2010 Bai Sha Xi "Tian Jian" Hunan Hand-Roasted Hei Cha

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Bitter, Smoke, Fish Broth, Fruity, Pleasantly Sour, Seaweed, Smooth, Sweet, Thick, Tar, Tobacco, Brown Sugar, Pine, Salt, Scotch, Wood, Mineral, Roasted, Salty, Vegetal
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by shakirah1984
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 3 oz / 99 ml

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From Our Community

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14 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I didn’t especially like this tea, and that surprised me. It’s definitely smoky, and smoke is one of my favourite flavours in pretty much any context. However, unlike other smoky hei chas I’ve...” Read full tasting note
    50
  • “108/365 Moving swiftly on from Yunomi’s Awa Bancha…This is actually the last of my Dark Matter teas, and I will honestly miss having a stack of different samples like this to try. It’s been both...” Read full tasting note
    70
  • “I thought drinking this hei cha when I was sick would be a good idea. I was wrong. Wrong, wrong, wrong. It tasted like dust. :( But it’s not the tea’s fault.” Read full tasting note
  • “From Dark Matter 2016: Anyone remember that “hangover cure” concoction from the movie Heathers? I kept thinking that’s what this would taste like if I added some OJ. My palate is definately...” Read full tasting note
    28

From Yunnan Sourcing

2010 Bai Sha Xi “Tian Jian” An Hua Hand-Roasted Hei Cha * 50 grams

A relatively rare production from the Bai Sha Xi tea factory in An Hua county of Hunan. Tian Jian tea is created through a special fermentation process that takes longer than black tea but considerably less time than ripe pu-erh. The tea is then roasted over pine fire by hand to dry it. Tian Jian is one of 7 types of “Jian” class hei cha produced in An Hua county of Hunan.

The taste is strong and full in the mouth with hints of tobacco and pine smoke, but with a heavy thick sweetness and a golden viscous tea soup.

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

Company description not available.

14 Tasting Notes

1113 tasting notes

Thank you AllanK for sending me a sample of this prior to Dark Matter 2016.
I went ahead an rinsed this tea and then threw out the first steep just to be safe so I wouldn’t have the same experience as Allan. About four steeps in I am noticing one aspect that I dislike in general which is the dryness around the sides of my mouth. While that isn’t pleasant, the taste is rather interesting in a way that I enjoy. There is a touch of mossy grass hiding behind a light ‘ripe’ like taste. Lots going on with this tea is you take time to taste it all; hints of salt, scent of minor smoke that doesn’t carry over to the taste, and an odd taste of ‘old tea’.
I am already pretty certain that most people won’t enjoy this tea when they try it, but there really is a lot going on with tea all while keeping me interested in pinning down the mixture of these taste. Wishing that the dryness would not be an aspect, I still feel like this will be a tea for others to experience and be thankful that they did get to try a roasted hei cha regardless if it leaves positive or negative thoughts after.

In the end: I shall call this the roasted moss dashed with sugar and salt. :)

boychik

I’m so curious by now

AllanK

Sounds like you liked it more than me.

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40
1758 tasting notes

I can’t get away from one thing about this tea. It has a downright unpleasant taste to it, don’t know how to describe the note. The first thought that popped into my head was drain cleaner. While I’m sure that is an extreme exaggeration I didn’t like this tea. It was also very smoky in the first couple of infusions. I alternated between adding sugar to this and not adding sugar. Sugar did a fair job of covering up the unpleasant note. I’m glad I only bought 50g of the stuff. I wonder if all Tian Jian are like this or just this one tea. I am curious enough that I might try some of Scott’s other offerings the next time I order from the China site. I often find that Hei Cha is trying to imitate puerh and not doing a very good job of it. The one thing I will say about this is I didn’t really get any fermentation notes from it.

I brewed this eight times in a 120ml gaiwan with 7.3g leaf and boiling water. I gave it a 10 second rinse and a 10 minute rest. I steeped it for 5 sec, 5 sec, 7 sec, 10 sec, 15 sec, 20 sec, 25 sec, and 30 sec.

Preparation
Boiling 7 g 4 OZ / 120 ML

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3294 tasting notes

Here’s another Hei Cha that I got from YS. This one reminds me of a cross between a Keemun, with it’s brown sugar pine smoke, & a Ripe Pu-erh, with a little earthiness. This is a rich & tasty cup!

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