2007 Xingyang Imperial Shu

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Musty, Wood
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by David Duckler
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 45 sec 4 oz / 118 ml

Currently unavailable

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

From Our Community

1 Image

3 Want it Want it

12 Own it Own it

13 Tasting Notes View all

From Verdant Tea

After finding the incredible, mind-blowing Golden Leaf 1998 Xingyang, we have been working with the growers to find another Xingyang with the same sparkling quality, but with a heavier body and a lower price point for more regular drinking. This is our solution. The first steepings are crisp and vegetal with notes of honey. Later the tea starts to develop in the same way the 1998 Xingyang does, with a rich mustiness, and a sparkling texture that feels almost carbonated. Late in steeping, an intriguing malty quality comes through. The tea has something woody like the smell of a room covered in tatami mats from fresh-cut bamboo.

About Verdant Tea View company

Company description not available.

13 Tasting Notes

96
2816 tasting notes

It’s a sipdown… which means I can buy more pu-erhs, right? :)

Spoonvonstup

Looks like you need a legit pu’er box… or chest… or closet!

TeaBrat

I have a tall cupboard in my kitchen and one shelf of it is devoted to puerhs so far. :)

ashmanra

CAN buy? More like MUST BUY!

TeaBrat

My bank account says NO… ha ha. Maybe next month. :)

ScottTeaMan

I hear that…….I really have to not buy anymore tea for a couple months-I hope I can make it. :))

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

98
294 tasting notes

A lovely tea on a rainy day. Or any day for that matter. Geoffrey is right when he said that something is going on at the Xingyang workshop. These are truly amazing teas. The beautiful Shu flavor with a hint of sparkle and life is grand when you sit down and enjoy these Pu’erhs. They are truly creating masterpieces….

Nathaniel Gruber

Agree. I had the privelage of making the 98 for a few friends a couple of nights ago. It’s almost hard to guess that that one is a Shu from the color of the tea liquor because of how sparkling it is. You can tell that this one has some similar attributes and will grow in to something ridiculous with time. And it’s not too bad for drinking now either :)

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

59 tasting notes

So, I think that Verdant’s Xingyang 1998 pu’er is one of the best pu’ers out there. When I saw that Verdant brought in another, younger pu’er from the same workshop, I was really excited to try it.

The dry leaves look really different (they are very small little buds instead of the giant twisting leaves of the 1998). Smelling them, however, is that same, satisfying musty Xingyang smell. Light, bright and clean, but undeniably old-smelling, like that great library smell.
Once steeped, the leaves start to distinguish themselves from their older cousin. They smell like warm tree pulp or maybe tobacco. They also really remind me of one of the woven bamboo mats we use on our tea tray when it has tea poured over it, or of woven reed shoes and being in a room covered with tatami mats (the description is definitely spot on about that part).
The smell of the liquid is really warm and cozy (more on the brown sugar/caramel end of the spectrum), and reminds me in aroma and color of the Twin Elephants Golden Buds brick.

My notes on the taste of this tea suddenly drop off and are really sketchy. I became distracted and too excited; I was too busy talking to my drinking partner about what I was tasting to remember to pull my pen back out. Here’s what I can reconstruct from nine scribbled words and an arrow:
If the Xingyang 98 reminds me of a lunar landscape, the 2007 has all of those same qualities, but brought back down to Earth. This tea feels like it was made by those same hands, but for real human beings, not just some terrific/terrible other-wordly beings. This shares the same soul, but still has the breath of life in it, not yet distilled to the spiritual essence. If 1998 is the cool glow of twilight and dawn, this is the burning, heady redness of dusk and sunrise.
Sure, there are tastes too (brown sugar/caramel, musty yet perfectly lightweight and airy, bamboo, celery notes and..in later steepings.. that delicious, crystalline sweetness of the back of a postage stamp or new book-binding glue), but that doesn’t really describe my experiences with this tea. This is excellent!! I love how fibrous and alive this feels (there is also a tingling, vibrating texture, if I’m remembering correctly), and I love what a great companion tea this is for the 1998.

It definitely stands on its own, but it’s so much more fun and exciting in context. I am excited to see what this will turn into in ten more years, but it is also perfectly drinkable now. I feel like I’m allowed to have this more often than my other Xingyang, both because of the age and lower price, and because I feel like it’s something that fits in more easily to everyday life. This can transport you, but it feels less dangerous than the 1998 (with that tea, you are practically guaranteed to reveal hidden about yourself; you won’t be able to resist coming closer to those you’re drinking with, or learning something new about yourself). This tea opens that door for me, but I feel like I’m being given a choice. I can walk through of my own free will, or I can linger at the doorway, peeking in, and then turn my head to enjoy the present as a simple, sensory experience.

Alas, I feel I am beginning to make less and less sense, so I will try in vain to sum up. This is a great tea that I am happy to add to my collection. On its own and paired with its older relative, it continues my pu’er and tea flavor education. This will be exciting to watch grow, and a pleasure to enjoy drinking on a more every day basis. I definitely recommend it to folks who’ve been drinking pu’ers for a long time, and for those who are just getting started.

I hope there will be other Xingyang offerings from Verdant in the future. They’re operating at such a high level; they’re going to raise the standards and expectations of what pu’er can be, and that is a good thing.

steeped in a gaiwan over multiple steepings, as always

Kashyap

wow…hands down what I think a tea description should look like- passion, memory, sensation, culture, mythology…and the grace of a cup….awe inspiring

Geoffrey

I found the 2007 Xingyang showing an unmistakable familial relationship with with the 1998 release. It’s like the similar facial features and mannerisms you often find between siblings. The leaves look dramatically different, and the overall flavor profile is unique in each of them, but they definitely share some very fine familiar qualities. The “old books” element is clear in both, and is really one of my favorite parts.

I like to fantasize that these two are brothers with some age between them, raised together in an aristocratic household that has yet to fall into decadence, and both of them having spent a great amount of time in the expansive family library educating themselves in the varying histories of the world. These are teas with perspective, which when looking out upon life can relax in the knowledge that, while everything has changed, the basic story remains the same.

Spoonvonstup

@Kashyap – aw shucks! It’s all the tea. I just flail around, trying to convey some part of my experience. The tea does all the rest.
Ideally, I’d just like to drink my teas with everyone; that would be the very best way to really convey what’s going on. These are just arrows in the sand, pointing vainly in the general direction of the “truth.”

@ Geoffrey- That’s an excellent description of these two teas; well said! Thanks for the story, too; it’ll be in mind every time I try the teas from here on out.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

86
25 tasting notes

I like this shu better than the nuggets. It’s less sedimenty, and more smooth. This tastes more like a beverage, and less like dirt. I don’t know if other folks would enjoy it, if they like the sediment flavor, but I prefer it. It’s very smooth, and light, but flavorful. The color is a very nice redish-brown. 1st & 2nd steeps: The flavor is like old wood. It makes me wonder if it was keep around rotten wood, or something. Not at all bitter. Just rotten old wood. 3rd steep: Old wood, and now leather. No more sediment, at all. Just lots of leather. Like chewing on an old belt. 4th steep (slightly cooler temp): Strangely, sediment is makin a come-back. Leather is fading. Less everything. I’ll have to use higher temp, next. 5th: Lighter flavor, but the leather taste is back. This one feels flatter, and less tangy. I think the water might be getting stale. It’s time to replenish the kettle, anyhow. 6th: Wood and leather are stronger, again. Sorta tangy, too. The aroma is getting a bit smokey. It’s not quite like sheng, though. 7th: I increased the temp a little, and the steep time a lot. The flavor is hanging in there. It’s still wood and leather, though. No new developements, except in the after-taste. It’s like portabello mushrooms, and was rather brief. 8th: Steeped at boiling for 2.5 mins. More of the same, and I’m bored. Over-all, I’m glad I tried this one. There was no fishy odor, and the sediment was minimal. This is a very smooth and approachable shu. Although, it was a little one-dimensional, to me. I enjoyed it, but I wouldn’t get too excited about having it again. However, if my goal were to drink shu on a regular basis, and I wanted to avoid anything gross. This would be an excellent choice. Although, I doubt it would keep me interested for long.

EDIT: Oh! I forgot to mention that I was doing double steepings. So actually, I drank around 16 steepings. By double steepings, I mean that I was steeping once into my cup, and again into my pitcher, and counting that as one steeping, but it’s in fact two. Sorry for the confusion.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

1186 tasting notes

First snow that is sticking to the ground here today! I guess autumn had to end at some point (this is the longest one we’ve had in AGES) and it abruptly ended with about 5 cm of snow already, about -5 C outside, and still snowing haha. I have shovelled for the firs time thisi season, vacuumed upstairs this morning, finished off a few more cups of the sheng from last night, tried a chamomile tea and started coughing, so now I am having a session with the dark, woody shu. And dark and woody it is, nice to hibernate inside with on this snowy day. The best tea drinking days are now here!! I will be having various shu’s today I think :) see previous notes on this one!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

92
278 tasting notes

What a week! Work sucked, house stuff sucked (electrical issues) and well… SUCK!

So today I have been taking time to try some new teas. This one is a winner fo sho. Very mildly earthy, like clean moss. Some coffee and chocolate notes. A lightly sweet finish and nice aftertaste. It’s a little leathery perhaps also. Just little hints here and there.

It’s a loose shou, nice and easy, no prying. Thumbs up!

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 tsp 4 OZ / 118 ML

Login or sign up to leave a comment.