2005 Gong Ting Tribute Ripe Pu-erh Mini Cake

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Thomas Smith
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 15 sec

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I got one of these 100g mini-beengs in 2007, bought ten more at the beginning of 2009 and have been drinking them up and gave a few away as gifts. I’m down to 2 and 3/4 cakes left and will miss ‘em...” Read full tasting note
    65
  • “I have the 2007 version and was blown away by the previous review. Reading it really helped me taste the tea with whole new buds. I am totally new to Pu-erhs so I will have to reserve my rating...” Read full tasting note
    67
  • “About an hour after drinking a raw pu’erh from YS, I find myself grabbing another sample package. Well, looks like ripe it is! Upon brewing this, either my sample or the tea itself, it needed some...” Read full tasting note

From Yunnan Sourcing

100g Mini Beengcha made of “gong ting” smallest ripe puerh leaf grade from Menghai area. Produced by Gan Quan factory (now renamed Hao Ming Tea Factory) using 2004 fermented material.
Smooth with strong “cha qi” and dark color. Would benefit from another year of aging to mellow.

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3 Tasting Notes

65
93 tasting notes

I got one of these 100g mini-beengs in 2007, bought ten more at the beginning of 2009 and have been drinking them up and gave a few away as gifts. I’m down to 2 and 3/4 cakes left and will miss ‘em when they’re gone as they are great for drinking with meals (especially oily/greasy stuff like a lot of Chinese food). Tons of oompf for such a tiny package – little beengcha, little leaves, big flavor. Mellowed a bit since the first taste I had, but age has had little effect thus far and I doubt the tea will survive to a point where it’s effect is really significant.

10g with 225ml water in a seasoned “shi piao” Yuan Kuang Lao ZiNi yixing teapot. Double rinse to break up very tight compaction. 1st infusion 20 seconds; 2nd infusion 25 seconds; 3rd-6th infusions 30 seconds each.

Leaves are tightly compacted but not as absurdly tight as an iron-cake and it is possible to break of chunks using just fingers. There’s a lot of buds but grading ripe puerh is tricky – while graded piles are segregated in wo dui prep, most is done on the basis of size after being broken down in active fermentation so these fairly uniform leaf bits contain buds, rolled bits of young leaves, and thin broken twigs of the sort that connect 2 leaf and a bud sets. Still, the cakes are pretty equally brown and gold with a reddish reflection. Embedded paper has started taking on some tea oils but still an overall matte appearance. Not much dry fragrance beyond dry clay-rich loam. Same note dominates in heady wet aroma but with warm moist leaf litter base. Coppery sweetness in aroma like candied pecans/walnuts. Did I mention clay? Always reminds me of sculpting in the same room as an operating kiln. Liquor is dark red with clear transparency but the color makes it nearly impossible to see through the tea without back-lighting.

Heavy, heavy body. Mouthwatering tacky quality similar to currants/prunes but there really isn’t a fruit note except maybe a fleeting hint of prune in the aftertaste. Flavor hits at the back, near the throat first and then you notice the flavor in the rest of your mouth. This is all about the moist earth flavors. Sweetness is pleasantly metallic. Like the comforting sweet smell of bronze antiques or lightly rusted cast iron. Mmm, boy it’s rich. Lots of woody tastes – less acidic than orchid bark, but moist chopped hardwood bark a definite. Aroma suggests resin and pepper but these are not really present in neither flavor nor nose. Long finish of unglazed clay wares. For all its earthy characters, it is not dirty. These are humus and refined base soil material notes, not dust or dung. I’ve seen some people call the barnyard smell of wet-storage puerh as “pu-erh like” (or “poo-air” like the common mispronunciation of the tea category); this does not have that off-characteristic. Puerh ought to have a clarity despite its earthen qualities in shous or aged shengs. Sure, this is a wo dui processed tea and has an old building character to it, but no farm animals here and the mustiness is kept to the wet leaves. Rich, potent, and smoooooth with long lasting but clear finish.

I love this tea and it is a staple for drinking with food. So why the rating? The rating reflects the reality check of the real level of this tea – it is not a superb, must-try tea. It tastes really good and makes a good gift for folks who actually drink good tea, but it can not compare to a well-aged cake or many teas that cost 10 times as much. There is a huge presence of flavor and you can pick out all kinds of tastes if you try – ranging from toasted white oak, teak, dried bullrush, and water lily – but the complexity is not something that you really jump at and in six infusions prepared gong fu cha, there really is not much shift in flavor. On the plus side, it it reliable and can cut through the impacts of drinking alongside a meal, but monodirectional flavor doesn’t earn a high score in my book. You don’t reach for a $100 bottle of wine to drink with every meal, however much you may enjoy it; same goes for this good everyday tea.
I’d still recommend this to friends, but I can’t find any more to buy.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 30 sec

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67
2 tasting notes

I have the 2007 version and was blown away by the previous review.
Reading it really helped me taste the tea with whole new buds.
I am totally new to Pu-erhs so I will have to reserve my rating until some sophistication seeps in via experience. I have 10 samples on order through Yunnan Sourcing as I type this.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 45 sec

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1113 tasting notes

About an hour after drinking a raw pu’erh from YS, I find myself grabbing another sample package. Well, looks like ripe it is!

Upon brewing this, either my sample or the tea itself, it needed some help to open up or else I knew I wouldn’t be tasting the actual tea most of the session. About six steeps through and I can tell that this ripe doesn’t have what I look for in a ripe; cream notes or thick texture like I am almost drinking mud.

I’m insanely picky with ripe to be honest, but those who would like this would be the ones who like their pu really runny ;)
This has a solid fermentation taste throughout each steep; but please note I stopped at six because I wasn’t feeling the shu’ld drink this anymore.

Kirkoneill1988

mud: earth/fermentation, forest floor autumn leaves…. all are almost the same to me. takes great skill to tell the diference

Rasseru

or be the sort of person that eats mud and leaves in real life to know which is which. Thats dedication :D

Kirkoneill1988

@rasseru lol i go by smell (90% of what something smells like is what it will taste like; so i hear.)

Rasseru

Yeah same. LP isnt normal so he has to do the last 10% as well

azurephoenix

LP what would you say are your top 3-5 favorite ripes?

Liquid Proust @azurephoenix 2010 Golden Needle White Lotus, 2015 Green Miracle, 2014 Lao Cha (W2T)

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