Ripened Aged Pu-erh Mini Tuocha by Teavivre

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Autumn Leaf Pile, Dried Fruit, Fig, Raisins, Wet Earth, Earth, Mushrooms
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaVivre
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 1 min, 30 sec 6 g 3 oz / 95 ml

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  • “A review of Ripened Age Pu-erh Mini Tuocha (sample) by Teavivre Date: 11/16/2012 Company: Teavivre Tea Name: Ripened Age Pu-erh Mini Tuocha Tea Type/Varietal: Pu-erh Region: Yunnan China Steeping...” Read full tasting note
    88
  • “This is the 3rd pu-erh toucha I have tried over the last two days. Age of leaf: May 2007. Brewing guidelines: Ceramic 4 cup teapot, no sweetener, 5 gram toucha, ~1 cup of water. I did a 5 second...” Read full tasting note
  • “Got this as one of the free samples from my Teavivre shipment, I’ve never tried a straight Pu’erh before and thought this would be a good chance to give it a shot. I actually got three different...” Read full tasting note
  • “At first the ‘fishy’ smell was overbearing, but as this tea cooled, the aroma dissipated and gave way to amazing flavor. Multiple steeps reveal a sweeter cup each time.” Read full tasting note
    86

From Teavivre

Tea leaves harvested in April 2007 in Simao, Pu’er, Yunnan, China

Flaked Pu-erh tea leaves compressed into birds nest shape and individually wrapped

Tea brews up a rich mahogany color

A complex mellow earthy flavor with a comforting woodsy aroma

Low caffeine (less than 10% of the caffeine in a cup of coffee)

Ripened Age Pu-erh Mini Tuocha by Teavivre
Ingredients: Pure tea leaves

Brew guide: One Tuocha brew at 212 Fahrenheit for 1-2 minutes

About Teavivre View company

Company description not available.

11 Tasting Notes

88
600 tasting notes

A review of Ripened Age Pu-erh Mini Tuocha (sample) by Teavivre

Date: 11/16/2012
Company: Teavivre
Tea Name: Ripened Age Pu-erh Mini Tuocha
Tea Type/Varietal: Pu-erh
Region: Yunnan China
Steeping Vessel/Amt. Leaf: cup/ mini Tuocha
Plucking Season:
Liquor Color: dark cranberry
Leaf Characteristics: Small coin like Tuocha

Steepings

1st Steeping:
Water temperature: 200 Fahrenheit
Time: 2 minutes

Note: This is another sample sent to me from Teavivre and I am looking forward to trying this Tuocha. I cut open the sample pack and take out one of the individually wrapped Tuocha and remove the covering from it. It is semi-soft and rolled like a little weaved basket/ resembling a small bird’s nest, I take this and put it in my tea mug and pour the already boiled water into the mug, I place the saucer on the cup and leave to steep for two minutes.

When I remove the saucer/lid from my mug, the aroma starts to permeates the air around me; smelling of dampen earth, it is very noticeable smell (dampness in towels, basements, moisten soil) all images that I am conceiving as I breath in and out. The tea’s color is a lovely dark cranberry; more like dark cherries.

I take a sip and swallow and another sip yet again I swallow; there is that dryness effect on the palette and back of throat when I swallow. This pu-erh is somewhat like pu-erh I have had from Stash Teas, yet they were loose leaves. Anyhow, there a dryness and raw cacao nibs taste to this Tuocha and it is not bitter, in fact it is quite smooth and fuller in the body. I think I mean to say that the taste of this pu-erh is consistent throughout.

Upon first sip I am met with a dryness effect and very light on the palette, this tea is not heavy at all. It is very smooth and I definitely taste something of the cacao nibs…aspect of this tea. Or perhaps best to say that darken chocolate taste of both bitter/sweet chocolate when raw, unprocessed.

Do I like this tea? Yes. Do I like the tea’s color? Yes. And of the smell/aroma, is the teas’ bouquet to your expectation? Yes, I expected it to smell of dampened earth…a dewy, wet odor left from moisture permeating in the air. It smells as if something was not properly dried.

In all this is a good cup of tea for this inexperience palette.

2nd Steeping:
Water temperature: 200 Fahrenheit
Time: 2 minutes

Note: With this second steep and continuing to drink this tea for the remainder of the day I find the tea’s color to remain like that of cranberry or darken cherry and the tea is smoother and richer with more infusions. It is just a nice cup of tea, it has substance and one an experience palette would be able to place quite readily since nothing is hidden with this tea.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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171 tasting notes

This is the 3rd pu-erh toucha I have tried over the last two days.

Age of leaf: May 2007.

Brewing guidelines:
Ceramic 4 cup teapot, no sweetener, 5 gram toucha, ~1 cup of water. I did a 5 second wash this time.
……….1st: Just under boiling, 2.5’
……….2nd: Boiling. 5’

Aroma of tea liquor: About the same as yesterdays touchas, but a little more, eh, ripe?

Flavor of tea liquor: definitely stronger than the other 2 touchas: like mulch, perhaps woodsy, and a little bitter.

Appearance of wet leaf: Like the SpecialTeas toucha, tiny little dark bits of tea.

Overall: The first steeping was not exactly to my liking. After reading one review on Teavivre’s website stating you need to keep the steeping times short, I thought maybe the 2.5 min. steeping time was the problem. Still, for comparison purposes, I decided to follow the advice of the ‘scientist’ in me and stick to using consistent parameters for comparison purposes and so did the second steeping time ~5 mins. Generally speaking, not much of a change from the first steeping.

There seemed to be lots of good reviews about the tea, and, although that doesn’t change my own personal experience with it, the reviews do indicate that I may have done something ‘wrong’ in brewing it. It may also be my tastes don’t match the reviewers’ tastes, but I doubt it. I have lots of respect for the quality of tea that Teavivre sells (having had at least 20 teas of theirs). So I will try brewing this one again sometime (I have three more ‘pieces’ of it) with the shorter steeping times: a wash, 20-30 seconds, adding 10 seconds for every steep after that. So, I’m leaving off the numeric rating for now.

I wish I knew if the SpecialTeas toucha was ripe or raw, but my guess is it is raw; if it is, I realize comparing a ripe toucha to a raw toucha is not the best comparison. Still, I like SpecialTeas toucha the best so far of the three.

What really strikes me most about this experience is what a difference adding a little sweetener did to the taste; on the second steeping after trying it without sweetener I added a touch of Stevia extract to it, and it seemed to smooth out the edges very nicely. I was astonished at the difference: it was barely drinkable without sweetener, and yet much more drinkable with it. I still hold to the philosophy, or general guideline, that it is best to try the tea first w/o sweetener; yet, this experience also emphasizes how easily sweetener can transform the taste.

On to the forth toucha.

Preparation
Boiling 2 min, 30 sec

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116 tasting notes

Got this as one of the free samples from my Teavivre shipment, I’ve never tried a straight Pu’erh before and thought this would be a good chance to give it a shot. I actually got three different samplings of Pu’erh tea from Teavivre but read somewhere on their site that this is the one to try first. So here it goes.

Dry the tea is compressed into a tiny birds nest of dark brown leaves, and there was a small amount of powdered leaf left in the wrapper. I also found very little scent to the dried leaf, what little there was smelled of loam and old leather, a few hits of mushrooms too.

After a good rinse my first steeping was for 15seconds and left me with a dark brown liquor that had a bit of particulate settled at the bottom. The aroma was of leather, loam and a dark woodsy scent. As for the flavor, there was definite smokey favors mixed into the wood/loam base. I also noticed a certain astringency that started mid sip but by the time I noticed it it had already been replaced by a heavier sweetness; that said it’s quite a smooth drink. I don’t enjoy the flavors much once the tea has cooled though.

The second steeping was for 10sec and wow did that ever give me a dark brown-black liquor, it made me feel like I was going to be drinking coffee. The leather scent was more predominant now, though there was still the dark woodsy notes in there. Flavor wise, the earthy loam notes were lighter and with less smoke this steeping, plus I got a few more mushroom favors.

A third steeping of 10 seconds gave me a dark brown liquor that smelled of wood, loam and a bit of smoke. The dark loam flavor was lightened slightly by the woodsy taste and the mouthful ended off on a somewhat astringently sweet note.

I did one last steeping of 15seconds (this certainly could have stood up for further steepings but I had to head out for the day.). The medium-dark brown liquor smelled of loam and mushrooms with just a touch of smoke. The flavor was probably the mildest of all the steepings, earthy but sweet at the same time. The flavor lingered a bit after each sip as well, compared to the previous cups where the flavors just sat on your tongue.

For my first straight Pu’erh I think this went well, I’m not a huge fan but it could grow on me. I’ll definitely have to try the other samples and see how they sit before I make any sweeping statements (or even rate this one specifically. ) After that I’ll try this again and see if anything has changed.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C

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86
67 tasting notes

At first the ‘fishy’ smell was overbearing, but as this tea cooled, the aroma dissipated and gave way to amazing flavor. Multiple steeps reveal a sweeter cup each time.

ashmanra

If you let it air a couple of,hours first, no fishy. Also, I think mrmopar recommends,doing a rinse and letting it rest a LONG TIME and then having your sessions with it. Great if you have time! I like this one, and my son used to drink it so much that he would ask for the biggest bag of it for Christmas.

Comm Guy

Now all I have to do is learn to want some good pu-erh…later.

ashmanra

It can be liked a baked potato. Takes much longer in the oven than the microwave, but worth it! LOL. Actually, I had a super fishy one from Southern Season years ago that I set out in a bowl for about 36 hours, then put it back in a container. It was enough to de-fish it without losing all the flavor. It wasn’t a great grade of shu but it was all right, especially after all the airing out.

Comm Guy

Okay…took the advice. Sort of. I rinsed and let the leaves sit for an hour. Went from fishy to mild barnyard. I’ll try the “let it rest a LONG time” advice of mrmopar on a day when I have a long time. Still tastes great and yields plenty!

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80
77 tasting notes

These mini tuochas from 2007 are about 5 grams each, and work out nicely for brewing up a cup of tea for one or two people. These are ripe pu’er, and so the dry tuocha have that sticky sweet dried fruit smell like prunes or raisins or figs that I find pleasant. Wet leaves smell very much like wet leaf pile, mulch, earthy. Taste, however, is very smooth and mellow, a little wet earth taste, sweet, a bit of dried fruit, and zero fishiness. Very low on the woody tannin notes. I get no bitterness and only a little astringency, but only after quite some time has passed after sipping the tea. I get some throat dryness after about 5 minutes has passed.

I prepared this in purple clay with 2 quick rinses of boiling water, and by then with a little shake, the tuoacha had fully fallen apart in the bottom of the pot. Subsequent infusions were kept fast at 8-10 seconds and then increasing in duration from there. Liquor was always dark and rich even with the short infusions, as expected with a ripe. This is a good drinking, mellow shou pu’er. I feel very relaxed after the 6th infusion, and where I will stop.

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Dried Fruit, Fig, Raisins, Wet Earth

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 90 ML
HaChaChaCha

Just a quick update. This probably had nothing to do with the tea, but I thought I’d log it in case anyone else experiences the same. On the same evening I had this tea, I also had a very spicy Mexican dish, carne endiablada, so it could have been that, but I woke in the middle of the night drenched. I’m not talking just a little sweaty. My shirt was literally sopping wet, the bed was wet, my pillow and hair were wet. Yuck! I’ve never had a purging, cleanser, etc I hear others talk about, but I’d say something sure got a hold on me that night. :-)

Kirkoneill1988

teavivre is great at picking quality teas :D so is the other site i go to: yunnan sourcing :D

Kirkoneill1988

thanks for following me :)

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88
4 tasting notes

Really nice, mellow, everyday tea for office.
Although my steeping procedure is:
1: 1 minute
2.: 20 seconds
3. and every other steeping: 30 seconds

More then that is personally to much for me…

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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100
892 tasting notes

I’m pretty sure Teavivre sent me this as a sample a while ago. Using my gaiwan to do a few steeps. This stays rich in a reddish brown color through every steep. The flavor is pretty strong for only steeping it for 10 seconds at a time. The flavors are earthy, a touch of leather, and a touch of sweetness with hints of mushroom.

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2291 tasting notes

This looks like coffee.

But does NOT taste good with eggnog.

http://instagram.com/p/xN4Wh6R5NX/

I did 2 short rinses, and now I’m doing few-second steeps. So far they are all REALLY strong. It’s like I’m digging through a decomposting tree but it’s hot. Mulch, earth, and autumn leaf pile are good descriptions.

So far it’s tasting too much like tree and bitter for me. I’ll come back in a few steeps.

4 (shorter): Fishy. Hmm.

5: More earthy and mulch like. Wet forest is here too.

6: A little sweeter? Interesting. Still earthy and wet foresty though.

7: I think this is it. I steeped a couple minutes this time, and it’s significantly lighter in colour and flavour.

OMG, I could not imagine steeping this for one to two minutes straight up!

ashmanra

LOL! I gave my son a big bag of this for Christmas and he was so happy! It is his favorite. To each his own is grandly apparent in tea tastes! :)

OMGsrsly

It’s not bad, it’s just REALLY STRONG (and not so great with eggnog!). :) I have a forest floor puerh I love, but it’s a lot lighter.

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83
5 tasting notes

This is a great all around Pu-erh. If you are strictly a Pu-erh drinker i would not recommend this simply because the full sized cakes are better. That being said, if you like Pu-erh here and there i would say this is the one for you. They are individually wrapped so its very convenient to store, and you use one tuocha per pot. Overall it’s a very tasty tea with a classic ripe Pu-erh taste.

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Earth, Mushrooms

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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1812 tasting notes

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