Yiwu Gu Shu Sheng Pu'er 2003

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Bitter, Cake, Floral, Herbs, Peat Moss, Stewed Fruits, Sweet, Sweet, Warm Grass, Vegetal
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 oz / 100 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Gongfu Sipdown (719)! Picked this tea up from Zhen Tea at the Montreal Tea Festival – I was really intrigued by the tea description, and as most people are aware I certainly have a penchant for...” Read full tasting note
    95
  • “This was one of the best teas I tasted at the Toronto Tea Festival, so I got a 5g sample (for a very steep 10 CAD) to try it out at home. I got a piece close to the middle of the cake, but it’s not...” Read full tasting note
    90

From ZhenTea

This ancient tree sheng Pu’er tea is a delight from start to finish. The large long leaves struggled to fit in the gaiwan, but a quick rinse restored enough suppleness to allow them to curl up into our brewing vessel. The aroma from the dry and wet leaf was subdued and delicate and the first infusions yielded a gold liquor with a light pink hue. The first few sips revealed a light smokiness mingled with plum notes couched in mossy, woody flavours. Later infusions led to a deeper orange/gold liquor colour but the flavour was steady, with a thick, silky mouthfeel. Flavours of this tea lingered for ages and offered a sensationally refreshing experience. The quality of the raw material and the processing is readily apparent in every sip and a glance at the brewed leaves confirmed this. Lustrous and silky in appearance and soft but sturdy to the touch, this is a tea to be enjoyed for many infusions.

Dry leaf: wet hay, undertones of plum
Wet leaf: soft woodiness/plum
Liquor colour: bright orange/gold
Liquor aroma: delicate woodiness
Flavor: plum, wood, moss, hints of smokiness
Mouthfeel: thick, lingering and refreshing
Bottom cup: long lingering dried fruit sweetness with a touch of tartness

ORIGIN
Yiwu, Yunnan Province.

HARVEST
2003 spring

BREWING
3g/90ml at 100°C for 10 sec, 2nd & 3rd infusion for 20s. 7-10 infusions.

STORAGE
Sealed well in a cool, dry, dark location.

About ZhenTea View company

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2 Tasting Notes

95
15662 tasting notes

Gongfu Sipdown (719)!

Picked this tea up from Zhen Tea at the Montreal Tea Festival – I was really intrigued by the tea description, and as most people are aware I certainly have a penchant for yiwu sheng. It was fairly pricey – $10CAD for 5g, but I guess that’s kind of reasonable given that it’s a sheng with sixteen years of age on it. I appreciate that the company was even offering sample/session size of it at all at the festival.

I’d normally have brewed this in my yixing pot, but 5g is too little for a session in that pot so I brewed it instead in an 80ml shiboridashi – even that was a little soft for me though…

This was a delicious tea though; very fragrant and sweet aroma. Plenty of ripe plum and penetrating florals. The taste started off very much like a salted plum with lingering sticky sweetness and a touch of smoke- that was the general flavour for the first three or so infusions. From there it was gradually getting more floral over time – but retaining that juicy plum note. Very, very mild and pleasant astringency; no bitterness.

Fourteen infusion session in total. Wow.

I’d definitely purchase this again is the opportunity arose…

Photo: https://www.instagram.com/p/B4sN9djgh3s/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a_K0t5x4_3w

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90
947 tasting notes

This was one of the best teas I tasted at the Toronto Tea Festival, so I got a 5g sample (for a very steep 10 CAD) to try it out at home. I got a piece close to the middle of the cake, but it’s not overly compressed. The leaves look quite coarse.

It is clear that the tea is aging very slowly, I was told it has been stored in Beijing since production. The leaves look somewhat green and the liquor is dark yellow, it hasn’t even properly started turning orange yet. There is a slight hint of fruits in the aroma, which is sweet and reminiscent of some cakes.

The first infusion after rinse is still very light with no bitterness and only a touch of astringency. It has a really nice sweetness, nothing overpowering. There is also a vegetal and floral character to it and the aftertaste is surprisingly strong given how mild the taste was. Second one is so smooth and already thicker. The taste I would describe as sweet grass with a bit of herbal bitterness. I can also feel its effects, clearing and focusing my mind. I have to say though that I am by no means in a standard state of mind, having just returned from a 90km long bike ride (the first one this year – spring seems to be pushing the winter away, yay!).

Third steep is a proper one. It’s such a nice mix of sweet and bitter taste, buttery texture, and a long floral and numbing aftertaste. Fourth and fifth are strong, but not as distinctive. I tried various types of brews next. The lighter ones are tasty and easy to drink, while the stronger ones have a heavy, peaty moss note to them and a much more interesting mouthfeel, which numbing and drying without being very astringent.

All in all, a very nice example of a dry stored Yiwu tea. If it was 4 times cheaper, I would even consider buying it! :P

Flavors: Bitter, Cake, Floral, Herbs, Peat Moss, Stewed Fruits, Sweet, Sweet, Warm Grass, Vegetal

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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