Mengku Bazi Laohuangpian Sheng Pu-erh 2014

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Pu Erh Tea
Flavors
White Grapes, Floral, Grapefruit, Green Beans, Pleasantly Sour, Vegetal, Honey
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Fair Trade, Organic, Vegan
Edit tea info Last updated by WYMMTEA|惟餘莽莽
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 oz / 80 ml

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11 Tasting Notes View all

  • ““…the pale yellow liquor contains some grassy flavors, which remind me of a pleasant green tea mixed with a sheng.” “In my third cup, which resulted from another thirty-second steep, I note that...” Read full tasting note
    95
  • “I want to apologize to Wymm Tea for taking so long to taste this sample. I wanted to give it the attention it deserves and have not had time until tonight! A few weeks ago I picked up an unknown...” Read full tasting note
  • “Sipping this away today and I’m not really tasting or experiencing anything that would define this tea as something ‘unique’- I understand that sometimes green teas are just green teas with...” Read full tasting note
  • “I tried to refuse samples from Wymm mainly because I’m just too old to expect to age out tea this green. But they decided that makes me a challenging customer to win over. I suggested the...” Read full tasting note
    81

From WymmTea

This is a sheng pu-erh that brews bright golden liquor with a creamy and supple flavour and grassy aroma. Aside from the less than appealing aesthetics, it’s actually a very soothing tea at a affordable price which makes it ideal to be drunk on a daily basis.

The name Laohuangpian literally means “old yellow leaves” in Chinese. The picking standard of pu-erh tea has been 1 bud, with 3 to 4 leaves. Usually the 3rd and 4th leaves’ shape are not as ideal after processing. For the best aesthetics of final product to the consumers, tea farmers usually filter out these bigger leaves so that the remaining ones are neat and symmetrical when pressed into pu-erh tea cakes. These bigger leaves are often kept by the tea farmers themselves and are rarely found in the market. Unknown to the general public, these larger and plumpish leaves are more flavourful and sweeter as it has been grown on the trees for a longer period of time. Laohuangpian undergoes the same production method as other pu-erh raw tea we have and possesses the same quality. This tea is worth trying if you wonder what the local tribe and tea farmers in Yunnan are enjoying on their own.

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11 Tasting Notes

314 tasting notes

(Note refers to 2014 Spring) This tea has a very tight compression. Rather than shred it entirely, I left 5 small chunks in pot. After the first steep and a 5 minute wait, I had to break them up with a knife, and found they were still dry on the inside. The first two steeps reminded me of a green tea, but much deeper: grassy with a hint of green beans. A woody flavor that was barely there in the first steep grew stronger until by the third steep it dominated the taste. The overall power of the tea also grew.

The tea was a little rough, probably due to its youth. There was a tart, tannic edge that was just short of bitter. Not unpleasantly so, but it made the tea feel like it needed more time to settle out. The one constant was a very strong cha qi. It was so relaxing that I had to take a couple of breaks so I didn’t nod off during the session.

I’m not going to give a numerical rating, since I believe this tea should be judged on how it will taste in 5-10 years rather than how it drinks now. I enjoyed it, but would hope that it would become a bit more rounded and unified with more age.

I received a free “mystery box” of samples and also purchased a sampler. I’m not sure which teas were purchased and which were free samples, but want to thank Wynn tea for the opportunity to try their teas.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 g 2 OZ / 59 ML
WYMMTEA|惟餘莽莽

Hi Dr Jim, we do agree that the Huangpian has a very tight compression, we usually break it up into really small pieces before steeping. This Pu-Erh is normally only drank by the tea growers themselves, and are made with the larger, older tea leaves which explains the rougher taste. However they tend to have sweeter notes to them as well since the larger leaves have grown on the trees for longer period of time. It gives you an insight of what the local tea growers enjoy daily.

As for the gift set, we were trying a new concept. Every customer had a different selection of samples, and it would only be revealed once the wrapping is opened, hence the ‘mystery’ gift set. The usual orders would have tea names on the outside:)

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