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2018 Yunnan Sourcing "Wu Liang Mountain" Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake

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Original price $11.25 - Original price $101.00
Original price
$11.25
$11.25 - $101.00
Current price $11.25

This tea is made entirely from first flush of Spring 2018 high altitude Wu Liang mountain tea.  The Wu Liang mountains peak out at about 3300 meters, making them the highest mountains in Simao prefecture.   The Wu Liang mountain range is in the county of Jingdong which borders both Lincang and Dali prefectures.  This tea is grown in the area of Wu Liang known as Zhong Cang village (中仓村) at an altitude of 2300 meters making this some of the highest altitude pu-erh in existance.  Due to the high altitude most of the tea trees in this area are a naturally occurring hybrid of large and small leaf (sinensis and var. assamica).  The trees are healthy 200 year old trees growing naturally on steep hillsides and ridges.   These tea gardens are arguably some of the remotest tea gardens in all of Yunnan.  Lack of roads and access has kept the environment of this area in good condition, mao cha prices are significantly lower than comparable Banna teas, making this an affordable yet.

The tea itself is aromatic with hints of orchid aroma (兰香), and a strong mouth-feel.  Even when young this tea is full in the mouth giving the drinker a persistent warmth and lubricated mouth feel.  It brews evenly across 10 to 15 infusions never too harsh and neither dropping off suddenly, thus revealing the healthy characteristics of the trees and environment from which it came.  This tea will develop gracefully through years building its character and providing the drinker with ever more complex textures.

 

Nice and prolonged mouthfeel couple with noticeable but not overpowering cha qi.  Very infusable!

This tea was compressed in a small tea factory near Kunming where stone presses were used.  Low temperature drying (about 35C) was used to dry these cakes after the compression process thus preserving their integrity!  The cakes are wrapped in Dai Minority hand-made paper and then bundled into bamboo leaf "tongs" with seven cakes per tong. 

 

In total just 90 kilograms of this tea has been produced
Net Weight:  400 grams per cake (7 cakes per bamboo leaf tong)
Harvest time:  April 2018
Harvest Area:  Zhong Cang village of Wu Liang mountains, Jingdong county of Simao

Wrapper Illustration by Patrik Benedičič

 

Below are the previous releases of this tea under the Yunnan Sourcing Brand
2010 Yunnan Sourcing "Wu Liang Shan" Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake
2012 Yunnan Sourcing "Wu Liang Mountain" Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake
2014 Yunnan Sourcing Wu Liang Mountain Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake
2015 Yunnan Sourcing Wu Liang Mountain Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh Tea cake
2016 Yunnan Sourcing Wu Liang Mountain Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake

 

This tea has been tested in a certified laboratory for 191 pesticides, and is within the EU MRL limits set for those 191 pesticide residues. For a full list of the 191 pesticides we tested for and more information about MRL testing and the EU Food and Safety commission click on this link.

Overall rating: 4.6363635 / 5 from 11 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Summary topics

Review topics: ["taste","bitterness","sweetness","order","material","tea","puerh","sheng","mouthfeel","liquor","puer","notes"].

Review highlights

Reviews

for me there was little sweetness and fruit

"tea looks good, quality raw materials, aged, but it's just a smooth smooth puer with minimal bitterness and almost no sweetness"

Matvey S. (4/5)

Nice and prolonged mouthfeel

"Nice and prolonged mouthfeel even at the 10th infusion"

antonio (4/5)

This tea makes me say the word "creamy" a lot.

"As an impatient lover of young sheng, Wu Liang has been a favorite of mine for it's easy going smooth creamy flavor. This vintage was my introduction. My subjective experience of this tea is lush, creamy sugarcane, vanilla and floral flavor with lasting aftertaste. The thick mouth feeling and taste reminds me of a moonlight white tea or Taiwan Baozhong, which I love. After many steeps, a vegetal taste eventually appears accompanied by gentle barely-there astringency in the aftertaste. I love teas that offer a ridonkulous number of steeps and Wu Liang does that well. Nice price too."

Ryan P. (5/5)

Delicious!

"Im new to Pu-erh and found this tea very forgiving. It had no astringent with a delicious earthy maybe grassy maybe floral taste. Left a cooling mouth feel after a few steeps. Really really enjoyed this tea and will definitely buy it again"

Clay (5/5)

Good, affordable puerh!

"I bought this back in November, 2018. From my memory, it was a little more bitter and astringent than it is now, however, it has retained its very floral flavor, oily texture, and sweet hui gan. It still has quite an astringent aftertaste, so I will be aging the second half of the cake to see how it develops. All-in-all, quite happy with this tea :)"

Rob (5/5)

Balanced and full

"This is less a review and more a personal anecdote from a Pu'er rookie. I've been discovering all forms of tea for the past two years and had been held up at the gate with respect to Pu'ers. I'd 'liked' some, but I mostly found myself searching for the reason of their popularity. I've purchased a number of samples of various aged and young, raw and ripe from various places and settled even on a few cakes I would sample from time to time, but this was the first that I now judge as a daily drinker. My favorite whites, blacks and oolongs have had to make space in my day for some of this each night over the past week. Perhaps I've simply acquired the taste, but it is a full and good taste to be sure. I find the smell of the cake very enticing and the flavor follows if I brew it well. Brewed gongfu, I use 8g's in a 200 ml Gaiwan and keep the steeps very short to begin - 10s at first adding a second or two each time to keep pace. I experimented by using 25s on my 4th steep just to see if I'd get the bitter blast I'd come to associate with the young sheng's I've sampled but was surprised that the balance of flavor was maintained, if only intensified for the push. The bitterness that accompanies the quite full flavor is key to the mouth-watering craving I associate with what I now consider a favorite sheng - and I now have a favorite sheng! I'll be looking for more YS cakes as stepping stones from here!"

Kelly S. (5/5)

MMMmmmmm

"First day of the year 30°C +. Decided for this one to come along this most beautiful day. Fruity, somewhat "green" comes to mind, tempted to call it Mao feng-like. Super soft. pushed hard on 4th steep about 50sec, with slight bitterness und astringency. Nice mouthfeel, then cooling mouth. overall soft and gentle! Taste lasts in the mouth"

Ingz (5/5)

Smooth Sheng

"I'm tempted to purchase a tong. It is a raw puerh you can't resist buying. It is indeed a smooth drinking raw puerh. Very little bitterness is present and I could not notice any astringency. Sweet floral notes with strong menthol feel in the mouth and throat. And the aroma is strong in honey like sweet orchids. Highly recommend."

Tabitha S. (5/5)

Очень ядрёный чай

"Заварил, попробовал и удивился. Чувство, будто сорвал жменю травы и начал жевать. Очень травянистый. Надеюсь, что со временем эта травянистость перейдёт во что-то более благородное."

Mir (4/5)

Sweet and grassy

"Strong mouthfeel, sweet and grassy. Beautiful golden liquor. Seems like it would be astringent from looks and smell but is wonderfully smooth instead."

Nathan D. (4/5)

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