Elephant on Pause 2023 Bada Raw Puer

Tea type
Pu'erh Pu'erh (sheng) Blend
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Compressed
Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Roswell Strange
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From Bitterleaf Teas

This 50-50 blend of qiaomu (arbor) and big tree material tea comes from the forested area near Zhanglang village in Bada mountain, which is home to the largest Bulang population in Xishuangbanna. Sandwiched between the more well-known and well-traveled Bulang mountain range and Jingmai mountain, Bada tea tends to fly under the radar, but in our opinion lacks nothing compared to its neighboring mountains.

After spending the better part of a day exploring the nearby forest and villages, we were impressed by not just the environment, but the kind people and the tea as well. This tea is as solid as they get, with a rich quality that is still down to earth.

Similar to Bulang teas, there is a prominent kuwei (pleasant bitterness) that quickly dissolves into sweetness and a lasting huigan. This is overlayed with a unique and intriguing fragrance that truly set it apart though. The addition of big tree material in this blend shaves off some of the roughness and makes for a well textured soup that sticks to the mouth.

This is a strong value tea with excellent ageing potential. In a year like this, it’s an affordable candidate for either picking up a tong of, or at least doubling up on to enjoy now and with some added age.

To highlight the differences tree age can make, we highly recommend comparing this tea with 269, which is comprised of gushu material from a nearby section of land.

Picking period: April 1-8

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1 Tasting Note

16603 tasting notes

Grandpa Style!

I imagine this would probably be better steeped gongfu, but all of my teaware save for one last mug has been repacked for the moment as I switch locations for the second half of my vacation. It’s still pleasant steeped in this style though; the liquor is medium bodied with a pleasantly light and medicinal bitterness. I have a love/hate relationship with bitter sheng, but this one straddles that line well and the lingering sugar cane sweetness after each swallow is something to look forward to from sip to sip. I look forward to revisiting this tea brewed gongfu in the future, when I’m home with access to my full tea stash…

Tea Photo: https://www.instagram.com/p/CvSWexyu8Ae/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tU5hjtqS-xs

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