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2011 Xiang Yi "Yi Pin Fu" Hunan Fu Brick Tea

Original price $9.50 - Original price $56.00
Original price
$9.50
$9.50 - $56.00
Current price $9.50

This is from the Xiang Yi Tea Factory in An Hua county of Hunan Province. Xiang Yi is the second oldest producer of Hunan Hei Cha after Bai Sha Xi Tea Factory.

This Fu Brick is composed of An Hua grown tea that's been picked and processed with frying, rolling, wilting and then sun-dried. The bricks are tightly compressed which allows for slow but determined post fermentation. This tea may or may not have golden flowers (eurotium cristatum). Most bricks have it; some do not.

This particular brick was stored in An Hua County of Hunan from 2011 until now. The smell of the dry leaf is fruit and hardwood. The taste is sweet, with an earth and tropical hardwood taste, with a smooth and sweet mushroom broth finish. You can really push this tea in later steeps with awesome results! You might even boil the leaves from the start if you like your fu strong and thick!

This tea can be infused 7 to 10 times if brewed gong fu style. We recommend loosening the tea using a pick into smallish chunks layer by layer. We also recommend using a clay, porcelain, or silver teapot AND the hottest water possible.

An incredibly unique tea that's also very very enjoyable to drink!

400 grams per brick

2011 Vintage

** 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 **

Overall rating: 4.3333335 / 5 from 3 reviews.

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Update To My Previous Review

"This tea shines more in its barely warm or stone cold state. It develops a richer nutty flavor with a nice enzyme-ey-ness to it. On the downside, its ammonia note is still there."

Rayna (5/5)

Great Leaf Aroma, More Generic Taste, Under Sweet

"This tea took some time to get to know well enough to review it & it takes more effort to get it to release its flavor. The directions on how best to brew it seem to be accurate. The dry leaves smelled perfect, very cave-like, earthy, & somewhat complex; with faint hints of wood or mushroom. You also get the hei cha yeasty/bready & sour/sharp notes. On the downside, this tea seems to lose much of that complexity once brewed, for taste especially. Mostly I get the yeasty/bready, sour/sharp, & sometimes ammonia-like notes. This tea would definitely benefit from being sweeter than it is too."

Rayna (4/5)

Amazing Value and Sweetness

"I received this tea as apart of a dark tea bundle. The first few steeps are incredibly rich with sweetness and wood. Gradually, the woodiness is pushed to the background. The sweetness stays at the forefront from the first to the last steep. This tea reminded me a lot of a raw pu’erh with its tropic sweetness but its woodiness sets it apart. I really enjoyed this tea and highly recommended it."

Dylan (4/5)

Q&A

Is this ripe pu-erh tea, is it black tea, or is it neither? what is meant with "Golden Flowers"? Thanks in advance for your reply!
It's Hei Cha from Hunan. Golden flowers are also known as "eurotium cristatum".
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Yunnan Sourcing Brand Pu-erh