1975 Wenshan Baozhong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Oolong Tea
Flavors
Autumn Leaf Pile, Clay, Sweet, Wet Rocks, Astringent, Metallic, Sand, Wood
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by curlygc
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 6 g 3 oz / 95 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “So the one I ordered at the end of last year was a 1973 Wenshan Baozhong and that is what’s written on the tea I received. However, since it’s no longer on the site and I can’t verify one way or...” Read full tasting note
    91
  • “Such a Great tea. A nice smooth somewhat oily soup with a burgundy colour and a very nice and smooth mouthfeel with a hint of astringency in it. A sandy sort of claylike taste with a minerally...” Read full tasting note
    91

From Chayo Tea

What were you doing in 1975?

This 1975 Wenshan Baozhong was being plucked and processed that year and since then it has been stored and kept safe in order to age and change like a phoenix rising from the flames.

If you have ever tried green baozhong, you will be surprised by this taste!

All the green is gone, and what is left is a sweet, deep, earthy, long lasting, slightly spicy taste.

About Chayo Tea View company

Company description not available.

2 Tasting Notes

91
98 tasting notes

So the one I ordered at the end of last year was a 1973 Wenshan Baozhong and that is what’s written on the tea I received. However, since it’s no longer on the site and I can’t verify one way or the other I will leave my review here.
-
Dry leaves smell of petrichor, clay, old leaves and a hit of coffee.
Wet leaves smell of old wet winter leaves, clay, with a note of prunes.
This is the darkest rinse I’ve ever seen!

Steep/Time: Notes
1/5s: Very, very smooth. Sweet with old leaves and clay. Reminiscent of shou puer, but very, very clean.

2/5s: Sweet, smooth, tastes of wet winter leaves. (Think of the smell of a pile of leaves you find buried under snow). No bitterness or astringency to speak of.

3/10s: Sames previous. Picking up a bit more of that petrichor/mineral note. Not at all overwhelming. Perhaps the tiniest bit of astringency in the finish.

4/12s: I’m actually enjoying this petrichor/mineral note. It’s that smell of newly fallen rain on hot stone, with wet leaves. It’s sweet and smooth. Wasn’t sure in the previous steep, but this tea does indeed have a bit of gentle cha qi.

5/18s: Speeding up time between steeps definitely kicks up the qi. Sweet, smooth.

6/25s: Same

7/30s: The sweetness is blossoming more. Not as much wet old leaf taste in this steep. Just sweet smoothness and petrichor.

8-14/?s: These I just let sit and pour and sip and sip and sip. Same taste profile as steep 7 for the most part.

I just moved the leaves to my larger oolong pot (250mL) it just struck me that the smell I’m describing as petrichor is the aroma of a genuine yixing teapot after its seasoning boil. The smell of wet stone earth. :) I’ll drink to that!

15/???s: I let this steep through my meeting and man is this good! Tastes like a really clean shou puer with that oddly pleasant petrichor/mineral note a bit more subdued.

16/???s: This has to be what the original creators of shou puer were hoping to create. Really, really good!

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Clay, Sweet, Wet Rocks

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 90 ML

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91
9 tasting notes

Such a Great tea.

A nice smooth somewhat oily soup with a burgundy colour and a very nice and smooth mouthfeel with a hint of astringency in it.

A sandy sort of claylike taste with a minerally metallic sort of astringency that doesn’t quite dry the moth but is rather smooth and is a bit rounded of by a sweetness that increases with steepings.

There is a hint of wood that is both wet like the smell of a carr yet dry like a piece of wood that has floated ashore on a beach and dried in the sun.

Reminds me of sitting and watching the sun set in the eaarly autumn on a cliff near a small lake with a cuneiformous forest in the back, a small sandy beach to the side below the cliff that has some birches growing near a grassy patch with their leaves rustling in the wind.

Flavors: Astringent, Clay, Metallic, Sand, Wood

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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