I have been aging this one for a few years now. I have expanded my puerh horizons but I am far from an expert. There are so many flavors I can not equate with something else for a description, especially in a sheng.
I like to steep a shu puerh a nice long time, relatively speaking, and I don’t mind if the cup is inky black. I like it, whether it is horsey, mushroom-y, cedar-y, fallen leaves on a wet woodland path, or leather and barn. I don’t like fishy, not at all.
With a sheng I like to keep things a little milder. This one has now been steeped about nine times and it is still going. The color remains a light amber, and the flavor is hard for me to pinpoint. There is definitely a mineral aspect, like wet stone in a forest with deep shade, a fresh and natural taste, and a muted vegetal flavor. The minty flavor of a few years ago is no longer apparent to me, which could be due to my cold, but I think my sense of taste has come back. I am not getting camphor at all. I have a bit left to continue aging. It will be fun to see if it changes further.
I drink chilled puerh and love it! Not bad with a little mint or ginger too.
This comment makes me smile. I almost sense a touch of sarcasm. :) “Cold cave water” and “smell of stalagmites” sounds splendid for a cuppa tea. ;)
I’ve always drank my puerh hot with a short steeping. What is the best way to cold brew puerh; both the amount and time left to brew would be helpful?
No sarcasm…I did my courtin’ in the Ozarks and fell in love with an amateur spelunker :) Haven’t tried a cold-steep batch yet, I just stuck leftovers in the fridge.
Bonnie, the mint sounds great … I’ll have to look and see if Peppermint Patty has any leaves that haven’t fried int this heat.
When I finish my morning hot pot of pu’erh (like today) I brew again, let it cool down and bottle (sometimes I dilute to taste with orange water or mint water and I sweeten sometimes too) . Then….into the frig! You can pour over ice if you steep strong using a gaiwan.
Wow, Bonnie! I bet that it is delicious!
GMathis: ts is a green puerh. Do you like shu or cooked puerh at all?
Thanks guys! I’m gonna try this right away. Sounds delish.
Ashmanra, I think I do—very limited experience and bungled preparation on my part. I’ve had a couple of shu samples. The cooked ones are the little pre-shaped things, right?
hmm, I don’t see this on their website, did you buy it in the store? Maochas are pretty tasty.
No, Amy, this was a gift from … one of my kind Steepster buddies, but I can’t remember whom. So it may be a little oldish; wouldn’t surprise me if it isn’t in current rotation.
I sent it! They only carried it for about a year. I think it was one of Emeric’s picks. I still have some left and it is aging nicely!
The cooked and greens can come every whichaway! Cakes, mini tuocha, loose. I have a bagged shu that is pretty good from Numi. Someone on here gave a helpful tip, green and sheng sound a lot alike, and shu and cooked sound a bit alike, so that helps me keep straight which is which!
Ay-yi-yi, so much to learn!