Misty peaks MaoCha 2013

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Fruity
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Marcus reed
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 5 oz / 150 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “GCTTB pulled this one from the tea box and thought i’d give it a shot this morning. I’ve been drinking it since i woke up and i’m not entirely convinced this is a sheng for me. Not surprising...” Read full tasting note
    71
  • “This is not a powerhouse tea, but one of subtlety and presence. It has a gentle fruitiness I associate with Yiwu, lovely large leaves, and is relaxing and contemplative. I am enjoying it.” Read full tasting note
    88
  • “Backlog from last night. GCTTB4 Many thanks to Ubacat for adding this to the box! I had about half the sample last night in my gaiwan. I got about 10 steeps before I called it a night. I used...” Read full tasting note

From Misty Peak Teas

Misty Peak Teas provides you the World’s oldest tea in its purest form, sourced from 200 year old trees. Our tea can be found in 350 stores around the world. Home of the #1 top rated Pu’er tea out of over 3,100 teas.

The taste of change with the complexity that comes with aging. The leaves have now endured Spring and Summer and have absorbed so much as the seasons change. The complexity of Autumn’s Puer allows for a tea that starts with a rich plum flavor and evolves into sweet peach notes, while holding a gold amber hue throughout the steepings. The deep mineral and stone fruit taste has this tea aging into something so different with each passing month. Once one sits with this tea, they will notice complete relaxation as the Autumn tea calms the body and mind.

About Misty Peak Teas View company

Misty Peak Teas offers the world's oldest tea, Pu'er, as it never has been before. We connect the tea drinker with the tea farmer; allowing each person a chance to understand the many benefits and interests in this timeless leaf, as it was thousands of years ago. Misty Peak Teas is dedicated to providing the highest quality while allowing the farmer a fair value for their crop and the world a chance to enjoy an incredible pure tea.

3 Tasting Notes

71
15019 tasting notes

GCTTB
pulled this one from the tea box and thought i’d give it a shot this morning. I’ve been drinking it since i woke up and i’m not entirely convinced this is a sheng for me. Not surprising really, since i tend to prefer shou. I am happy for the taste though. It was a more subtle tea – hay and sweetness for the most part. nice but not amazing.

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88
63 tasting notes

This is not a powerhouse tea, but one of subtlety and presence. It has a gentle fruitiness I associate with Yiwu, lovely large leaves, and is relaxing and contemplative. I am enjoying it.

Flavors: Fruity

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 5 OZ / 150 ML

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987 tasting notes

Backlog from last night.

GCTTB4

Many thanks to Ubacat for adding this to the box! I had about half the sample last night in my gaiwan. I got about 10 steeps before I called it a night.

I used 80-85C water, rinsed it for 2-5 seconds, then did steeps of 10s/10s/15s/15s/20s/20s/25s/30s/35s/40s.

All throughout, the tea was a lovely clear yellow. The taste remained quite consistent from steep to steep – a bit haylike, a bit fruity, a bit mineral. However, I did notice the mineral note become more prominent on the last 2 or 3 steeps.

By the time I was done, the leaves had greatly expanded in the cup, but they hadn’t completely unfurled – they were still quite twisted up.

Unfortunately, I noticed that as I drank this tea, I developed a stomachache. For the last year and a half I’ve had unusual stomachaches that I can’t pinpoint the cause of; I thought it was one of those. However, boychik wrote recently in a note for a different sheng that really young sheng gives him stomachaches, so I think the tea is a possible culprit. His sheng was from spring 2015 — quite a bit newer than this maocha. But still, I think it’s possible.

Despite this, I’m glad I got to try a new vendor. Thanks for adding it to the box, Ubacat!

looseTman

Christina, Did you drink this tea on an empty stomach?

Christina / BooksandTea

I had it about 2 hours after dinner. Dinner itself was a filet of fish, some salad, and some roasted veggies.

boychik

Well, I have to say I’m better now. Maybe because instead of avoiding it I drink it more often. Kinda training myself. Another tip is to limit steeps. Like 5 a day. And continue the next day. I do snack before and after. This tea didn’t give any problems. It’s not as green.

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