Skip to content

Bai Sha Xi "Blue Mark 5375" Fu Zhuan Tea from Hunan

Sold out
Original price $5.00 - Original price $82.00
Original price
$5.00
$5.00 - $82.00
Current price $5.00

Bai Sha Xi Tea Factory in Anhua County of Hunan is the earliest producer of "Dark Tea" (hei cha) in Hunan and the first to produce the Golden Flower bricks in China. Bai Sha Xi was established in 1940 to product Hei Cha bricks, then in 1953 they produced the first Fu Brick with Golden Flowers.

This "Blue Mark 蓝印 5375" commemoreates the years 1953 and the 75th anniversary of the Bai Sha Xi Tea factory! 

This 800 gram tea brick is composed entirely of spring harvest material from An Hua county area mountainous tea gardens. The tea was fermented using Bai Sha Xi's proprietary process, then pressed into bricks where the golden flowers flourish in the inner section of the brick where the conditions are just right to support them. After a few days the Golden Flowers have thrived the bricks are dried gradually using a temperature of 37C which preserves gradually halts the spread of the flowers without damaging them or the tea leaves.

800 grams per brick. Each brick comes in a lovely gift box with booklet in English and Chinese!

ALLERGEN ALERT!!!   ** Because there is a possibility the golden flowers were inoculated using wheat flour we cannot guarantee this tea is safe for those with Celiac Disease or those that have severe gluten induced allergies **

***Box may be damaged in transit. No refunds or credits will be issued and no returns will be accepted for a damaged box. If you want a perfect box, please do not order the boxed item since we cannot guarantee a box in perfect condition.***

Here we drink the 2015 version of this tea!


Overall rating: 4.8235292 / 5 from 17 reviews.

AI Generated Review Summary

Summary topics

Review topics: ["taste","feel","sweetness","tea","honey","box","drinker","brick","flowers","rinse","coffee","steeps"].

Review highlights

Reviews

Smooth

"When ordering this I feel like I completely misunderstood what to expect from Hei Cha. I expected something of an acquired taste; very strong, mushroomy and sour, with plenty of astringency and bitterness. Instead this brews super smooth pretty much no matter how you treat it. It's definitely earthy, caramelly and has subtle notes of Chaga, sourness and astringency, but it feels very muted compared to the experiences I've had before drinking Pu'erh. It's a nice tea that I could easily drink every day, and I feel like a big cup lasts me all day brewing Grandpa-style. I do wish however that it felt a bit more alive and potent flavour-wise. I have to acknowledge that it's only a few years old at this point though, so I probably will enjoy it more once it's aged."

g b. (4/5)

Quite Enjoyable

"New to Fu Tea. Quite enjoyable. Lots of golden flours. In find it soothes your stomach and helps with digestion."

Christopher S. (4/5)

Top Tier Fu!

"I’ve had this tea for a few years, but just now got around to reviewing it. To me, this Fu brick is sweeter than most that I’ve had. On par with a good Tian Jian. The sweetness and sour taste is similar to the Run Zi Fu brick. Flavor-wise, I get caramelized fruit, forest tones, rock oolong-like minerality, and sweet sour honey. The brick is loosely compressed and doesn’t brew out as many rounds as I would like, which is my only gripe. But I think I like it more the older it gets."

Ryan P. (5/5)

Great stuff

"Very enjoyable tea. I usually brew it up strong in a thermos. There's a nice and grounding tobacco-y taste at play here, coupled with the traditional, slightly acidic sweetness, I often get from fuzhuan teas."

Eric R. (5/5)

delicious, enjoyable hei cha

"It is extremely difficult to describe the taste of a Hei Cha tea properly, or to compare it to a known taste. I sometimes think that some Hei Cha teas are not drunk for the taste, but rather for their supposed medicinal properties... I have also had experiences with quality teas with an almost unpleasant, unappealing taste... This Hei Cha, however, has a very delicious, pleasant taste! It has a typical Hei Cha aroma, but it is also sweet and even a little creamy, with a hint of spices in the background, perhaps a slight Chinese cinnamon... I have tasted some of the components of the tea's flavour in the branches of certain trees in the autumn forest... The colour of the tea resembles that of certain Yunnan red teas, strong, able to withstand many infusions. Definitely worth trying and enjoying!"

suttogo (5/5)

95C.....5 pours at 110 seconds...Ive

"95C.....5 pours at 110 seconds...Ive learned that some people boil this Fu...not Gong Fu Cha style....i dont think you can go wrong brewing this Fu...its very forgiving....i used 14 grams in my 200 ml Purple Yixing Clay Teapot....tomorrow ill use my 500 ml Black Yixing Clay Teapot....im sure ill be able to get another 1000 ml....but the steeps will be much longer.....at 97C....this tea is yummy....I love strong Hei Cha....and this tea has got a creamy....buttery....PU-ERH taste....its amazing....id like to buy some more and put it in my tea vault.....in the photos....you can see the Golden Flowers.....I LOVE SEEING GOLDEN FLOWERS....i have some year 2000 Fu...its loaded with Golden Flowers....GOOD JOB YUNANN...IM PLEASED"

Mitchel B. (5/5)

Really unique tea. Lovely Fu

"Really unique tea. Lovely Fu Brick."

Stephen T. (4/5)

Relaxing

"Nice easy drinking smooth Fu. Peaceful time"

Gilbert B. (5/5)

Nice tea

"Great tea, always regret not buying the whole cake. Feeling inside after drinking is strange, but in a good way"

Steinar T. (5/5)

Good stuff

"This is the first fu zhuan I have tried, and it's really good. I keep drinking it almost every day without getting boring. The price is great too, I may purchase a whole brick."

Ido153 (5/5)

Q&A

Hello, as for other Fu cha(s), are you supposed to rinse this tea or would this remove the golden flowers? Also, I was curious to know if the cha qui that a lot of people mention with Fu cha comes from the golden flowers (if this has even be studied!). Thanks.
Rinsing will remove some, but with a brief rinse you shouldn't lose much as the tea is tightly compressed. I don't know if there is a relationship between the golden flowers and cha qi, but there could well be.
Can you drink the 2019 version immediately or have to wait few years?
You can enjoy it now for sure.
How would you recommend storing a brick of this tea? I have separate ripe and raw puerh pumidors. Should I store it with the ripe or the raw? or in a separate heicha humidor? Or just on a shelf in my closet?
I would store it with raw if you don't have a separate place to put it. Ripe would give it a weird taste.
Free Gifts

and BOGO Offers!

Brewing Guide

Helpful Suggestions!

Terms

Shipping, Refunds and More.

EU MRL

Yunnan Sourcing Brand Pu-erh