2021 Raw Spring Liubao

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
Average preparation
Not available

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

0 Want it Want it

1 Own it Own it

1 Tasting Note View all

From white2tea

Liubao heicha, also known as dark tea, a post fermented tea from Guangxi province in China.

This tea was made on commission for white2tea in early spring of 2021 for our wonderful tea club. We did not have enough left for baskets, but had a little loose tea left for our new heicha section.

Not the typical mass produced and pile fermented dark liubao. Raw may be a misnomer, but calling it green doesn’t quite seem right either, and some folk have even suggested this tea qualify as a yellow tea or some hybrid unfermented heicha. In China people often call it nongjia or farmer style, though it is rarely sold on the open market due to small production sizes and lack of proper accreditation. You will find similarities in this tea that spans genres – green tea, yellow tea, heicha, raw Puer – there is a reason you can’t pin it down easily.

Bright aromas and sweetness with a hefty huigan (returning sweetness) that is sticky and refreshing. Lovely to drink now or age as you desire.

Each purchase is for 25g of loose tea.

About white2tea View company

Company description not available.

1 Tasting Note

16557 tasting notes

Gongfu!

This tea was really, really different!! Is it heicha or is it yellow tea!? After brewing it up I can really understand why this is a tricky tea to class. Everything about the profile sort of just screamed “raw” to me. Not in the sense of sheng/pu’erh but more just like very, very raw cacao nib and dark baker’s chocolate notes mixed with unsalted & unroasted peanut butter, fresh green beans, and just a bit of molasses. Not bitter, really, but a decidedly unsweet and peculiar mix of these more typically decadent notes with the greener vegetal elements. I’m definitely a bit undecided on how I feel about this one, just based on this one session…

Tea Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/CYkGRw4OkWi/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xRWtWTPiRFk&ab_channel=EdMount

Login or sign up to leave a comment.