2015 Jingwei Fu "1368 Classic" Fu Brick Tea

Tea type
Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Chrysanthemum, Floral, Fruity, Musty, Pear, Sweet
Sold in
Bulk
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by JFellnyx
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 oz / 90 ml

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  • “My first Fu tea. So perfect for cold weather like we’ve been lately (I know, it’s all relative but 23˚C is cold for Singapore!) Even though this tea is sort of grouped with other post-fermented...” Read full tasting note
    85

From Yunnan Sourcing

This is a unique offering from Xianyang area of Shaanxi. Fu brick process was supposedly originally first done in Xianyang over 600 years ago!

Jingwei Fu is a tea producer that has continued the tradition of Fu Zhuan in the style of Shaanxi Hei Cha since 2008.

This “1368 Classic” celebrates what is believed to be the first production of Fu brick back in (you guessed it) the year 1368!

Aged since 2015 in Xianyang, Shaanxi, this fu brick is replete with golden flowers and a soft sweetness, and a viscous wild mushroom-like soup. This is a very tasty full-bodied tea with the a pleasant cha qi that gives a warming feeling without being over-stimulating. This tea is also remarkably infusable!

900 Grams Per Brick

2015 Pressing

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

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1 Tasting Note

85
261 tasting notes

My first Fu tea. So perfect for cold weather like we’ve been lately (I know, it’s all relative but 23˚C is cold for Singapore!)

Even though this tea is sort of grouped with other post-fermented teas like pu er, I feel that the flavour doesn’t burst out of this as much (akin to very dry storage pu er). I find that I need 5-6g of this per 100ml (as opposed to pu er where I need 4-5g per 100ml)

Used 4.5g to 90ml today because I am leaving the house soon and won’t get many steeps out of this.
Warmed dry leaf smells floral (like chrysanthemums? I’m terrible with identifying flowers).
Rinsed once.

1st infusion (100˚C, 0:15)
- Wet leaf smells very sweet, floral and fruity––like ripe pears, or really sweet heavy-scented flowers like… (not rose, and not white florals––sweet vanilla orchids, or hyacinth? mimosa? magnolia? freesia?)
- Liquor tastes sweet like dried longans, hints of crunchy white fungus – reminds me a lot of the Singaporean dessert called cheng tng.
Rating: 85

2nd infusion (100˚C, 0:15):
- Wet leaf has a sweet, aged mustiness to it, like dried flowers kept in the yellowed pages of an old book.
- Liquor is slightly less sweet, but still has the nice rich floral + fruity “cheng tng” flavour
Rating: 84

3rd + 6th infusions: (gave 4 & 5 to my sis)
- Really nice for pairing with food like my yoghurt and granola. Still has sweetness and fruitiness coming through, reminds me a bit of an aged raw pu er or a medium-roasted oolong (like bai hao or dancong).
Rating: 85

Flavors: Chrysanthemum, Floral, Fruity, Musty, Pear, Sweet

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 90 ML
ashmanra

You are so right! Some relatives from Minnesota visited when it was 20C here once. We stood outside with our teeth chattering and they wore short sleeves and rejoiced in the balmy weather. But we had been accustomed to temperatures around 34C, so very chilly to us and delightfully warm to them!

Sirentian

Haha yes I totally get it. That sounds like an adorable scene, ashmanra!

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