A Tea Addict's Journal

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Tuesday October 3, 2006

October 3, 2006 · 8 Comments

So BBB and I went out to drink our way to hell today at around 9:30am. We had breakfast and hopped on a cab to go to Maliandao.

We got there around…. 10:15? Something like that. Bright and early. We went into the Beijing Puerh Chadu — walked a circle around the whole place, saw thsi one store with an unknown factory (I think they’re called Yunnan Xiangming Factory) and tried two of their puerhs. One is a Yiwu, and the other is a Banzhang cake, both 2005, I believe. The Yiwu was definitely better than the Banzhang, which was just a bit sweet and nothing really interesting. Prices were, well, low, but since it didn’t quite exactly impress either of us, we didn’t buy anything.

So out we walked, and into the tea mall next to the Beijing Central Tea Company we went. We saw this wonderful zhuni pot — the thing felt like it was melting in our hand, it was so smooth. It was not cheap, and since I 1) didn’t bring enough cash and 2) didn’t really feel like bargaining for it, not yet anyway, I decided to stay off of it, but both of us agreed there was something nice about that pot going on there. We walked around what is essentially a rather sad little tea mall with nothing impressive to offer, and BBB kept remarking how most of the teaware stores basically sell the same stuff he sees in Winghopfung in LA — except cheaper.

We ended up in the Jingmin Chacheng, where I got some of my Wuyi tea last time. We went to the top floor to look at more teaware, since BBB is looking for something. Walked around, didn’t find much. Then we hopped into a few puerh stores to check their goods out, and didn’t see much of interest either. There are just SO MANY different kinds of cakes out there, most of which we’ve never heard of, that it’s almost impossible to go “ok, let’s try this”. Near the end of our walkaround, we did find one store with two cakes that he recognized. We ended up trying three cakes — one being better than the rest. It was a Dabaihao — Big White Buds — but the seller wouldn’t agree to a price drop to a level we wanted, so we walked again, no goods in hand. I was severely dehydrated because one of the teas was really drying and I felt water was being sucked out of my body.

Had lunch at a pretty busy place with semi-warm rice (nasty). BBB loved a chicken dish I ordered.

After lunch we went to two more stores on the streets where we browsed and tasted nothing. Then, in the third one, we saw a bunch of Yichang Hao cakes. Since I have rarely noticed them in my wanderings around Maliandao, we decided to give some of it a try. We tried one, a 2005 Zhenpin, which was decent, but somehow, the tea tasted like it was locking our throat. After we walked out, I once again felt it was a bit drying. I know this apparently happens with teas stored in drier weather — they tend to have this nasty effect of drying out your mouth and throat. It was not pleasant, and so I was drinking loads of water.

Then we went all the way to the end of Maliandao, to Chayuan Chacheng. I took him to the Mengku Rongshi store, where we sat for about two hours tasting different things and (mostly me) chatting with the owner.

We had four things there. The first was a Big Snow Mountain brick, 300g, that had some wild tea mixed in with regular stuff. It was, well, good. Then we had the 2000 Yuanyexiang, which was excellent, although I detected a hint of wet storage, and the owners admitted that it had briefly gone in wet storage before. It is by no means unpleasant, just that it has gone into wet storage once upon a time. Not too bad at the end of the day. I thought this tea doesn’t exist outside of Hong Kong, and was pleasantly surprised when they said they have a little bit left. The owner, I think, was surprised that I know it at all. Thanks Davelcorp for reminding me of the existence of this thing.

Then we had the 2002 Mengku cake that I talked about last time. Both BBB and I thought it was great. I don’t know how it will age, but as it is, it is already quite pleasantly drinkable, and I think it will probably turn into something better. The price, given the goods, was excellent. I think we’re going to buy some of this.

The last cake we tried was a 2001 production of their tea, similar in taste to the 2002, but somehow a little less impressive. It’s VERY tightly compressed, so maybe that’s partly why it doesn’t seem to be as good.

We decided to just ask for quotes and then come back in a day or two before making any purchases. We then spent a good bit of time walking around Chayuan Chacheng, trying to look for more teaware. There were some ok stuff, but nothing exciting. We also looked at some more tea, but decided that we’ve really tasted enough for the day.

At the end, we walked into a store thinking we’ll look for puerh, but surprisingly, they sell a LOT of dancong. It was a better selection than the other place that I went to, and I was pleasantly surprised when they pulled out something that I recognize as what I want. I ended up getting 125g of it. No bargaining, but oh well, they broke half of a standard pack because I didn’t want so much tea.

So, not entirely without acquisition, but the buying hasn’t started. Meanwhile, I think my stomach is not really agreeing to all this young puerh, and is giving me a little trouble. I should really be more judicious in drinking puerh next time I go.

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Monday October 2, 2006

October 2, 2006 · 4 Comments

Bearsbearsbears is here, sleeping very soundly after an undoubtly tiring flight. We’re planning to hit Maliandao from about 9am onwards until we drop dead from caffeine overdose.

Sounds like fun? Yeah. I’m looking forward to it.

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Sunday October 1, 2006

October 1, 2006 · 1 Comment

Sanzui is quite the resource. It’s a Chinese language forum for tea addicts like me, and there are lots of people (hello, 1.3 billion people!) who go there and post. The quality of the posts are high for the few people who do have some very interesting knowledge, and there are lots of interesting photos to see.

Among the things I’ve learned, or at least read about, is puerh processing, which I’ve already talked a little about, and also things like looking at what is a Lao Banzhang versus a fake Lao Banzhang tea, a whole bunch of Dayi cakes and how they look, dried and brewed, a treatise on Mengku’s early works, somebody’s thoughts of storing pu (10 years experience), buying tea on Maliandao (apparently I’m already pretty good — seems like the tea city at the back really is better, as I thought).

Lots of things to learn…. not enough time.

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Saturday September 30, 2006

September 30, 2006 · 3 Comments

It always takes a bit out of me after making a serious trip to Maliandao. I tasted no less than 10 teas, and it really hit me the next day. I was a bit tired and worn out, and I think the caffeine withdrawal gets more severe because I was consuming a lot the day before. I think it’s especially bad because I sleep less well after a Maliandao trip (too buzzed from caffeine, I suppose), so it takes longer to recover.

I’m still recovering, so to speak. Yesterday I had a sample of a medium-to-high fire tieguanyin. It was decent, but not great. They claim it’s 15 years, which I’m sure it’s not. It’s hard to say how long it’s been around, but it doesn’t taste anything like the 15 year old oolongs I’ve had in Hong Kong — it lacks the softness and the subtle aromas that an aged oolong will have. Instead, the flavours are very up front.

Today I’m drinking the Best Tea House 30 years loose puerh again. I am now on about infusion 10, and no end in sight. That’s always a nice thing about aged puerh — you can keep brewing, and brewing, and brewing, as both Cloudstea and Davelcorp noted recently in the Livejournal Puerh Community. There is something lacking though in a loose puerh – there is always a little less complexity, I think, when compared with compressed puerh. It seems that something happens to the process that the tea ages when compressed, in such a way that the tea adds flavour when aging in a compressed form. Different shapes also seem to impart somewhat different aging, with round cakes being the most palatable. I think both bricks and tuos tend to be of lower quality, and the jingcha, or mushroom shape, being the worst. That, of course, is no hard and fast rule.

I am now fairly interested in securing a brick made by Mengku Rongshi in 2001/2002, 300g, that is supposedly mostly from wild tea mixed in with regular stuff. I saw it on my most recent trip, but decided not to taste it yet, as I want to bring Bearsbearsbears along for a second opinion. Since this is not really a piece for educational purposes, I intend to perhaps buy a little more, which also means a little more careful consideration. The same goes for a 2002 cake of theirs that I did taste and that seemed rather decent, at least for the price.

One problem of buying puerh seriously is just that there are so many of them. Each store will easily have at least half a dozen to a dozen cakes on display, most of which are wrapped, which means you have to go through every one of them to look at them, check them out, see which one might be interesting, taste them, realize it’s crap, and repeat the process. You can always ask them to give you the better stuff, but that’s also an invitation to raise prices on you, so you can’t really do that with people you don’t know.

So all I can do is taste as much as I can, and hope I chance upon something decent. There are simply too many puerh factories (I think they number in the hundreds now) and too many vendors out there. I read somewhere that there are at least 500 stores on Maliandao selling tea. At least every other one has puerh on sale. Most are not puerh specific, and those who do specialize in puerh tend to have better stuff, but even then, most of the stuff is crap.

That’s one good thing about going to a place like Best Tea House, where they do some pre-screening for you so nothing is really terrible. On the other hand, the prices are also a good bit higher, and the selection limited…

Sigh

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Thursday September 28, 2006

September 28, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I went to Maliandao again today. It’s tough being in Beijing by yourself — it’s a bit boring, and my entertainment so far has been tea shopping, hahaha.

I went to quite a few places on today’s trip. The first stop was the Beijing Puerh Tea Capital (Beijing Puer Chadu). I walked around twice, stopped by two stores. The first one sells cakes from a factory I’ve never ever heard of. I tried one of their cakes — a Yiwu Zhengshan cake. Supposedly from arbour trees. It was ok, not great, not too bad. I ended up getting a free sample of the thing so I can try this out at home for real.

Then I hit another store that sells only Mengku Rongshi stuff. I looked around, and tried out the Mengku 2002 cake that won some gold award, and is generally considered decent. The cake is, indeed, decent, and immediately tastes better than the Yiwu Zhengshan, but of course that’s not fair to compare, because the Yiwu is 3 years younger. Even then, however, I think the nice feeling you get from drinking puerh is stronger with this Mengku cake. The girl, however, wasn’t willing to budge much for the price, so I just walked.

And good thing too… I decided to explore the Chayuan Chacheng at the end of Maliandao a little more. One of the first stores I saw was a Mengku Rongshi store — in fact, one that is setup by the factory itself. They also had this cake, and the initial quote was already lower than what that girl claimed was their “baseline price” (which, we all know, is not really the baseline). I didn’t buy any, but I might go back and try it again, maybe with BBB in tow. There’s also an early Mengku Rongshi brick that is supposedly decent.

I walked around a little more, and settled into a puerh store that sells stuff from another totally unknown factory. There are zillions of these and you just can’t get to know them all. I tried 3-4 cakes there, all mediocre stuff. Nothing really struck me as good, but the owner is very nice (he’s the boss of the factory) and we talked alot about the puerh market, things that are happening, etc, and he was pretty honest about some of the cakes I was trying, like when he says one cake “well, this cake has a flaw — the shaqing temperature was too high”. I think I put my knowledge just acquired recently to good use and impressed him with what I knew (or pretend to know, anyway), so he didn’t feel like lying to me. Always a good thing, because otherwise these people think they can lie to you and get away with it.

But anyway, I ended up buying two cakes from him which, incidentally, is not really his stuff. Both are samples or what not he got from other people, and I bought them for basically what is a friendship price — I didn’t bother to bargain because I felt what he told me in knowledge was worth something too, and it’s always good to have a sort of person you can trust a bit. I might go back there, not so much for the tea, but for the company.

This is cake number 1

And cake number 2

This is one of those “three no” cakes, with no warpper, no neifei, and no big ticket. I have no idea what they might actually be. Guess which one is the more expensive cake? Which one do you think it’s better? Place your bets now. I will be tasting them soon. Maybe BBB can be guest judge. These are more education pieces, but I think both are probably better than the cake I bought the other day.

Then, after sitting there for almost two hours just chatting and drinking insipid puerh from his factory, I walked out again with these two cakes. He also gave me some loose tea, some weird looking maocha, basically. Might be worth a try.

Then I walked into my final stop of the day, a Wuyi tea store. These people also make their own, apparently, with the store owner’s mom being the tea master (she’s in Fujian). This is their Beijing outlet. I tried four of their teas in a very short time — the girl was brewing nonstop. Part of the reason was because 3 regulars were also there, drinking tea and just chatting about tea. I was, again, learning and just sitting there mostly listening. I’ve learned far more sitting in teashops and listening to older tea addicts talk about tea than I have ever done either reading books or taking tea classes (well, I only ever took one, decided it’s enough to know the basics). Didn’t buy anything, but I might in the near future to get some stuff to compare with what I got from Lao He. I got the feeling that these people have better tea.

So now I am rather buzzed with caffeine, and I felt today was a good day at Maliandao — genuinely made some contacts/friends. I also discovered for sure that prices at the Tea city at the end of the street seem cheaper than up closer to the Carrefour…

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Wednesday September 27, 2006

September 27, 2006 · 3 Comments

In terms of teas I drink these past few days, nothing’s been really exciting. I had more of my rougui (the 2006 version) in the pot yesterday, and it turned out better than the first try. Maybe my intense seasoning effort paid off last time (the tea sat in the pot for a whole day). Maybe it’s just that I messed up the first time, I don’t know.

Then today I had bits of the brick I bought. Didn’t come out as well as last time. I wonder why… it’s got some qi, but the flavours are a bit lacking. I think I am more confident in saying that this was a not-very-well-stored puerh. It’s got a bit of a cooked flavour. Now when I smell it it’s no longer got that nasty mouldy smell. Let’s hope it stays this way.

On the other hand, I was studying the cake I bought a few days ago a little more, and noticed some things

The parts I circled are all leaves that are yellow/light green. From what I’ve been reading the past few days on Sanzui (Chinese), there are, supposedly, two kinds of teas that are now making their way into puerh cakes. There’s the Yunnan Green (dianlu), and there’s the Yunnan Dark Green (dianqing). YDG is the stuff you want in puerh — it is what makes puerh “go”, so to speak. YG, on the other hand, are more or less green tea.

So what’s the difference?

I think they differ mainly in the processing. YDG is processed at lower temperatures duing the shaqing (literally Killing Green) process. That’s when the enzymes and what not are destroyed and the oxidation stops for the tea. Green tea, as we usually know it, is proceed at a high temperature where the shaqing takes place rapidly, thus preserving the green colour of the tea and stops oxidation quickly. White tea, as we all know, is processed more naturally and thus the leaves are actually a little oxidized. YDG, then, is processed more like white tea, I guess — where temperature is low and they should be naturally dried under the sun. They are what should be used for puerh.

So why add YG?

YG adds flavours — nice aromas and that kind of thing. Adding YG to the cake makes it more palatable NOW. There are lots of people who buy puerh not to drink 10 years from now, but rather to just drink it now, and YG makes the tea nice, smooth, mellow, drinkable, with good aromatics and lack of bitterness that makes YDG nasty to drink now, sometimes. YG’s colour is lighter — greenish, yellowish, whereas YDG is darker green, more like a forest green than a leafy green. We’ve all seen the difference. So YG being added to cakes is really a matter of how the market is moving and what people want from their puerh.

This, of course, leaves many questions unanswered. YG supposedly ages poorly, because it basically decays like green tea does over time, and instead of enhancing flavours, it loses it. Supposedly, the tea’s colouring rapidly changes and before you know it, you’ve got a brown pack of tea that really doesn’t taste very good. YDG, supposedly, doesn’t do this and ages like a normal puerh should/would.

But does this mean we should look for the nasty tasting cakes? If the 90s Xizihao cakes are any indication, then no. They seem to age decently well, although, admittedly, I worry about its tastes another 10-15 years from now. But then, those cakes obviously do taste just fine now, and probably will taste quite nice 10 years from now.

I’ve also heard theories that wilder tress/older trees/arbour trees tend to produce tea that are more palatable, not as bitter, etc. Are those just YG in disguise, where a dishonest merchant is trying to cheat me of my money in goading me to buy crap tea? Maybe the merchant himself is being misled? Or is what I read completely wrong?

I’ve been reading things that say that lots of the processing of raw leaves for puerh is extremely unscientific, and when you think about it, sun dried tea, by definition, has to be unscientific. If you plucked the tea today, and luck has it that the weather turned quickly and starts to rain in the evening when you’re trying to lay out your tea for drying — what do you do? You use the oven to dry it instead of leaving it outside. What if it’s cloudy that day? What if the weather is especially cold? Lots of things can happen, and can really affect the tea that is made.

I am starting to think that I need to apply the shotgun method — buy lots of different things, and hope that some things turn out good. There are cakes that do seem to be poor prospects for aging, like this one that I bought recently, but then, does anybody really know? Maybe it will turn into a reasonable cake in 5-10 years, and that given the initial cost, becomes a decent investment. I honestly don’t know the answer, and I’m not sure if anybody really does.

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Uncategorized

Monday September 25, 2006

September 25, 2006 · Leave a Comment

So this is the cake I bought yesterday:

Longyuan Hao Gelanghe Old Tea Tree Bing. Spring 2005.

This is, by the way, my wrapping job 🙂

The tea looks like this:

And these are the bits I broke off for taste

After brewing, it looks like this

And in liquid form, in the 6th infusion, I think, it is like this

Enough tea porn.

So how does it taste?

I tried it yesterday in sub-optimal conditions, and decided to get one to buy home to try for real. Like I said, it was cheap, so I wasn’t too worried even if it sucked. It’s sort of an education piece, if nothing else.

If you look at the front of the cake, it looks nice enough. The back, however, reveals some yellow leaves, and from what I understand, those are no good.

The compression of the cake is solid, not too tight, but not so loose that you already worry about it falling apart. I broke off a decent amount for tasting. The overall impression is one that goes down mellow, but really nothing terribly exciting. When I drank it at the store yesterday, I actually felt it was better than me drinking it at home. Maybe the hustle bustle of the store added to the mood, I don’t know. In terms of aroma, the first few infusions were a tiny bit smokey, with hints of fruit on the lid, but none in the taste. There were also some notes of honey sweetness at the bottom of the cup for aroma around infusions 2-5. The fruitiness smell disappears after 3, being replaced by an odd aroma… it’s almost perfume like. I’m not sure how or why such a smell made it into this cake. Maybe it’s from the cake maker??

The taste of the puerh is fairly consistent… and flat. The most obvious taste is astringency — that little tingling that puerh does to you, but not in a menthol kind of way. I am not very good today at thinking up words to describe the taste, other than that it’s a bit boring. After a few infusions the colour is still there, and the taste, while persistent, was not particularly exciting.

I have my suspicions about this cake as to what happened with the tea. If you look at the leaves, there are red borders and what not — I think it might’ve been leaves that either took too long to dry and thus oxidized a bit, or… deliberately done so that the taste of the tea is more mellow and drinkable now.

Will I buy it again? No. One’s enough.

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Sunday September 24, 2006

September 24, 2006 · 2 Comments

I was bored out of my mind today, so what did I do? I went tea shopping again.

I ended up with one cake of puerh of medium quality. The tasting conditions were sub-optimal, since it was in a slightly dirty wholesale store of puerh selling low to medium quality stuff. They didn’t even make the tea for me — I served myself. It was a rather odd experience, but kinda fun, in a way. I’m not sure if I’ll go back there. This cake I bought mainly for comparison purposes — so I have some basis to go on, since I haven’t been drinking much young puerh these days (unlike some people, ahem). It was better than a few of the other cakes I’ve tasted though.

It does, however, also remind me that I should bargain harder in Beijing. HK really kills your bargaining habit.

So I put that into practice and bargained a bit harder at the place where I also bought some qingxiang tieguanyin today. I probably could’ve gotten it for a even lower price, but this is probably all the qingxiang tieguanyin I’m buying this year, and I found the price pretty acceptable (having been knocked off about 60% from the first quoted price).

This, however, reminds me how much of a ripoff it is to buy anything tea related in the States. But then again, if I were in the tea business, I’d also sell at those prices in the States because that’s what the market can bear (of course, there are other costs too like shipping, rent, labour, etc…)

I ended up tasting some more puerh at another store, although neither of the cakes I tasted was any good. The first was one of those sweet mellow pathetic tasting cakes that leaves no impression after you swallow. The second is better, with a bit more wild taste and what not in it, but I wasn’t convinced it was good enough, and the price … well, I didn’t feel like it justified what they were asking for (and taking 50% off that). So I left.

I might taste the puerh cake again tomorrow to give it a more honest try.

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Uncategorized

Saturday September 23, 2006

September 23, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I made some of the tieguanyin I got two weeks ago, and somehow, it didn’t come out quite right. I’m not sure what I did wrong… I wonder if it’s the water. Maybe the water needs a bit more mineral-heavy stuff to balance it out, or otherwise it gets too light. I don’t know… it just didn’t taste right today.

I hate it when a tea came out wrong, but you’re not really sure what’s wrong. I also wonder if it was a little too much leaves. Hmmm

Annoying.

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An LA tea affair

July 4, 2006 · Leave a Comment

A tea meeting in LA. On my way back from Palm Springs, I met up with two tea friends, Phyll and Bearsbearsbears from the LJ Puerh Community for some tea (scroll down the link for pictures). We had tea at this place called Chado in Pasadena (yes, I drove all the way from Palm Springs to Pasadena). It was a curious little place, serving a good variety of tea, although done in western style pots (in Phyll’s words, Polka-dot teapots).

We didn’t have any of their teas. Instead, Phyll brought his own set of paraphrenalia with two gaiwans and a few drinking cups, etc., as well as the all important tea tray for water disposal. We started with my Dahongpao from Tea Gallery. It was fairly mellow even though I did the 3/4 leaves thing. Then we went on to sample a Yichanghao beeng, and finally, a sample of the 97 Xizhihao from Hou De. I have to say the 97 Xizhihao is slightly disappointing. I need to brew it again, as I have a sample of it myself, but it seemed weaker than I expected.

Regardless, it was a lot of fun to meet up with some online tea friends in person. I certainly enjoyed my time (almost too much, as I cut it pretty close to make my flight). And even better, Phyll was very generous and gave us each a little bottle of something, and I got a Zinfandel. Thanks Phyll! We should do it again.

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Teas
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