2015 EoT Huang Shan Shu 15 trees

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Heavy, Moss, Nutty, Vegetal, Wet Moss, Wet wood, Green Wood, Herbaceous, Mineral, Mushrooms, Nutmeg, Apricot, Astringent, Stonefruit
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by The Essence of Tea
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 3 oz / 100 ml

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7 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Soft and heavy, due to a certain humidity a very nice moss note which also makes the tea look much older. Images and more at https://puerh.blog/teanotes/2015-huangshanshu-15-trees-eot” Read full tasting note
    85
  • “This is a nice young sheng, smooth vegetal flavor, I also noticed some very pleasant sweetness in it. I felt a long lasting mellow Qi, I was not expecting mellow from this tea because of its age...” Read full tasting note
    85
  • “From the Puerh TTB #3. Thanks to EoT for the samples. 1st steep (10 s): There is a bit of spice in the nose. The taste is quite strong for a 1st steep. Smooth and sweet, with a rich blend of...” Read full tasting note
    92
  • “From the Steepster Puer TTB round 3 A really nice mellow sheng. Notes of apricot fruity, herby with a hint of spice and floral with a slick texture. The pu’er is also sweet and with a light dryness...” Read full tasting note
    90

From The Essence of Tea

This tea comes from Huangshanshu – a village in the larger Bangwei area. Made from 15 of the oldest single trees in the garden, this is a very pure, powerful and thick ancient tree puerh tea. Due to their older age and larger size, these trees were separated out to be harvested and processed separately from the rest of the garden.

I can highly recommend this tea. It has everything I look for in a gushu puerh…. thick and rich in the mouth and throat, powerful but refined, with good energy and an ability to thoroughly satisfy.

This tea was grown naturally without pesticides or fertilisers. We confirmed this with a lab test for agrochemical residues by one of the leading laboratories. Two hundred of the most common agrochemicals were tested for & no traces were detected. The report is available for viewing here: 2015 Huangshanshu pesticide lab test report

About The Essence of Tea View company

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7 Tasting Notes

85
127 tasting notes

Soft and heavy, due to a certain humidity a very nice moss note which also makes the tea look much older.

Images and more at https://puerh.blog/teanotes/2015-huangshanshu-15-trees-eot

Flavors: Heavy, Moss, Nutty, Vegetal, Wet Moss, Wet wood

Preparation
8 g 3 OZ / 80 ML

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85
12 tasting notes

This is a nice young sheng, smooth vegetal flavor, I also noticed some very pleasant sweetness in it. I felt a long lasting mellow Qi, I was not expecting mellow from this tea because of its age and I was very pleased with the body and mind calming, meditative effects. 3 hours from the first sip I still feel nice and relaxed.

Preparation
Boiling 10 g

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92
314 tasting notes

From the Puerh TTB #3. Thanks to EoT for the samples.

1st steep (10 s): There is a bit of spice in the nose. The taste is quite strong for a 1st steep. Smooth and sweet, with a rich blend of straw, toast and floral hints. The finish is also good; silky smooth and long-lasting. I’m feeling a lot of cha qi, but this is my second sheng of the day so the effect may be cumulative. 2nd (10 s): The tea is a medium straw color. Smell is richer; a hint of smoke? Really big and rich and super finish that seems to just keep getting bigger. Too big for my head!? Partly I think it is a powerful cha qi taking over. Between the finish and the cha qi it is hard to actually taste the tea. It is richer than the first cup, with wood and caramel flavors replacing the floral note. Also not as smooth; there is a bit of tartness and tannin, especially at the finish. This is the sort of tea that I’m tempted to just pound down and enjoy the cha qi, but I want to set a good example and review the tea since it was a donation to the puerh TTB and I was the one that required tasting notes for the donated teas. I’ll take a break then come back.

3rd steep (20 s one hour later): Light straw aroma and flavor. Less nuanced. Sweet, with a hint of bitterness underneath. 4th (30s): More wood than straw. A dark richness that’s hard to identify; not quite earthy. spice? (another review suggested nutmeg, and that is close) Finish and cha qi still dominant. Later steeps were mellow and rich and slightly spicy.

I liked this tea a lot, at least in part because it presented so many different facets. After the first cup I was thinking approachable. After the second I was thinking tea drunk. The third and fourth suggested the need for more age, and I’m now on about the 7th cup and it’s just really pleasant. Smooth, full flavor in the mouth, a finish that is still going strong, and a nice buzz from the cha qi. What’s not to love?

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 g 2 OZ / 59 ML

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90
1271 tasting notes

From the Steepster Puer TTB round 3

A really nice mellow sheng. Notes of apricot fruity, herby with a hint of spice and floral with a slick texture. The pu’er is also sweet and with a light dryness that tingles a bit making it a pleasure to drink for texture. Later steeps are more herby sweet and very nice. Great young sheng and totally ready to drink now. Lots of qi in this one too, I was flailing around at around steep 5 or 6.

That price though, it’s pretty high, but this pu’er is pretty good. This is my first try at Essence of Tea btw.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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99
318 tasting notes

From the Pu TTB

Very mellow, thick, and sweet. The early infusions have notes of mushroom, minerals, herbs, and green wood and a slight floral touch. A well balanced tea with a strong qi that became apparent by the third steep. Great mouthfeel as well

Later infusions taste very warm and clean with a nutmeg note and nice creamyness. Under the influence I noted that it tasted like “drinking liquid candle light”

A super nice young sheng; I don’t know how it could be much better. I experienced some sticker shock upon seeing the price, but I do think this is the best young sheng I’ve had

Flavors: Green Wood, Herbaceous, Mineral, Mushrooms, Nutmeg

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 5 OZ / 150 ML
mrmopar

I want this one..

Rasseru

Another shop where my wallet pulls me past whenever I look at it – mostly due to me wanting to try some authentic Bei Dou Yi Hao.

mrmopar

I agree. I have had some of their other stuff. Pretty good. The exchange rate is killer to your wallet though.

tanluwils

WANT. Well, in my last tasting note I likened a tea’s liquor to “liquified garnet” well before tea drunkenness set it, so that already says something…

Even with the currently decreasing strength of the pound, I have no choice but to wait for EoT’s annual sale. I’m eyeing their liu baos, too.

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21 tasting notes

Thick, oily in the mouth and throat, astringency peaks in the early steeps but is still evident mid-session. Pretty sweet with stonefruits, a familiar profile for good quality young gushu. Body is above average. If I were to criticize, it’s less dynamic than I had hoped, but it could be in part due to my lack of focus. Overall a very enjoyable clean and active tea.

At ~$0.50/g it compares well to other 2015 productions in the same price range, especially if you value body/texture. There is excess moisture in my sample, but it may be in part due to the air-tight bag it’s been sitting in.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 12 g 5 OZ / 150 ML

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90
1758 tasting notes

Puerh Tea TTB. This tea is one that I at first, because of the coincidence in the name, took to be a shou puerh. It is a tasty young sheng instead. Only after drinking it did I find out the nature of the linguistic coincidence. Huang Shan Shu is the name of the village from which the tea is sourced, not shu in the sense of shou. It is a quite tasty sheng. It had very little bitterness to it. There were the traditional notes of apricots and stonefruits in this tea. It was sweet. It is also mildly astringent. There are no notes of smoke and I didn’t get any camphor. Overall I would rate this among some of the best sheng I have drank. It seems to have some qi as I am feeling quite relaxed after twelve steeps. Stopping now because of the caffeine but I’m sure this tea would have gone a few more steeps.

I brewed this tea twelve times in a 60ml gaiwan with 5g leaf and boiling water. I gave it a 10 second rinse and a 10 minute rest. I steeped it for 5 sec, 5 sec, 7 sec, 10 sec, 15 sec, 20 sec, 25 sec, 30 sec, 45 sec, 1 min, 1.5 min, and 2 min. This is a good tea to drink now because of a lack of bitterness. I don’t know how it will age as I have heard that bitter teas age better.

Flavors: Apricot, Astringent, Stonefruit

Preparation
Boiling 5 g 2 OZ / 60 ML
tea123

I’m not keen on lots of astringency.

AllanK

The astringency wasn’t too strong in my opinion.

mrmopar

I been eyeballing this one.

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