Mandala "Wild Monk" Tea - Mao Cha

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Dark Bittersweet, Lemon, Sour, Tangy, Fruity, Peach, Smoke, Spices, Vegetal, Musty, Spicy
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by adagio breeze
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 30 sec 7 g 9 oz / 253 ml

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36 Tasting Notes View all

From Mandala Tea

Many in the West have never tried pu’er tea, let alone a mao cha. Mao cha translates to “unfinished tea”. It is the sun-dried form of the leaf before it is steamed and pressed into cakes and made into a green style pu’er.

This particular mao cha is very special in that it was picked from tea trees grown entirely in the wild, surrounded by all the native floral and fauna, exposed to nothing but clean air, high-altitude and sunshine. The tea grows quite dark, almost purple as it has adapted to the high levels in sunshine, protecting itself from the UV rays. For us humans that means we get a tea that is even higher in antioxidants.

This is a product of our April 2012 buying trip to China. We are so excited by this tea and have commissioned the pressing of 300 cakes of this leaf for long-term storage and aging. Customers are raving about this tea and we have had many repeat buys!

Almost no bitterness is present in the infused tea liquor, even when brewing at higher temps, though most of our customers are enjoying this at water temps of 175 to 190 degrees. This is delicious in the tea glass style of brewing, as well, but should definitely be enjoyed gongfu style at least once!

The dry leaf has a sweet, smoky aroma and even those who have not been fans of smoke are enjoying this tea. So sweet and full in the mouth with a tea energy that will leave you feeling fantastic! You will keep coming back for more!

We are so excited to be one of the first tea companies in the US to offer mao cha to our customers. And this tea is much worthy of the rave reviews it is getting!

Check out this tea made into a 100 gram pu’er cake commissioned by Mandala Tea!

About Mandala Tea View company

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36 Tasting Notes

91
189 tasting notes

Such an amazing blend of citrus-flavored green pu-erh leaves-beautiful to look at as they unfurl in my SamaDoyo glass mug, but even better to drink. No trace of bitterness with a thirst-quenching snap! Love it!

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec
Garret

Hi Doug! Thanks for writing up your thoughts on this tea! This particular mao cha is the autumn 2013 picked. Great stuff now, better in 1 year. I just had 500 cakes of this same mao cha pressed into pu’er in China. If you haven’t tried the Wild Monk cake from spring 2012, I recommend it. Our customers are flying through it here, but we still have 200 or so cakes left. Definitely worth the try. You will see differences and similarities between it and what you are sipping right now.

It’s what I drank before and after my 6 mile cold and snowy run this morning. It kept me feeling light and strong!
Grateful,
Garret

Doug F

Hi Garret, I do have the small cake, but I wanted to try it again before writing a review. Maybe this evening after I make my way home in yet another snowstorm.

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90
142 tasting notes

So, from someone almost entirely new to pu’er, I’m a fan. And I can see why people become so devoted. We’re getting a lot of ‘light’ and ‘fresh’ type reviews from the pu’er devotee crowd, and that’s absolutely right, but from the ‘newer to pu’er’ perspective, it still has that pu’er funk in a way that leaves you wanting more. This is a bugger since I’m consciously putting off my anticipated future plunge into pu’er, and I can already feel the cravings coming on. For now, the plan is just to keep this one in stock as long as possible, since it’s hard to imagine being any happier with a single pu’er on hand.

Stephanie

You started with a very good one. Every time I try a new sheng I compare it to this! You will certainly come across some that are funky in a bad way.

Flowery

Glad to hear that. When the time comes, I’ll have to dig into your tasting notes on them!

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93
353 tasting notes

This was delicious. I’m so glad I got a sample of this with my last order because I doubt I would have ordered it for myself. The flavor is subtle and it’s hard to tease apart the different flavors. It’s a little sweet, a little smoky, and perfectly smooth going down.

I’ll have to make another mug of this when I’m not in a hurry in the morning and just in need of a caffeine fix. This is a tea to be savored.

This is the first raw pu’erh I’ve tried, and I think I’ll try some more. I haven’t been terribly impressed with the aged ones.

Preparation
3 min, 0 sec
Dexter

Wild Monk is really nice. If you are looking for other milder, more subtle sheng pu’erh, may I suggest Mandala’s Silver Buds Raw. They sell it in loose form and in cakes. I loved the loose sample so much that I bought more loose and a cake!! It’s like a white tea pu’erh – really nice and gentle, subtle. Just a suggestion….

Debbie

Thanks! I will try them when I next place an order. I have a ton of tea to go through though…

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92
22 tasting notes

This tea is wild alright – visually It looks like someone raked their tea lawn and put the leaves in a bag. The leaves themselves are actually purple too. How cool is that?

The sparse nature of the wild “lawn clipping” style leaves and deceptively faint aroma of the dry leaf brews a shockingly full bodied cup of tea with a range of taste somewhere between dry, herbaceous chinese green and smokey ripe pu’er. Its quite remarkable, this tea borrows from both sides of the spectrum while standing distinctly on its own. This was my first ever Mao Cha style tea… up to this point I have never tasted anything quite like it.

The energy of Wild Monk is penetrating, as is the flavor if left to brew for too long. I would suggest shorter steepings around a minute. The first few brews tend to be dominated by hay and a well balanced meditative smokiness while the later brews bring a bit of citrus and sweet shellfish to the mix.

Main notes to my palate are:

Hay
Smoke
Malty/Citrus
Shellfish (mild)
Sweet (mild)

While not a daily drinker for me, it is an enjoyable cup of tea and its nice to know I have it when i’m in the mood for something off the path of conventional flavors. Overall i’m rating this tea highly because it is so unique, wonderfully complex and for lack of a a more tactful word, powerful.

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 1 min, 15 sec
Garret

I really enjoyed reading your review, as did my fellow biz owners here at Mandala Tea. Thank you for the writing, my friend. The Wild Monk was one of the teas that I tasted directly from the grower and kept coming back to for days, even though I had many teas at my disposal. It’s neat to see how the tea has changed over the months since I purchased it and I really look forward to tasting the changes within the cakes of it that I had pressed.

Wishing you all the joy you can stand!

Sixie

Thanks Garret, very cool of you to respond and I really enjoyed your hand written note (its taped to the inside of my tea cabinet) and extra pu’er samples in my last order. I have nothing but great things to say about Mandala teas! You’re becoming somewhat of a steepster celebrity if I say so myself. Keep up the great work :)

After writing this review, I spent a good chunk of time dedicating myself to more Wild Monk. I experimented with different brew times and have settled on a regiment of 1-1.5 minute brews as my favorite. This tea is remarkable in that you can get so many vastly different flavors and intensities with relatively little manipulation of temperature and brew time. After reading some of your comments on other Wild Monk reviews, I agree that this tea takes on a bit of a trippy note, especially with the stronger brews. I have a penchant for the bizarre and unique and this tea is right up my alley.

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92
20 tasting notes

This was my first pu-erh and I was blown away. I loved the smoky sweetness of this tea. Each re-steep was a little less smoky and a little sweeter- and each cup was delicious. At work today all I could think about was getting home to have a cup of Wild Monk. Yay- it’s Friday and I have all weekend to drink tea. I think I’m hooked…..

Garret

Just drank this here in the shop with an old friend of mine! He was so excited by it. Sad to say, though, that this mao cha is nearly gone. Only a few ounces left. But, the good news is that we still have 250 cakes of it left. I had the cakes pressed of this very mao cha and I’m so glad I did. I thought we would have the mao cha around for years – I did not know that it was going to be so very popular! So it’s bittersweet to see the leaf almost depleted, but happy that the pu’er is around. And the neat thing about the pu’er is that it will keep improving. Mao cha typically is good for 4,5 years and then begins to decline. Thanks for writing this up, my friend!!

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98
5 tasting notes

I decided to pick this tea up on a whim while I was in the store last week. They had this prepared as a sample, and I was really delighted by the sample. Honestly as much as I enjoyed the sample I had no idea how fun this tea would be to prepare at home. I put about 4g of tea in my gaiwan and for this particular tasting I used a lower temp water around 175 degrees. For the first steep I went with 20 seconds and added about 10 seconds per subsequent infusion. The first few infusions the smoky flavor was the most obvious note, but later infusions were more mild and surprisingly sweet. There was even an almost floral purfumey taste coming out that almost reminds me of an oolong. I’m currently on the eighth infusion and I could definitely get a few more. I’m really glad I decided to pick this up!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 30 sec
Garret

Thank you for writing up your thoughts on this tea, my friend! I just secured this years crop of the same mao cha from the same farm. I’m excited about that. Also… you may be interested sometime in trying out the pu’er that I had pressed from this very same leaf, the Wild Monk cake. While the mao cha is great for 4 or 5 years, the pu’er will keep getting more flavor over the years.

I’m so glad that you stopped into the shop last week. Thank you!

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95
4 tasting notes

I’m not usually a fan of the smokey sheng puerhs, but this one is amazing! After a quick rinse in my yixing teapot this tea was ready to go. I had multiple short steepings each one more complex than the last. My first steepings were more of the smokey flavor but after the third it mellowed out and left me with the most amazing subtle lemon aftertaste. I really enjoyed my free sample and will be ordering more very soon!

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec
Garret

I’m really happy that you enjoyed this tea! The instant I did my first session of tea with this when I was in Yong De in April, I fell in love with it. Dang sure, there’s an anti-depressant built-in, cause it just makes me feel great! Thanks so much for the review, my friend!

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80
695 tasting notes

I’m treating this tea more delicately, this morning’s session with my mother was much better. The steep time and temp were both lower resulting in a smoother and nuanced experience. These leaves really have legs too so the infusions go on and on.

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85
485 tasting notes

Got this in a puerh starter-package from LP quite a while ago. Used the whole 4.5g in a 100mL gaiwan. Aroma was kind of bitter vegetal with a hint of smoke – not enough to worry me or anything though.

First steep I got some vegetal bitterness and spiciness with apricot and slight wisp of smoke in the aftertaste. Next steep, the vegetal flavor reminded me more specifically of asparagus and the apricot afteraste got a little sweeter – same otherwise. Over the next couple steeps, the bitterness mostly left, and the fruitiness came to the fore with a light smoky aftertaste. The next 5 steeps or so were pretty consistent, with a distinct peach flavor followed by the same smoky aftertaste. The tea had pretty decent body to it. For these steeps it seriously tasted almost exactly like that Arizona Peach tea you can get in a can, but without the crazy sugar levels.

I got about a dozen good steeps off of this tea, and I did go decently light on the leaf. Not sure if it’s the same as the Wild Monk cakes currently available on Mandala’s site, but when I finally get around to making an order with them, I’ll be sure to at least get some more to try. This was pretty good.

I didn’t get much body feeling from this tea. The early steeps gave a slight buzzing feeling on the tongue, but other than that, no noticeable qi or anything for me. Possibly due to lighter leaf, but this one might just not possess those qualities.

Flavors: Fruity, Peach, Smoke, Spices, Vegetal

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML
Garret

This same mao cha was what was used to press the 2014 Wild Monk pu’er cakes. I’m glad you enjoyed it. We have a local coffee shop that we source for and they go through this stuff like, well, wild monks! You can go stronger on the leaf, but with these younger purple leaf teas, I like doing lower temps for the first few years, 195 or so, if I’m leafing it up. There is much energy to be had in this tea. Buzzed, Garret

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78
15061 tasting notes

Wishlist tea from dexter and my last puerh for today. I’ve been sipping on this one all afternoon – i prefer wild monk cake form, but it was nice to revisit this one over the afternoon. Steeped at cool temps for short infusions, a mild tea, with just a little sweetness to it. There’s some smokey notes, but not as strong with the cake. a slight bitterness in later steepings but overall very enjoyable. thanks dexter!

Final Count: 124 (since i doubt i’ll get more sipdowns in tonight if i have more tea.)

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