A Tea Addict's Journal

Entries tagged as ‘wuyi yancha’

Aged Wuyi Tea

December 10, 2006 · 1 Comment

Now that we have the 10,000 hits thing out of the way… back to the teas 🙂

Yesterday, along with the scale and the bags of Wuyi tea I got, I was given a small sample of an aged Wuyi tea from the store. Since it’s a small bag, I figured I’ll brew it.

Since I got my new electric scale, I figured I’ll see how much tea they gave me.

It turns out it was 10g, almost to the dot. 10g of tea… that sounds like a lot.

So I warmed my pot, and started putting leaves in it. When I filled it to about what I normally would use… I realized that about 3/4 of the tea I got from the sample is already in the pot. What do I do with the rest? Keep it? It’s too little to do anything with it. Throw it? It’s a waste… so…. I “turned my heart sideways” (a rough translation of a Chinese phrase meaning “to do something with determination”) and threw the rest of the dry tea in there. It just fit in the pot, with a bit of space to spare… 10g of tea in this pot, and the pot is almost filled to the brim with dry leaves.

Yes, yes, tea addict.

In my excitement I forgot to take pictures of the dry leaves. I can say they are rather small and broken, and quite dark — black. It’s broken because it’s obviously been roasted fairly heavily (for storage) and perhaps re-roasted after some years of storage. Anyway, as I remaked yesterday, Wuyi teas are hard to tell apart when dry anyway.

The first infusion brewed a very promising looking liquor — doesn’t this look like aged puerh? This is what happens when you put 90% dry leaves in a pot….

The taste… overwhelmingly the first few infusions has a taste of chenpi (dried mandarin peel). This is what they would call the “chen” taste in tea, usually applying to oolong, as the “chen” taste in puerh is different. The first infusion came out a bit sour. It wasn’t terribly unpleasant in its sourness, but a little sour. Of course, with that much leaves in a small pot…. it’s hard to control. I then decided faster infusions will help, and indeed, the sourness subsided in the second infusion onwards, giving way to more of the “chen” taste. There’s a nice, soft, supple feel to the tea that is usually more obvious in aged Wuyi teas (or aged teas in general). Younger teas tend to be harsher, no matter what you do. Poorly stored aged teas, of course, can also turn bad on you.

Then after about 4-5 infusions, the chen taste subsided, giving way to a lot of sweetness. The brew also got considerably lighter. I increased the infusion time, but the chen taste didn’t come back. Instead, the sweetness persisted. I drank about 10-12 infusions of this. Needless to say, I was pretty worked up by the tea, despite its age and the fact that it’s a roasted Wuyi. It’s a comfortable feeling, not the nervous energy that you get from a young, qingxiang tieguanyin.

I might get more of this…. but I really, really have too much tea already. Then again, it’s hard to come by decent aged oolongs that are not sour or bland. This tea is neither. I should at least go back to the store and try it with less leaves.

The wet leaves…. don’t reveal much.

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Teas
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Roasted Dahongpao

November 30, 2006 · 4 Comments

As it seems to be my custom these days, after a long day of tastings I go back to one of my Wuyi teas to calm my body down.

Today’s no different, but it’s a different tea. This is a Wuyi I got a few weeks ago with the Lapsang Souchong and the other, lighter Dahongpao. This one’s also a Dahongpao, but it’s a much heavier fired one. The leaves are quite dark, and the tea brews a strong colour

There’s an unmistakable taste of charcoal in the tea, but it’s not an overpowering one that covers all other tastes, as is sometimes the case (those are really mismanaged roasting that went overboard…. or tea that is too bad and need to be roasted as such to be drinkable). The first infusion came out slightly sour, which from what I know means the roasting was not handled perfectly, although the rest of the infusions were fine. It lasted something like 6-7 infusions…. and when I thought it was dying, I left the water in there for quite a few minutes, which resulted in a dark brew, but still very drinkable and not bitter nor sour. I’m very glad of that.

Incidentally, this is the tea supplied to the National People’s Assembly in Beijing, or at least one of the teas being used. However, it’s much, much cheaper than the lighter Dahongpao. The cha qi, while still evident, is just not comparable…. and the subtlety of flavour is lacking as well. It’s good for when I want a nice strong roasted tea.

Wet leaves

Looking…. like a lot of Wuyi.

On a completely unrelated note — I remembered a factoid that I learned yesterday that I thought was interesting. Apparently, the cheapest gunpowder tea that China sells, exported mainly to Africa, is about $1 per kg…. stuff that gets sold to the US is a bit more…. but…. I should really get into the gunpowder tea business 🙂

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Teas
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Rougui day

November 23, 2006 · 4 Comments

Correction: Yesterday’s tea was from teahub, apparently.

Anyway, today I went back to an old reliable — the rougui I got when I first got to Beijing. Most of the 150g is gone now. I have probably less than 50g left at this point. Then I’ll break out the 2005 version of this tea and compare it with what I’ve been drinking so far.

To answer the question of how much tea I use:

For Wuyi I generally put between 60-70% full of dry leaves, sometimes a bit more, sometimes a bit less. With the yixing I’ve been using a little less. With gaiwans it’s almost entirely covered with tea. Then you brew very short and quick infusions.

This is how the tea looks — same as before 🙂

This time I noticed a bit of charcoal in the tea, just a hint. I hate it when a tea is so roasted (or rather, so poorly roasted) that the only thing you can taste is the charcoal. This one has a hint of that, but not very strong, and the tea taste still dominates.

It’s really quite pleasant to drink, and very relaxing. Wuyi teas really give me a lot of enjoyment these days, whereas in comparison even roasted dancongs are a bit more…. stressful, so to speak. I’m not sure why that is the case. I guess my taste is changing.

The leaves are a bit broken, as you can see. Bottom of the pile… or close to it.

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Teas
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Expensive dahongpao

November 17, 2006 · 3 Comments

I thought I was going to go to Maliandao, but jetlag and errands held me up. Since I basically didn’t sleep the night before, and since Paris time is 7 hours behind Beijing time… I woke up pretty late, too late to go after I ran my errands. Oh well, tomorrow.

I opened up another bag of tea today, one of the Dahongpaos I got with the Lapsang Souchong. This is the expensive one (I just grabbed one of the bags without looking).

By the way, I realize my photos have been pretty utilitarian — not much in the way of embellishment, decorations, nice settings, little kids, that kind of thing. Hope you folks don’t mind. I figured this way we’re only focusing on the tea and is more uniform, making for better comparisons and documentation, which is the point of this blog anyway.

This is how the tea looks in liquid form

The colour is fairly uniform throughout. The tea… is quite delicate, for lack of a better word. It’s not a strong, heavy kind of Wuyi, but rather the soft, supple kind. I didn’t buy it so much for the taste, which I am only ok with, but rather the mouthfeel and, most importantly, the cha qi. The mouthfeel is smooth, soft, much like the flavours of the tea. It’s very “round”. I found a very strong cha qi with this tea, at least in my reaction of it. I felt it again today.

I think this tea might be good for aging a bit and then trying again. It might just get better.

The leaves are still quite wrinkled after about 10 infusions, which, according to somebody I talked to, means that this is hand-rolled. He said the machine rolled stuff unfurls quickly, whereas the hand rolled stuff stay rolled. I don’t know if that’s true. I put the lighter there to give it some scale. No, I don’t smoke. This is for lighting the water boiler.

Maliandao tomorrow. I probably shouldn’t buy anything though…. I just bought two cakes online today….

Categories: Old Xanga posts · Teas
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