2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g

4.5 stars  4.5  1 review  Added 25.07.2013 by Eternal Spring, Tea status: [227] A 6673x
2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013
2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g
2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013
2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013 2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013
2006 Longyu Brand Bulangshan Jin Cha Raw 250g - 2013

Category: Pu-erh

Country: China

Province: Yunnan

Harvest: Production 2006

Producer: Yiliang Xiang Long Tea Factory

Shop: Cha Wang Shop

Cha Wang Shop

Tags: , , ,

Description:

Raw Jin Cha is especially for Tibetan market, used to be mixed with milk, it is very helpful for the digestion. This Jin Cha is made of sun-dried large leaves material from Bulang mountain.

The tea liquor is deep golden and flavored. Stimulation and rich in mouth with floral sweet aftertaste. This raw Jin Cha can also brewed in Tibetan way of tea with milk, butter and salt (or sugar).


  •   Display count: 6673  


Eternal Spring
21.11.2013 14:44:23
Eternal Spring

Pleasant Surprise

5 stars 4.5 This review helped: 0 / 0

I was just curious about this tea, so I bought one mushroom. Puerh tea in the shape of mushroom is primarily intended for Tibetan market and it was produced since 1912. However, production was stopped in 1966 and at the request of Tibetan Buddhists it was reinstated in 1986 again. I did not have great expectations of this pu-erh tea. Mainly I wanted to taste what they drink in Tibet and I was pleasantly surprised. Tea with milk certainly was not a surprise.

The smell of wet leaves is the first to feel a touch of maturity , which then passes into a distinctive fruity aroma of ripe fruit with a touch of menthol in further sweepings. Tea contains large quantities of stalks, but also a fair share of tips. The quality of leaves varied, see attached photo.
I am steeping the first infusion a little longer about 30 to 40s, then the tea is full-bodied right from the start. Tea comfortably slips into the stomach. The taste is mellow and has a strong astringency. There is no bitterness. Aftertaste is also astringent and it then changed to honey- sweet end.
The second infusion - 15s, color of the brew is caramel brown - very pretty. Taste is fruity, round , mellow. There is very pronounced fruitiness in the aftertaste. It is returning to the mouth via nose after swallowing. There is still no bitterness. There is this cooling effect in the mouth when you inhale through your nose. Finally there is very slight bitterness in the aftertaste - I thought that perhaps it is not Bulang :) You can observable a mushroom taste in aftertaste in further brews (5th or more), it is not unpleasant.
Tea’s energy is quite aggressive. It starts from your belly and rises up to your head. It warms up everything along the way. When it reaches the head, it is better just sit back and relax or meditate.

I am adding a little bit of milk. Unfortunately I do not have yak’s milk and butter, only cow’s milk out of the box. Although brew’s color is very intense like caramel, added milk absorbs all the color and infusion has a very fine brown – white color. What has happened to the color of tea, also happened to taste. The complexity of flavors is now covered with milk. Fruit component, maturity completely disappeared. There is just milk flavor with a hint of bitterness in the aftertaste.
I understand that drinking tea with milk and yak butter is due to different cultural and mainly geographic differences. We cannot compare Tibet and our local conditions. In Tibet, it is mainly to diversify rather one-sided diet based on yak meat. In the film – Tea Horse Road – they say this about drinking puerh tea in Tibet : "The tea warms the body and give him the necessary calories to withstand physical stress. At the same time, it also helps to digest meat and deprives the body of butyric acid, which it accumulates at these altitudes. "

It is about 7 years old tea, nicely matured with a fruity flavor, cooling effect and expressive energy. It has good endurance. Tea is good to drink now, also it has more potential for aging for sure. For me, it's a pleasant surprise, especially when one considers the price of $11 per 250 grams. I ordered also Shu version of the same tea from 2007. So hopefully the package arrives till Christmas and I would share more tea experiences with you.

7g per 100ml , 99°C water - flush - 25s/10/15/20/25/30/35/40/50/60/70
Watch out for sourness for longer steeping times.


Was this review helfule? Yes / No





Teas - Pu-erh

2014 Autumn Di Jie Village Old Tree

2014 Autumn Di Jie Village Old Tree Maocha 50g
0.0 stars 0 reviews

Di JIe is one of few villages around Bingdao. This maocha come from late September...

HeKai 2013 - blind tasting set 2

HeKai 2013 - blind tasting set 2
4.0 stars 1 review

nicely balanced bitterness with a breze of sweetness, beautiful honey-fruity aroma,...

2015 Spring Man Nuo Gu Shu Mao Cha 50g

2015 Spring Man Nuo Gu Shu Mao Cha 50g
0.0 stars 0 reviews

Man Nuo ancient tea gardens, at an altitude of 1266 meters. The tea trees are really...

2005 Yibang Old Tree Raw Puerh Brick

2005 Yibang Old Tree Raw Puerh Brick
0.0 stars 0 reviews

Spring 2005 material from Yibang was used for this semi-aged raw puerh tea brick. Rare...

2014 Xiaguan TF "Feng Yao" Export Grade

2014 Xiaguan TF "Feng Yao" Export Grade Raw TuoCha in Paper Box
0.0 stars 0 reviews

This premium tuo is a good blend of selected 1-3 years old materials. This tuo is high...

2012 Xiaguan JiaJi Tuocha In Box 100g

2012 Xiaguan JiaJi Tuocha In Box 100g
0.0 stars 0 reviews

Conventional Xiaguan green box and classic "Jia Ji" recipe! This tuocha is pressed in...


Quotes - Pu-erh


„Pu'er; 普洱. Also Puerh, Pu - er etc. Pu'er is the modern pinyin spelling. The place name of the Old City of Pu'er through which pack horses transported the tea from Southern Yunnan. The names were recently changed; Pu'er is now Ning Er and nearby Simao has the adopted name of Pu'er. Locally, in spoken Chinese at least, Ning Er is still Pu'er. “

zhi-zheng-tea-shop-logo
Source Web: Zhi Zheng Tea Shop. Puer Tea Glossary[online]. Available on WWW: <http://www.zhizhengtea.com/>. [q626] [s78]





Remember what tea did you drink year ago?

Create your own collection of favorite teas and keep the track what you have drunk.

How to add a tea?

Public or Private tea catalogue?

We will help you with tea selection.

Do you like quality loose tea?
We will help you to find the right one for you. Be inspired by tea ratings of other tea lovers. Rating stars could help you.    5 stars    5 stars 

More tea reviews

Photos

The most classical
Camellia sinensis
Chengdu, the capital
Factories are

Review your cup of tea.

Review the tea you are drinking and help other tea lovers to find the right cup of tea.


      5 stars  3 stars   1 stars

Theme

                                                                                                                                                                                                                               

Quotes

„The piling, wetting, and mixing of the piled máochá ensures even fermentation. The bacterial and fungal cultures found in the fermenting piles were found to vary widely from factory to factory throughout Yunnan, consisting of multiple strains of Aspergillus spp., Penicillium spp., yeasts, and a wide range of other microflora. Control over the multiple variables in the ripening process, particularly humidity and the growth of Aspergillus spp., is key in producing ripened pu'er of high quality.“

Source Web: Pu-erh tea[online]. Wikipedia. Available on WWW: <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pu-erh_tea>. [q499] [s62]

Photos

Female workers of a
Pu-erh shape -
Pu-erh shape - Brick
banner 4SUP.CZ - Nafukovací Paddleboardy