2017 Gu Hua Xiang Fall Jingu Raw Puerh

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Pu Erh Tea
Flavors
Astringent, Autumn Leaf Pile, Bitter, Bitter Melon, Floral, Honey, Raisins, Vegetal, Citrus, Green Wood, Melon, Mineral
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Mastress Alita
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 4 oz / 115 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Had some time before a doctor appointment today, so decided to get the little 180ml pumpkin pot out again and go through another of the old 2017 Dazzle Deer samplers. This time I’m taking on my...” Read full tasting note
    58
  • “Big burly leaves with a typical “sheng-y” smell. Brews a golden yellow. Low-moderate bitterness and astringency. Tastes of minerals, citrus, melon, and green wood. Nothing mind blowing, but a...” Read full tasting note
    84

From Dazzle Deer

普洱生茶谷花香

This is Dazzle Deer’s first cake, directly sourced from a farm in Jing Gu, Pu Er, Yun Nan Province.

Fall puerh is usually lighter than the spring tea, but with a stronger aroma. This is a great entry-level or every-day puerh with an affordable price, and it is a very delightful tea. The flavor is fruity, light, mellow, and comfortable, with no bitterness or astringency. We believe that with proper aging this tea can really shine.

The tea leaves were mix-picked from trees aged between 10 and 100 years old from Mr. Li’s tea garden. Due to the high volume of rain this year, the harvest time for fall tea was much earlier than usual.

PRODUCT INFO

-100g/cake
-Type: Raw Puerh
-Harvest Time: August 2017
-Origin: Bolin Village, Jinggu, Pu Er, Yun NanProvince, China
-Tea Garden Elevation: 5,570 ft – 7,874 ft (1,700 m – 2,400 m)
-Breed: Yun Nan large-leaf tea
-Flavor: Fruity, sweet, mellow
-Packaging: Double layer of cotton paper
-Shelf Life: Quality can be enhanced by aging
-Store in a cool, dry place. Avoid being exposed to light. Do not seal while aging.

HOW TO BREW

-Preferred in the Chinese Gongfu way
-Porcelain Gaiwan or Yixing clay teapot
-7g
-212℉ / 100℃
-Steep time: Rinse/10s/15s/20s/30s/45s/60s/75s/90s/120s/150s/180s/240s

About Dazzle Deer View company

Company description not available.

2 Tasting Notes

58
1217 tasting notes

Had some time before a doctor appointment today, so decided to get the little 180ml pumpkin pot out again and go through another of the old 2017 Dazzle Deer samplers. This time I’m taking on my least-liked tea-type, pu’erh. Though I admittedly have had much more experience with shou than sheng, so I wonder if I can get a different experience than the “dirt and marsh water” that I usually taste…

Used the full 7g sample and filled the pot to 140ml (so it wasn’t quite to its capacity) with 205F (lowered to 195F, and then 185F) water.

140ml miniature teapot | 7g | 205F (Dropped to 195F, 185F) | Rinse/10s/15s/10s/10s/10s/10s

The wet leaf after the rinse smells like wet autumn leaves, raisin, bitter melon, and sour vegetables. The first infusion has a surprisingly sweet/floral aroma!? As well as honey, and raisin and autumn leaf. I definitely have never had these kind of scents in a pu’erh before… and… it tastes good to me?! What the frack, this has a lightly floral (lilac? lotus?) taste, a touch of that fruity honeyed raisin quality, and then a slightly more bitter vegetal (cabbage?) finish. On the second infusion the tea had suddenly grown uncomfortably bitter (the description for the tea says it has “no bitterness or astringency” so I can’t help but feel like I’m doing something wrong?), so instead of increasing the steep times for each infusion like Dazzle Deer’s site had recommended, I decided to try sticking at the 10s and also lowered the water temp slightly to 195F. That helped some, but it still was a little more bitter/astringent than I prefer… What happened to that lovely first steep?! Lowering the water temperature even further (185F) helped a little, but I still felt an almost medicinal bitterness left afterwards on my tongue. Only by my sixth steep had it mellowed, but by then I was tired of the tea and ready to wrap up the session…

I think this is closer in flavor to something I would like (while I never seem to have much luck with shou, unless it is in flavored blends), if it weren’t for the bitterness that overtook the tea after the first steep. And I don’t know if that bitterness is a sheng problem or a Sara problem. Will need to explore further.

Flavors: Astringent, Autumn Leaf Pile, Bitter, Bitter Melon, Floral, Honey, Raisins, Vegetal

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 7 g 5 OZ / 140 ML
derk

Sounds like a typical young Jinggu sheng to me. The bitterness and astringency isn’t a Sara problem. A lot of young sheng possess both qualities. Supposedly they mellow in age and with the right storage conditions. Oh, if only you weren’t on a tea-buying and acceptance ban.

Mastress Alita

Isn’t three years aged though?!

derk

How’s your dashboard looking in comparison to recent? There’s a glitch on mine where my dashboard is missing notes from between 20 and 3 hours ago.

derk

Aged? Newp, it’s still a baby.

Mastress Alita

I still have those notes open on another tab, but on this one (new tab) I’m seeing the same thing. If you look at the Steepster Migration page, Ilya said a database table had been moved and things should’ve only been affected for a few seconds. I’ll go report it…

Mastress Alita

Bah, and here I’ve been dutifully trying to drink all my oldest teas (2017) for space/storage reasons! Three years certainly seems like a long time to me, hahaha! :-P

White Antlers

Sorry to butt in re: Dashboard. Mine is quite dysfunctional.

derk

Hide yo sheng, hide yo strife. Really, just toss all your sheng and shou in the back of a closet. Don’t let their presence feel like a burden. And one day when you find them, maybe they’ll have transformed a bit.

Mastress Alita

So how long is long enough, then?

derk

38 years.

derk

Next year, it will be 39 years.

derk

I kid. There are lots of factors involved, so I’ve read from my position in this here armchair. Over a few years, I have noticed changes in my sheng collection, both the sample bags that have remained closed with no humidity or temperature additions, and the cakes and open sample bags that are stored in crocks with added humidity to keep it around 65-70%. The ambient temp in my room is usually between 60 and 70 degrees.

Then there is the sample of tasteless sheng stored in a compartment in my truck. I’m really curious about how a year of that storage will turn out.

Martin Bednář

Just give it a try new and then… I don’t think there is some clear “long enough” time line. I liked very fresh ones and I liked as well aged ones.

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84
318 tasting notes

Big burly leaves with a typical “sheng-y” smell. Brews a golden yellow. Low-moderate bitterness and astringency. Tastes of minerals, citrus, melon, and green wood. Nothing mind blowing, but a pretty good and reasonably priced young sheng!

Flavors: Citrus, Green Wood, Melon, Mineral

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 90 ML

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