Pu Ti Cha

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Jillian
Average preparation
Not available

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

2 Want it Want it

0 Own it Own it

3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “And that was it. The last of the sooper-speshul (and wildly expensive) sanctified Da Hong Pao. It was in the to-be-finished pile because, well, as special as it is, you can’t keep it forever. And...” Read full tasting note
    95

From TeaSpring

To celebrate the 10th Anniversary of sanctification of the Guan Yin’s (Goddess of Mercy) Statue in Nanhai District (Guangdong province), the finest Da Hong Pao tea was selected as an offering to the Goddess. The Da Hong Pao tea leaves were sanctified in the process and are considered to be blessed, offering its drinkers good health, prosperity and happiness. Once sanctified, the Da Hong Pao tea is thereafter known as Pu Ti Cha.

Pu Ti Cha is sold in a box of twelve packs, each containing 9 grams of tea leaves. The total weight is exactly 108 grams. 108 is a sacred number in Buddhism and represents the number of mental conditions or sinful desires that one must overcome in order to reach enlightenment. Also included in the box is a sanctified card showing the picture of the renowned Nanhai’s Guan Yin statue.

Other names:
Bodhi Tea, Da Hong Pao Sanctified Tea

Taste:
Pu Ti Cha is flowery sweet and has a sweet, pleasant aftertaste. After a few sips, the sweet floral fragrance lingers on in your breath. This tea is processed using mid-fire.

Appearance:
Traditional looking Oolong tea. Dark and slightly curled tea leaves.

Origin:
Wu Yi Shan, Fujian Province

Harvest Period:
Spring ’06

About TeaSpring View company

Company description not available.

3 Tasting Notes

95
1353 tasting notes

And that was it. The last of the sooper-speshul (and wildly expensive) sanctified Da Hong Pao. It was in the to-be-finished pile because, well, as special as it is, you can’t keep it forever. And also, I need the tin.

I’ve bought a regular (and much less expensive) Da Hong Pao to replace it, so finally finishing this off was such a terrible loss. At least that’s what I tell myself.

It’s a good cup. Every bit as good as it was that first time when I finally made myself open the little satchet and brew up half.

I’m getting that chocolate-y note on this one again. Both in aroma and in flavour. It’s actually reminding me of Adagio’s Black Dragon Pearls a bit, except this one seems to have more character, I think. The pearls were good, but at the same time also kind of ordinary.

There are floral hints too but not so many that you think it must have been contaminated or that they have secretly scented it, and not so few that you have to sit and search for them.

I’ve brewed it a bit differently this time with steep times and leaf amount, (brave after the Nepal Top fiasco, I know) because I didn’t have enough leaf left that it was worth saving if I used the normal amount of leaves.

In spite of that, I’m recognising everything that I wrote in the first review. It seems like what we’ve got here is a consistently good tea. I haven’t yet tried the regular Da Hong Pao, but I have high expectations of it because of this one.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.