2003 Yiwu Zhengshan Old Tree

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by Steve GW
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 1 min, 30 sec 5 g 5 oz / 150 ml

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From PuerhShop.com

Yiwu Zhengshan Old Tree Round Tea Cake (易武正山古树茶园饼)

From famous Yiwu Manluo Tea Factory comes this semi-aged tea cake, a classic Yiwu.

The cake is made of tea leaves harvested in Spring from Yiwu mountain, considering it a truly authentic rare and unique Pu-erh tea. It went into aging in a dry storage that delivered a taste of a good green Pu-erh that was in its adolescent age.

Green Pu-erh tea cake 400g
Vintage 2003
Naturely fermented from Raw/Green
Premium class
Loose tea leaves
Caffeine: Moderate
Special-Reserve

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2 Tasting Notes

187 tasting notes

Dry – Faint mellow sweetness, aged woodiness, mint?
Wet – Sweet, somewhat fruity and floral bitterness, camphor, citrus-lemons
Liquor – Golden to Bright-Bronze.

5gm in 150ml Porcelain Gaiwan

1st 20secs – Strong citrus notes with sweetness that is very apparent in the mouth. As it goes down, it is still critrusy but wears a slight vegetal taste that hides behind the lemon like notes and slight tobacco hints. Strong citrus and camphor at the end.

2nd 20secs – Strong citrus notes along some floral bitterness up front. As it goes down, it becomes mellow and coats the tongue with medium body thickness that also opens to the vegetal/tobacco notes. The finish is citrusy and minty.

3rd 18secs – Strong cirtusy notes, very apparent tobacco notes with floral tart/bittersweet notes up front. As it goes down, it mellows down and has a somewhat vegetal body and some sweeter hints that seem more natural for the age. The finish is now more pleasant but still has a very strong citrusy-lemon like taste and strong camphor.

Final Notes
As I continued to steep the citrus and minty essence started to fade and the tobacco-vegetal taste was more apparent but pleasant with a faint floral sweetness. I’d like to say that the initial citrus and ‘camphor’ was pleasant but the truth is that it tasted somewhat like leaving a lemon-lyptus balm in the vicinity of the cake, it was minty rather than having a strong camphor. The tea was sweet at first but again it didn’t taste like what a 2003 sweetness should taste (to me, this is an opinion). The later steeps do have a sweetness that to me match what a Yiwu should taste like.

I retried this cake a week later after leaving to air a bit in a glazed clay container with out the lid. It was like having a completely different cake. sigh

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 g 5 OZ / 150 ML
Yang-chu

Different, not in a good way, I suppose.

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557 tasting notes

Not bad at all for a raw/sheng puerh, im not a big fan of sheng but this one is nice.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 30 sec

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