More lovely samples of Chen Yuan Hao await my discovery, and
today I plan to drink a 2016 Yiwu tea. The sample is courtesy of a tea friend,
who labeled the tea Yiwu, so I am guessing the sample is the 2016 Chen Yi Zi
Hao aka Yiwu Chawang
here from Teapals.
I own plenty of Yiwu teas and while the best ones have a
grape top note and honey base, Yiwu teas are fairly diverse in the finer
points, including leaf size and aging potential. In fact, Yiwu varietal teas
extend south of the Yunnan China border into Laos where they cannot “properly”
be called puerh tea even though the trees themselves do not know this political
requirement. I should not necessarily generalize about a Yiwu tea before
actually trying it, because the smaller distinctions make a huge difference in
price.
Before I try this tea, however, please note this image of a
pristine porcelain gaiwan.
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Gaiwan by Inge Nielsen, Etsy |
While of course this is a fairly new 65 ml gaiwan made by potter
Inge Nielsen (@i.n.clay on Instagram), I tend to keep my all my tea ware on the
clean side. Now I’m all for Patina, but we have Real patina and Fake patina. Patina
is a dark stain left behind on tea ware from years and years of use. This patina
is often shiny and a muted tea color which indicates aging, very pleasing on
Yixing and other clay teapots. Patina is so desirable it is often faked to make
teapots look older. Thus, Patina is the
new riche for tea heads. So much so in fact that some people must get that
patina going at all costs by never wiping or cleaning off the tea ware. So you
see tea gear that looks something like this.
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Tea Scum |
I am reluctant to share the source of this disgraceful tea
ware, after all I am only poking a little bit of gentle (I hope) fun. However,
the owner does have a registered government non-profit organization so I feel
not at all guilty leaving off an attribution. And to be clear this org has not
replied to any of my two year’s worth of emails pleading for help getting acceptance of SNAP benefits at Yunnan Sourcing
and other expensive puerh dealers because food stamps do, after all, cover tea
and coffee. No one works harder than Old Cwyn on behalf of tea people for real
issues despite the fact that I don’t have 501c tax-free status myself. Any complaints
regarding all this can be directed to the contact form on the right hand side
of this page.
Because the truth is this type of tea staining is not
Patina, but Tea Scum. Tea Scum is the result of tea trapped beneath a
combination of oils and minerals in water which eventually form a crust. Rather
like this:
Over time bacteria gets trapped in mineral crusts. I mean
really, do you let your tea ware resemble your toilet bowl? Well maybe some do.
I know puerh hoarding and trouble with cleaning go hand in hand. In the toilet
bowl level one can perhaps understand this, assuming the stats are really true
and 85% of puerh readers are male, so they don’t need to sit down constantly
like women to do their business except after a particularly nasty shou goes
south which no respectable tea collector ever drinks. Personally, I don’t keep
my toilet looking like this but of course tea ware is more important than the
toilet bowl. Right?
For educational purposes, going beyond the focus of my blog
which is mostly confined to Tea Filth, let me show you what Real Patina is.
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Two years of use produces a very light patina
Lin's Ceramics cream color cup |
Any stain that does not scrape off with a fingernail is Real
Patina. That which scrapes off with a fingernail is Tea Scum. Just so you know.
You can pay me to try a questionable shou but not in the tea ware in the photo
above. The Midwest where I live is known for the adage “cleanliness is next to
godliness,” and this is not mere regional stereotyping. Cleanliness
is
godliness. Alas, Tea Scum lurks within the best company and not just vendors,
and boiling temperatures do not kill off bacteria on Venus, something for man
to dwell upon.
My advice, always travel with your own gaiwan and cup as a
backup contingency. Inspect all tea ware carefully before using anyone else’s.
Having a wet wipe in your wallet is certainly worth a thought if you don’t want
to insult the host by insisting on using your own tea ware. You can pretend to
inspect the “beauty” of the piece by holding it at a distance far below the
level of the table while applying a discreet wipe, and remind the host of
properly warming the wares with boiling water afterward, prior to brewing.
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2016 Chen Yuan Hao "Yiwu" |
Using my pristine (for now) gaiwan, I can truly give the
2016 CYH Yiwu the attention and aesthetic it deserves. For this tea costs 1200
MYR for a full beeng which rings up at $270. Not the most expensive Yiwu out
there, the Last Thoughts cake comes to mind, but well past any budget Yiwu. I
have a most generous sample thanks to my friend, and so many sessions available
to me.
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Steep 3 |
The initial nose is an acrid smoke in a vegetal base which
reflects in the flavor of the first two cups after a rinse, and thankfully
washes away after three brews. The gold color of the brew is surprisingly dark
for a tea less than a year old, but perhaps the bit of char lends some color in
the early steeps. My photo appears consistent with the Teapals photo. I get
more bitterness than usual for many boutique Yiwu teas. A very heavy body qi after
about three small 60 ml cups causes me to pass out early in the day.
This tea
also possesses a strong throat feel that lingers long after drinking, like a
ball in the throat you know the tea is there. The flavor range is
representative but somewhat narrow, a single octave like G below middle C to G
above. None of the thickness of more premium Yiwu teas but of course that may
improve and the tea is not even out of the first year yet. This one brews long,
past ten brews and thickens a bit in steeps eight to ten.
I notice how small the leaves are compared to other
productions, rather like the 2002 Yong Pin Hao Red which is also a first flush
spring tea. A well-cultivated garden behind these teas, and both have dry
storage. The 2002 YPH is now up to $260 a cake, just $10 behind this CYH but of
course you’re paying for the age in the former, and the label premium in the
latter. Ah, my white wrapper 1999 Yiwu, were that tea still available, seems
like bargain now at $330-ish before it sold out.
The tea has some durability in steeping, I went ten steeps
and the brew still had strength, however I noticed some disintegration of the
leaves. Doing a strength test by rubbing the leaves between my fingers, some
turned to mush but others did not.
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Steep 9
Cloudy brew from disintegrating leaves |
This affected the soup, the disintegration
lent a sour vegetal flavor. This tea is still young, so one must subtract the
months-old tea as a variable to some extent until the leaves tighten up more.
The durability of the brew is encouraging for the long term and I’d like to try
this again some months from now.
This tea is definitely a better experience than a plain
drinker and really one’s collection is a determining factor. Do you want yet
another Yiwu in your stash? If you don’t have a decent Yiwu tea this is a good
consideration. Or if you’ve tried the YQH teas and don’t care for the Taiwanese
heavier storage, this tea is a new one you can try your hand at storing dry.
This is where I think the tea has the most merit for me, the opportunity to age
and retain more of the top notes. Quite honestly, the leaves themselves
interest me more than drinking the tea they make, just for observing changes
over time. This could be one of those long-drinking Yiwu cakes as long as it
doesn’t sour along the way. Care is everything and the storage challenge is
intriguing.
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Leaves after steep 10 when I stopped |
Otherwise, the price is off-putting for anyone new to puerh
tea and more appealing to those with some experience of labels. Most puerh
folks need to convince themselves with personal trial and error what tier of
tea various amounts of money will get. A writer telling you all this really
means nothing otherwise. I can say the tea is properly situated in price tier
between other teas, whether or not you feel the tiers as a whole should drop
down a clean hundred bills, well that is not likely to happen. This tea will
hit the $400 mark within five years, I’m sure. On the upside, this production is
yearly so when last year sells out you can likely expect another offering in
2017 with give or take roughly the same price.
Cheers!
As far as I *currently* understand things, the best teas are all to the *west* of Guafengzhai village. There will be stands up to and over the border, just from self-seeding, but quality varies.
ReplyDeletePhongsaly has the Yiwu varietal, more east. Of course whether or not it is "best" is probably hard to generalize. I just find Yiwu is easy to generalize while talking but really the teas end up more diverse in reality.
Deletewhat js the best way to clean tea scum from clay teaware?
ReplyDeleteFor glass, baking soda is okay. I cannot recommend baking soda for porcelain as it will scratch and dull the surface (and teeth, don't use it for toothpaste). I ruined the finish on a porcelain sink with baking soda, so save yourself my mistake. Barkeeper's Friend or another cleanser meant for dishware is fine. Even toothpaste is okay, I use Gleem toothpaste on yellowed vintage plastics with good results, works on yellowed car headlights too.
DeleteThank you
DeleteNice article Cwyn. A tip for anyone having trouble getting the tea scum off of their porcelain/glass/stainless steel teaware: place your teaware into a container and add just enough warm water to cover. Drop in a denture cleaning tablet or two and wait (15 minutes or overnight). Most of the scum will dissolve right off and the rest should wipe off very easily. This _might_ interfere with patina development but I don't know one way or the other.
ReplyDeleteAlternatively, a paste of baking soda and water works great but requires a little elbow grease.
Cwyn, could you elaborate a little on what your typical steep times look like for sheng? I typically do 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, and then I'll add a minute each time until the tea's done. Maybe I could be getting more out of my leaves?
thank you
DeleteAfter the rinses my next two steepings are long, because the leaves are not open. Quick steeps too early give nothing but colored water, so forty seconds or so for the first steep, then thirty. Fourth steep is flash brewing which I continue until the tea fades, after which I start adding time to the flash brew. It is significant for me to note when this point arrives. Mega steepers will flash brew tens steeps before I start adding any time. A cheaper tea might be cashed out at that point and need two minute brews. Really depends on the tea. Liu Bao is a short steeper, the money brews are the first four.
DeleteOh that's interesting, never would've guessed. I'm going to give that a try with a pu I already know well.
ReplyDeleteAlso good tip above about baking soda scratching porcelain. Didn't realize that it would scratch it - guess I won't be cleaning my porcelain stuff that way anymore!
Yes baking soda will scratch your porcelain (and develop a patina),glazed clay should not develop a patina with care (don't use the scrubby side of your dish pad, use the soft side or something soft like a damp paper towel). You need to do this http://www.ehow.com/how_5859235_make-washing-soda.html and use sodium carbonate aka Washing Soda. I heard that where you are they should sell washing soda in the supermarkets/grocery stores. Also hand towelettes are usually Isopropyl with some sort of buffer and scent so I wouldn't. Though Isopropyl (a type of alcohol) is good to clean other resinous "scum"/buildup on different kind of glassware.
ReplyDeleteI personally dissolve 1/8 to 1/16 tsp. washing soda in a little amount of water and wipe with a paper towel that I reuse (it has developed an illustrious patina btw). And rinse. Though every once in a while tea ware should be sanitized.
On another personal note, although expensive, I think you tasters and review/commentators should get together and decide on a water to use uniformly. Just a thought. ta ta
Thanks for stopping by and for your comments. I have Borax but just don't think I need it for tea ware. Regular rinsing and wiping avoids any scum problems altogether. But if I needed anything really grainy I suppose salt works fine.
DeleteAs for water, such experiments have already been done. I recall a post by MarshalN when he sent tea samples round to several drinkers and all used the same water to brew them. I recall Poland Spring is one water that some view favorably for tea brewing. I am fortunate that my water has very little scale, so I don't have too much build up unlike other places I've lived in the past.
Hey no problem! I just read your Tea Somm certificate, which was hilarious, bravo. Also I'm not too sure about borax (not sure if sardonic)(I think it's better for grease and not plant matter and tannic buildup, just a guess.) Also as I sure you are aware, wiping will still leave aromatics in the cup. I have Borax too but I've never used it on teaware just toilets, and I wouldn't really recommend it on teaware. Since washing soda breaks down pretty harmlessly and is dissociates pretty quickly in water. I prefer the Japanese take on teaware.
DeleteI haven't tried Poland Springs yet, I'll pick up a bottle.
Also do you know a good place to pick up medium-ish size clay that isn't exuberantly expensive? I want to do aging experiments in clay, but everywhere wants all my monies.
Thanks,
Deven
eBay or thrift stores for inexpensive stoneware.
Delete