Qianjiazhai Old Growth 2012 Sheng

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Forest Floor, Olives, Orange, Orchid, Flowers, Potato
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by BoxerMama
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 8 g 6 oz / 177 ml

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21 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I haven’t had sheng in quite a while, and it definitely was calling out to me today, so I’m having a gongfu session with this amazing tea. I’m debating ordering a few more shengs during verdant’s...” Read full tasting note
    92
  • “Master Han has a couple of new Puers that Verdant recently added to the webpage, including another Sheng. I’m curious to see how it will differ from this one, & it’s coming in the TOMC box, so...” Read full tasting note
  • “Sooo…Shengs are part of my tea no man’s land, having tried just a couple I have very few references when it comes to write a review… I always envy those of you who seem so taken by it (Charles, if...” Read full tasting note
    92
  • “Mmm… This is so incredibly good. I already liked it the first time I tried it but I over-steeped it then. Today I did things the right way and this tea is simply delicious. I used 7g tea in about...” Read full tasting note
    92

From Verdant Tea

Master Han picks wild tea trees in the Qianjiazhai region of the Mount Ailao National Forest Preserve, Yunnan. He takes the utmost care to “let the leaves speak,” pressing each batch of leaves differently to bring out their best, either as a looseleaf sheng, a black tea or a pressed cake or ball of tea.

He works his own land, but is part of the Dongsa farmers cooperative. The cooperative does not pool tea for bulk selling, but rather invests in equipment together so that each farmer can produce their own distinct products with a greater degree of ownership. This pu’er cake was made using Master Han’s leaf, but the cooperative kicked in for one pu’er cake wrapper and a pu’er press that everyone can share.

This loosely compressed cake of sheng has yielded deep complexity that brings out the richness that Master Han’s land has to offer. The initial aroma is of strong elderberry tea with woody undertones and a distinctly potent and energizing edge.

The early steepings are sweet like holy basil, and spicy like green plantain. The taste is so smooth it could easily be a dancong infusion instead of a young sheng pu’er. After the first light steepings a rich and addictive savory flavor begins to develop with the edge of a fine aged parmesan tempered with balsamic vinegar. This edge opens and rounds out into a buttery potato flavor with herbaceous banana leaf notes.

About Verdant Tea View company

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21 Tasting Notes

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63 tasting notes

I had a very nice cup of this tea this morning. Typical Qianjiazhai flavors for me – olives, forest floor, orange, touch of bitterness. Quite nice, mellowing out, early in the maturity phase. Wish I had more.

Flavors: Forest Floor, Olives, Orange, Orchid

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 8 g
mrmopar

Hey there, good to see you on here.

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57 tasting notes

This is the least smokey young sheng I’ve had so far. It smells a little smokey dry, but it smells fruity when wet. It tastes slightly fruity and I enjoyed eating it with some smokey gouda cheese.

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301 tasting notes

I am still in the early stages of my developing relationship with sheng. Today I enjoyed a nice encounter with this sheng from Verdant. I’ve only worked through the first two steepings but the flavors have moved from lemon and greens to pepper with a bit of astringency (although an astringency that seems quite pleasant). Anxious to see what the leaf reveals in the many steepings I intend to put it through.

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