27 January, 2013

2012 Essence of Tea "Qishenggu", "Baotang", and "Bulang"

"Write about the 2012 EoT cakes!" they said.

"You know you want to!" they said.

"Give us our preciousssss!" they said.

Two of the above three are verbatim quotes from my inbox.  I am, if nothing else, a slave to your affections, my dear Reader.


2012 EoT Cakes


First, we should set the scene, and provide a little context.  I love me my Essence-of-Tea cakes.  Heaven knows I have enough tongs of the stuff on my shelves.  The outfit owned by the man known only as "Nada" has been a constant and reliable source of really rather delicious pu'ercha since 2008, and often at a very competitive price.

This year's cakes are probably the "easiest on the eyes", as our colonial cousins over the Atlantic would probably say.  I am quite the sucker when it comes to pretty watercolours, and, if you wrap your tea in pretty watercolours, then I am almost already sold on the tea.

Almost.


2012 EoT Qishenggu


I kicked off my Essencefest with the mysteriously-named "Qishenggu", which is a fictional name to protect the innocent.

EoT always picks pretty leaves for its cakes, and these "Qishenggu" leaves fit the bill.  I appreciate the mixture of long- and short-leaved maocha, and the sweet, green scent is doubly appealing.


2012 EoT Qishenggu


My son deigns to leave me a little of the first infusion, which is kind of him.  "More!  Pweeez!" he adds, while giving me Bambi-eyes.

As you might see above, the colour is brutally yellow, almost heading towards being properly green.  I can hear the sounds of a thousand Asian people's stomachs crying out in agony at the rawness of this tea.  With my frighteningly over-heated northern-European constitution, its absolutely perfect in temperament.  

This was a very solid tea. I started off loving it in far-out ways: it has a citric element that adds character, not tartness; the aftertaste is the ever-so-slightly suspicious sweetness of crystallised brown sugar.  It thinned just a touch as the infusions passed; it has plentifully enjoyable floral notes at the outset, but these, as always with light florals, do not endure, and are usually the first characteristic to be lost to the aging process.  



2012 EoT Baotang


Stepping up the pricing, the Baotang is £48 which, it must be said, is getting rather expensive for an unaged cake.  Perhaps I am permanently stuck in a 2006 pricing groove. 

Baotang is in the Mengsong area of Menghai, and it is written that this tea was made with leaves from 300-400 year-old trees, which were hand-processed by a chap who stayed in the village for two months. 


2012 EoT Baotang


Xiaohu has departed for a day in town with his adoring grandmother, and so I look forward to enjoying a rare moment at the tea-table.

The first impression of this tea is very positive: it has a strong, enduring aroma that lasts for well over a minute.  For better or worse, I find myself caring about the aroma of the tea, because (I convince myself that) it conveys useful information about the compounds in the soup.  Teas with a rapidly-fading aroma seem to be among the first of my cakes to nose-dive in strength with aging, while my most pleasantly-aging cakes seem to be full, in body and in aroma, as young leaves.  I don't get this information from the tasting cup - the scent progression is only available in its full, to my senses, when using an aroma cup (wenxiangbei).  

(Much ink has been spilled concerning the merits, for and against, the aroma cup, from which I will spare you.)


2012 EoT Baotang


This cake delivers a thickly-textured soup, with some higher notes of Menghai-area "mushroom", as I often interpret it.  The kuwei [good bitterness] reminds me of older teas, and it pushes into all corners of the mouth.


2012 EoT Bulang


Finally, the one I had been waiting for: the Bulang.  EoT has made some face-destroying, eye-melting, bowel-scouringly beautiful Bulangs in the past.  I write this with some affection and admiration.  The 2011 was totally Taxmaster.  The 2010 was rather hardcore.  The 2009 was a demon screaming into an old lady's face at point-blank range.  They have aged a treat.  The earlier cakes were stupendous value; things got a bit uncomfortable in price with the 2010, and then moreso with the 2011.

This 2012 cake is £71. Perhaps it will feature even more demons and Taxmasters for our money!  Perhaps.

The monsters mostly come at night.  Mostly.


2012 EoT Bulang


Nada writes that he wanted to try something different with this year's cakes.  Who can blame a man for wanting to mix things up a little?  He has combined maocha from two villages (Manmu and somewhere fairly near) in an attempt to balance the punchy kuwei [good bitterness] of one region with some nominally complementary characteristics from the other region.  This could work, methinks.

The aroma is long and engaging, which is a good start.  I enjoyed its low, sticky sweetness, noting an obvious departure from previous years' Bulang productions.  Initial wisps of smokiness soon dissipate - no problem, 'tis a young cake.

It is calm, smooth, and sweet with a great deal of "chaqi" that is immediately energising.  It has a heavy base that tastes very much like biscuit to my addled senses.  The kuwei is a marked change from previous years. 

My tastes are undoubtedly fickle, but this cake is, to my mind, in a different genre to the aggressive, thrilling heights of its cousins from previous years.  Then again, I have strange tastes in pu'ercha, and never really "get" elegant teas, which I know that Mr. and Mrs. Essence enjoy a great deal.  It must be something to do with that fact that I am something of a thug.


2012 EoT Bulang


These cakes are well-made, and well-selected, as ever.  They also represent a change for Essence of Tea.  Every year, the learnings of Mr. and Mrs. Essence allow them to produce something just a little bit better than the year before.




Addendum
August, 2013

This 2012 Bulangshan is the "without pesticide" sample from Essence of Tea's £15 sampler pack.




The leaves and soup are clean, pure, and beautiful.  The two-component mixture is rather obvious: it has a biscuit base that feels a little roasted, and a distinctly separable sharp-sour tone of good old-fashioned Bulang.




My opinion of this tea is, likewise, formed of two separable components: the one positive, the one less positive.  I prefer the style of Bulangshan cakes of previous years from Essence of Tea, and am uncertain how the roast "biscuit" profile will age.  Time will tell.  "Biscuits and grapefruit", I wrote in my journal, in summary.

25 January, 2013

2012 Douji "Yudou", "Dadou"

I took the opportunity of an act of kindness from China Chadao to learn a little more about Douji's hitherto-mysterious range of blends.


2012 Douji Yudou, Dadou


I used the 2010 and 2011 catalogues to obtain my data (with prices from China Chadao), given that they are the most complete; the 2012s still seem to be making their way into the market.  Note that in all of the below, "Dou" is pronounced "DOH!", rather like Homer Simpson, and with just as much gusto.   In the third tone.

In order of increasing (2011) price per gram:
1. Xiangdou [fragrant-Dou] brick, $20 / 250g
2. Hongdadou, Hongshangdou [red great-Dou, red upper-Dou] cake, $30 / 357g
3. Landadou, Lanshangdou [blue great-Dou, blue upper-Dou] cake, $35 / 357g
4. Yundou [harmony/charm-Dou] brick, $33 / 250g
5. Yudou [jade-Dou] cake, $49 / 357g
6. Jindou [gold-Dou] cake, 357g

Note that #3 is a stronger version of #2.  The blends really do seem to be "eclectic":
Xiangdou: Bulang, Damenglu*, Menghai
Dadou: Manzhuan, Mengsong, Youle
Shengdou: Mengku, Menghai, Simao
Yundou: Hekai, Mengku, Mengsong, Youle
Yudou: as above
Jindou: Banzhang, Jingmai, Yiwu
*Pinyin errors creep into the translations; "Damenglu" does not exist, but could perhaps refer to Manlushan in the Menghai / Mengsong region.


2012 Douji Dadou


With such broad ranges of source material, often specified only vaguely ("Menghai" is a county, "Simao" is an entire prefecture), the above are only a very sketchy guide.  The proof of the pudding is in the tasting - which is why we are where we are, after all.

The blends all have very similar appearances before the water boils: they are small- and medium-sized leaves, appearing in largish fragments.  Typically, they have a decent and clean scent of freshly blended maocha.


2012 Douji Dadou


The "house style" of Douji is darkness, heaviness, and tobacco aplenty - although in a pleasant and clean manner, compared with the tar-and-pitch of modern Xiaguan (which someone once aptly described as being like "black cigars").  The Douji house style is detectable in their single-mountain cakes, but is absolutely obvious in their blends.

This Dadou is strong.  I am not sure if it is "red" or "blue", but I suspect the latter due to its beefy kuwei [decent throaty bitterness].  It is also very sweet - after a few infusions, it warms up into a honey-like tone which is welcome, in combination with the scents of tobacco and the solid bitterness.

It has a base of green leafy plantation characteristics, but this is a (relatively) inexpensive cake.  Not at all bad.  I fondly recall my first encounter with this blend in 2008 (yikes, half a decade ago?) which was, I believe, the first year for this blend: back then, it was creamy, soapy, and definitely milky.  The blend has changed since then - for better or worse I cannot say, but it is noticeably different.


2012 Douji Yudou


The Yudou, pictured above, is nominally the better cake - it certainly costs more.  The leaves, pictured above, look very similar to those of the Dadou.


2012 Douji Yudou


In the cup, it is similar to, but very much better than, the Dadou: it has the same clean base of heavy tobacco, but it is tangy, long, vibrant and very "alive".  After a few infusions, the breath is noticeably cooled; the nose is filled with heavy mushroom-like scents; the whole feeling is big, bold, and good.  It does have a lot in common with "trad Menghai" cakes, and I wonder if the Hekaishan component of the blend does in fact have a noticeable contribution to the final character.

It endures very well, holding up to several hours of brewing.  After twelve or so, a base of green plantation comes through, but the tobacco and tangy kuwei continue to tell me "everything's OK".


2012 Douji Yudou, Dadou


In style, the *Dou blends have converged towards that made famous by Dayi, and have something reminiscent of modern Xiaguan (on one of their better days).  I like them very much: I always have a soft spot in my heart for very solid blends, which are invariably based on plantation leaves, but which can be made really very enjoyable, if the blender knows what they're doing.  The evolution of Douji blends over the past five years has resulted in some very sharp, tasty cakes that (certainly for the cakes at the upper end, such as the Yudou) could have the legs to age into something decent.

The price has edged ever upwards, as is the recurring problem with modern Douji, but these are very solid.  At $50, buying the Yudou isn't a quick decision, but if, like me, you get on well with hardcore "trad" plantation blends, in the Dayi vein, then some of these begin to look rather appealing for low-maintenance, high-enjoyment brewing.

23 January, 2013

Stalking Her Prey

Sunhat


stalking her prey
sinews tense, gaze fixed
the photographer