2004 Dry Stored Pinglin Baozhong oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Apricot, Floral, Grass, Grass Seed, Honey, Lemon, Lemon Zest, Nectar, Petrichor, Popcorn, Shellfish, Smooth, Soil, Stonefruit, Sweet, Thick
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 5 oz / 150 ml

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  • “I have tried to sample a number of aged oolongs recently to expand my horizons. Usually, I find that they don’t offer a sufficient quality/price ratio as compared to most other tea categories. This...” Read full tasting note
    92

From TheTea

Meeting new teas is never ending educational process. This tea comes from the same farmer like 1999 Baozhong you can find on our offer. But this one is little bit younger. Some of you can have big fun comparing 1999 and 2004 tea created by the same person. Traditionally made Baozong oolong stored for 16 years in the farmer’s house near Pinglin. It was also super dry storage we can call “sealed storage” – with no moisture and air access to the tea. Tea tastes much more younger than most of Baozhongs from this period I have had but dry storage created really interesting layers of taste and especially aftertaste. Dry leaves smells similar to yancha – roasty, nutty, full of red fruits nuances. Liquor is thick, oily – with strong flowery, honey and dried lemon peel notes. Some typical for aged Baozhong wood flavour is here too. Aftertaste is very sweet and long lasting. Brewing tip: use the scale because leaves are really light. With 6g of tea my 110ml gaiwan is totally full of them. Powerful tea.

Origin: Pinglin, New Taipei City, Taiwan.
Harvest: circa 2004
Tea cultivar Qing Xin oolong

About TheTea View company

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1 Tasting Note

92
956 tasting notes

I have tried to sample a number of aged oolongs recently to expand my horizons. Usually, I find that they don’t offer a sufficient quality/price ratio as compared to most other tea categories. This is the first one that I reordered after trying, which may tell you a bit about my feelings towards it :)

The dry leaf aroma is spicy and nutty with hints of grass and fenugreek seeds, as well as stonefruit pits. When smelling wet leaves, I can imagine biting into an apricot at a grassy meadow after summer rain.

The taste is warming, smooth, and floral. First infusion reminds me of shellfish, summer honey, roasted lemons and popcorn. The second one has even stronger lemon peel flavour. Later I could also taste nettle. The mouthfeel is syrupy and quite thick.

One of the highlights is the pungent and protracted aftertaste with complex florals and nectar flavour. There is also a very interesting mouthfeel after swallowing. It is tempting to describe it as numbing and on the drier side, but in fact it is neither. I feel almost as if my mouth was completely overwhelmed by the sweet florals and therefore sending contradictory signals to the brain.

To top the experince, I have to say that the cha qi is top notch too. It is very grounding and quite chest focused.

Flavors: Apricot, Floral, Grass, Grass Seed, Honey, Lemon, Lemon Zest, Nectar, Petrichor, Popcorn, Shellfish, Smooth, Soil, Stonefruit, Sweet, Thick

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 5 OZ / 150 ML

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