2006 Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Tea Tuocha 100g

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Pu Erh Tea Leaves
Flavors
Camphor, Floral, Freshly Cut Grass, Grapefruit, Hay, Honey, Menthol, Smoke, Stonefruit, Sugarcane, Wood, Astringent, Bitter, Spicy, Earth, Green, Sweet, Smoked, Musty, Spices, Leather, Plum, Tobacco, Apricot, Dried Fruit
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Low
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaVivre
Average preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec 7 g 48 oz / 1416 ml

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31 Tasting Notes View all

  • “So after realizing I didn’t buy any raw puerh earlier in the day on Cyber Monday, I really wanted to try some and so here we are. This is the first puerh I’ve had off a cake of sorts, this coming...” Read full tasting note
  • “Thank you Teavivre for this sample. The tea itself is a mixture of dark brown and light brown leaves compacted together into broken cake pieces. They have a sweet and earthy smell equal to most raw...” Read full tasting note
    84
  • “This is the 4th pu-erh toucha I have tried over the last two days, and the second from a sample pack I bought through Teavivre this past November, 2013. Age of leaf: July, 2006. Brewing guidelines:...” Read full tasting note
  • “Another free sample from Teavivre. Thank you. This is the last of the most recent batch of samples I was sent. I bought a sample of this tea some time back and really enjoyed it, although I did not...” Read full tasting note

From Teavivre

Origin: Fengqing(凤庆), Lincang, Yunnan, China

Ingredients: Made of 100% pure one bud with one to three tea leaves from 50 to 150 years fengqing large tea-leaf speices

Taste: Bright yellowish color, taste strong flavor of first sip, quick sweet after-taste

This 2006 Sheng Tuocha comes from Fengqing, Yunnan. Using Fengqing large tea species as material, it was made with the process of picking, rolling, drying and compressing. This Sheng Tuocha has strong taste of first sip. As a typical model of Yunnan Pu-erh tea, this Tuocha has pure sweet aftertaste, tight shape and soft leaves.

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31 Tasting Notes

91
63 tasting notes

I liked the sample so much that I had to buy a whole tuocha, success right?
The flavor is not that bold that other sheng that I’ve tried, but I like it that way. Golden-orangeish color with nice aroma, bit hayish. When using my glass steeping mug I can taste some dried fruits like apricot and plum, it so awsome I have never tasted tea like that before. This sheng is very mildy smoky and typical raw pu erh flavours like wood and earth are not so strong.

Flavors: Apricot, Dried Fruit, Hay, Plum, Smoke, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 128 OZ / 3785 ML

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3294 tasting notes

I’d like to thank Angel & Teavivre for this sample, which I got with my order awhile back.
My instincts were screaming, “Yixing!”, but for some reason I decided to follow the actual brewing instructions written on the sample package, which I usually tend to ignore. The suggested brewing parameters: 10G (the entire packet) + 8oz water X 1 – 2 minutes.
This is way more sheng than I ever use! But what the heck, I have 2 of these, so I can gongfu the other one.

I went with one minute, & although it was pretty intense, it was very drinkable! To be honest, this is the first time I’ve ever done a sheng this way, & I’ll definitely drink the other sample with short steeps in my yixing, it was interesting to try, & frankly, I was curious to see how it would be. It was potent! I went through several resteeps, adding a minute to each, & even though that was hours ago, I’m still as high as a kite, if you know what I mean!

TheTeaFairy

Good to know, sounds great :-)

TheTeaFairy

And yes…I know what you mean, lol.

Terri HarpLady

LOL…I’m going to try to go to bed now :)

Spencer

I definitely went for the yixing brew…but I think I need to try this!

Stephanie

Yum, sheng. I love steeping them real intensely like this :D

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90
1812 tasting notes

This morning’s review is possible, thanks to Teavivre for providing the sample of this old, raw pu’erh!

Contemplating the package of sheng (raw) pu’erh in my hand, it seems that this is a worthy tea for using a small yixing pot that I have dedicated to raw pu’erh. I start heating the water and open the package of tea in the meantime. The small sample package contains leaves and clumps of leaves, broken from a tuocha or a cake. And the smell of the leaves…what a raw smell it is, and I do not just say that as a pun. A raw pu’erh from 2006 has had some years of aging in which to intensify in flavor. From the aroma of the dry leaf comes a very green scent, mellow but figuratively seeming to have come straight from the tea plant. As the water finishes boiling, I put the leaves into the pot, then pour some of the freshly-boiled water over them for a quick rinse of no more than ten seconds, which is discarded. Having added a large amount of leaf to the pot, I decide to begin with twenty second infusions, rather than my normal thirty. The rinse did the leaves a lot of good – it awoke the aromas and flavors.

The smells, rising from my cup, are complex. Deep in the heart of the aroma is the raw greenness that I noticed with the dry leaf. Yet spreading outward from that is the more mellow scents of earth and floral notes. The earthiness does not begin to compare to the deep, dark earthiness of a cooked pu’erh, as I have reviewed in the past, but is lighter and less intense. The first sip of tea is strong…very strong…but it finishes quite spectacularly. Like a strong green tea, the initial taste permeates one’s mouth and overwhelms all else. but in the finish of the sip come the taste manifestations of the aroma. Those floral notes, slightly reminiscent of the floral aspects of some oolongs, sit in the finish and the aftertaste, hovering on the edges and lending their complexity.

For the second cup, I steep the leaves for another twenty seconds. The leaves are fully expanded and fill the small pot in which I am brewing. The aromas have not changed much, but the taste is smoother. I would not describe the taste as more mellow, for it is still as intense as the first sip, yet it does not seem as overwhelming. The leaves last through several more infusions. The flavor is, in many ways, refreshing in its complexities. Yet, it can be consuming quickly and without much a thought to the depth, and one will still receive from it an enjoyable flavor. On my personal enjoyment scale, I would rate this sheng pu’erh a 90/100.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec

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336 tasting notes

So this is the second raw pu-erh I’ve had in my life.

I looked at the instructions on the little sample bag – and it said to use the entire bag! I’m kind of glad I didn’t, because this tea is pretty potent as it is.

I forgot to smell the raw leaves before I stuffed the rest of the sample back in my cupboard, but the smell of the tea reminds me of hay mingled with a little dirt. The flavor is VERY bright! Very mineral, with a little bit of that hay essence in the back of my mouth somewhere. It’s actually fairly bitter (bag said steep 3-10 minutes, I steeped it for 3-4) and it remains in the aftertaste. Honestly, that astringency is getting in the way of me noticing much else. Are you supposed to steep shengs for less time, or is that just how this tea is?

I’ll do the second steep in a separate review. No numbers for now.

Stephanie

3 mins for the whole bag? Yeah, that doesn’t sound right. Usually with puerhs shorter steeps are recommended. When I do a longer wearer style steep I use no more than half the sample pack.

Terri HarpLady

With Sheng, I always go on the light side, at least at first: 3-4G in a 4oz yixing or gaiwan, 10 second rinse, & steeps of 10 sec, at least at first. Otherwise they start out too intense for me.

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74
152 tasting notes

Light amber in color with a nice woodsy aroma. It has the taste of hay and wood mixed with a the flavors of dried apricot and maybe a little bit of plum. Slightly astringent aftertaste.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C

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