2016 Slumbering Dragon

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Pu Erh Tea
Flavors
Bitter, Fruity, Astringent, Bark, Fir, Forest Floor, Sweet, Cream, Sour, Vegetal, Herbs, Pleasantly Sour, Citrus Fruits, Mineral, Citrus, Creamy, Green, Nuts, Pineapple, Sage
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Crimson Lotus Tea
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 3 oz / 103 ml

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14 Tasting Notes View all

From Crimson Lotus Tea

This is a rare puerh. Of all the tea we sell this is the hardest to source and the hardest to pick. There is a village in Kunlu Shan that isn’t even on Google maps. Once you’re there you need to hike another 3 kilometers into the mountains to get to these trees. The hike is often steep. You gain 500 meters and it takes more than 3 hours to get there. No one there knows how long the trees have been there or anything about their history. When you ask locals the age they simply reply that they are as old as the earth itself.

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14 Tasting Notes

1113 tasting notes

https://m.imgur.com/gallery/KeRON

Wild look. Wild aroma. Wild taste.

Comparable to a wild oolong more so than a young sheng. Light and savory in a way that says ‘welcome to my jungle like taste’

A wonderful treat meant to be drank asap as many wild teas before the wild things are lost in the jungle.

andresito

I had a very different experience…I’ll have to try it again with different brewing parameters, but last time I tried it my takeaway was this needs quite a bit of aging, indirectly confirmed by CLT himself when he said the 2014 is not bitter anymore.

Liquid Proust

Wasn’t bitter at all for me. This was from a cake.

mcrdotcom

What leaf/water ratio are you using? Stuffs fairly potent, but the bitterness doesn’t but me off at all, I loved it! I can see less leaf making it more palatable though, which I’ll try next time! But definitely think a 10 year old cake would be delicious!

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67 tasting notes

Really looking forward to getting this tea, but after my first session…hmm…I’m honestly hesitant to venture back for a second session.

First whiff of the aroma was like WHOA! This is powerful aroma. I want this in my teacup!! Smells like the sweetest Jingmai you ever had.

Brewing: 2x rinse, bone china gaiwan. Aroma of wet leaves changed to a rich fryer oil-like aroma sort of like funnel cake (in a good way), not the fruity sweet of the dry leaves.

Steeps 1-3: steeped 5s each. Deep, thick, mouth coating, back of the throat, lingering, heavy waxy bitter, that never turns sweet. Ever try bear gallbladder (TCM folks?)…its that kind of bitter. There’s a rich sweetness present that is trying to peek out and say hi, but that bitter just shoves it back down. I really diluted my chahai halfway with water and the tea became somewhat more palatable, but not really enjoyable. I’m struggling at this point. But venturing on.

Steeps 4-5: Steeped barely a second, trying to reduce bitter to something I could drink. It kinda worked. This tea needs VERY quick steeps. There is a thickness and rich sweetness you want to enjoy, its definitely there, but the intense bitterness on the back of the tongue really dominates.

There’s some chaqi. Ever eat something so sour you get goosebumps, sweat, and takes your breath away? Kinda like that, except its from bitterness. I got goosebumps from this tea. Strong cooling huigan after taking just a sip, very nice. If you can get past this unique bitterness and look at the other aspects of this tea…I don’t know.

Not sure I’ll be drinking much of this. I think its going into storage for quite a while. Its just too bitter for me. I’ll probably sample a bit here and there to see if it grows on me. At the moment I would say its undrinkable. So I hope it ages well.

All that said, this is definitely high quality leaf material. That much is evident. But unfortunately its just personally not my cup of tea. For the price, I really wish I could have tried a sample first.

Crimson Lotus Tea

I appreciate the review. This is one of those interesting teas that either fully grabs you or fully pushes you away. It is what it is and it isn’t ashamed. That high bitterness does fade in a year or two. The material we have from 2014 is much smoother now.

andresito

I’ll revisit every six months to see how its doing. There are lots of great qualities to this tea, so I’m really hoping they’ll stand out as the bitterness fades.

mcrdotcom

Try a lower leaf/water ratio maybe? The aroma is so intense and the aftertaste forever lingering, perhaps 3g/100mL would yield a fruity and palatable experience?

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97
38 tasting notes

What? I never did a 2015 review. Bad, bad on me. I had so much fun sharing the previous incarnation of this with everyone I know… and my green tea loving sister loved it… it was the only sheng she actually liked… and I tried a lot of fancy teas on her, including a few high end w2t club ones. I am pretty sure my family is biased Kunlu, it’s also dad’s favorite shou.

Kunlu gushu tastes like the wild. Instantly transporting to a forest in the middle of nowhere.

So the kunlu sheng is much less pineappley than the younger trees… but has this really great wild after taste lovers of the 2015 version will instantly recognize. The wildness that evolves and changes as the tea matures.

I will update this after I try the cake version, as well as do a side by side comparison with the 2015 (please remind me, I have one more maocha sample session left and half a cake coming) but wanted to share some initial impressions with people before these went on sale. Because they went fast last year.

So if you tried a sample last year and loved it, the good news is… you are getting a tea with very much the same character as last year. The second time I tried it I was able to confirm this.

What is different?

The aroma. Goodness! This year has aroma in spades. Like I had a small sample of this with some jian shui cups come in the mail last month… and as soon as I stepped out of my car, about 10 foot for the door step, I was all kunlu? o.O? At around 3 feet, everything still sealed was Kunlu! o.O it is delightfully pungent. I’m not sure if this is because it is maocha rather than a cake, or this year is just super pungent.

Also, beneath its still upfront wildness, there is a bit more of a fruity note than I detected last year. Almost a pear.

Also… longetivity… this baby goes on forever and ever until you are done with foresty tastes and decide to grandpa it. I don’t think I’ve ever found Kunlu’s end by gongfu alone…

I need to session more with this to find subtle differences… and how diff notes aged out… but more or less, if last year’s was your jam, chances are you will love this one too. It is a worthy sequel.

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