65

So I still have a couple of these and had brought one to work at one point in case of pu-erh emergency. I decided to make this in my perfect tea mug with a western gongfu hybrid. After my attempt to brew the Chenpi Ripe Tangering pu-erh Western style the other day, I thought I’d better try a rinse. I got the water to a boil then did a ten second rinse. It smelled very earthy and dark (and a little fishy) after this so I did another ten second rinse. Still smells earthy, dark and strong but not offensive. The tuo pretty much collapsed at this point and my infuser is fall of very finely ground leaves, like coffee grinds (I see I had that experience with this the first time as well).

After all this, I gave it a 30 second steep which yields an aroma of earth, barn and mushrooms. Maybe damp hay. Not offensive, just strong. Like a farm, but not unpleasant. I swear! It’s not that it smells like manure, but it does smell like a wooden structure that’s lived in by animals. I think people with a rural sensibility might understand that. Or I’m crazy. :)

So indtead of writing the rest of this note, I accidentally talked with a co-worker for a while. Whoops. Impressions from the past are: it wasn’t very strong in flavour, despite the depth of colour and aroma. I was probably a little skimpy on time given the two rinses BUT leaving it like this kept it fairly fresh and allowed me to sip along mindlessly which was actually perfect in the circumstance. No strong notes really came to the fore, so my assessment of this now (with more pu under my belt) is that it is good for a casual puerh when I want something rich but am not in the mood for black tea. It’s a beginner puerh, which makes sense given that it’s a mini tuocha with tiny leaves. I’m gonna go make more now…

Anlina

Haha I’m a city person mostly, but I totally get the barn smell. It’s like clean animals and hay and fresh straw and outdoors and all those different scents that combine to make that barn smell.

AllanK

How many tuochas did you use for your mug? A twelve ounce mug really needs 2 tuochas. You might get better results.

Uniquity

Allan, I’ve had particular tea before with a stronger taste and it was not so pleasant. Surprisingly, this followed the recommendations of Teavivre (at least from two years ago when I first received it). I personally wouldn’t want two.

Uniquity

Wooooow. Just looked at Teavivre’s new recommendations for this tea Western style:
Teapot 8oz Tea:2p 5-8 min 100ºC/212ºF
That would be beyond undrinkable for me. I might try it as an experiment someday as I have been surprised before. But wow.

Starfevre

what, exactly, constitutes a pu-er emergency?

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Anlina

Haha I’m a city person mostly, but I totally get the barn smell. It’s like clean animals and hay and fresh straw and outdoors and all those different scents that combine to make that barn smell.

AllanK

How many tuochas did you use for your mug? A twelve ounce mug really needs 2 tuochas. You might get better results.

Uniquity

Allan, I’ve had particular tea before with a stronger taste and it was not so pleasant. Surprisingly, this followed the recommendations of Teavivre (at least from two years ago when I first received it). I personally wouldn’t want two.

Uniquity

Wooooow. Just looked at Teavivre’s new recommendations for this tea Western style:
Teapot 8oz Tea:2p 5-8 min 100ºC/212ºF
That would be beyond undrinkable for me. I might try it as an experiment someday as I have been surprised before. But wow.

Starfevre

what, exactly, constitutes a pu-er emergency?

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

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Bio

I’ve been drinking loose tea since 2010 and my tastes have changed a lot over those years. For the last few, I’ve been a fan of unflavoured Chinese blacks and shu puerh. I still drink other things, but that’s where I am.

I live in a rural area with my husband, cat, and soon to be firstborn. I love tea, reading, doctor who, knitting, crosswords, board games, the marvel universe, and lots of other things.

I’m not often rating teas numerically any more but I want to leave this to explain my past ratings:
I try to only log teas once or twice because I drink a lot of the same ones repeatedly. My rating is based on my perception of the tea at first tasting and is adjusted if anything notable occurs in subsequent cups. I may also factor in the price and customer service but try to note that when I can.

81 – 100: These are great teas, I love them, regularly stock them or savour them as unique treats.
71 – 80: These are solid. I drink them, I like them, I may or may not keep them on hand regularly. This is still good stuff.
61 – 70: Just okay. I can drink it, but it doesn’t stand out to me. Might be lower quality, not to my taste, or outside my comfort zone.
41 – 60: Not likely to keep drinking…hoping hubby will enjoy!
0 – 40: No thank you, please. Take it away and don’t make me finish the cup.

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Canada

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