2005 CNNP Big Yellow Mark from Yunnan Sourcing in ragg paper (uncut edges) |
The good news is Yunnan Sourcing’s US site now offers Free
Shipping for orders over $75. With this tea at $68, I can easily find something
else to toss into my cart to reach that free shipping mark. Recently I noted
that white2tea has reduced their flat rate shipping from $14.99 to $9.99. So
all the online griping over shipping costs seems to have had some effect on at
least two vendors.
My cake arrived during the first hot and muggy spell of the
summer. Of the two teas I ordered together, this is the one that stank up the
box with minty incense. The beeng is 357 grams with machine compression. Mr. Wilson describes the storage on this tea as “dry
Guangdong,” which is more humid than a dry-stored Kunming. I found my cake is
definitely on the dry side of humid storage with no off odors and I welcome the
bug bites on the wrapper. Overall my cake is drier than, say, the 2006 Chang
Tai I bought last year from Yunnan Sourcing. The material in this tea is a
spring blend of Bulang and Nannuo leaf with a mix of buds and larger leaves.
No mushy spots on mine. |
A Bulang/Nannuo mix of buds with larger leaves. |
This tea performs very well in zisha/Yixing clay. |
I agree with Mr. Wilson’s assessment that this tea will be
really nice in 8-10 years. The lack of any date stamp knocks the collectors off
the buyer list for this tea, leaving it for those of us with a storage hobby.
While the price is entry level for a semi-aged tea, I really hope that the
storage fiends are the people who go for this. I consider this a tea to put
away for that full duration as Mr. Wilson suggests, so you can have a very
nicely aged puerh tea in just a short decade, or maybe less if you live in one
of those more humid places. This tea has the best possible start and yet is dry
enough that I cannot consider it wet stored at all. If someone says to me “oh
well this tea did not ‘do’ it for me,” then I think you are missing something.
Tea is still green but with pale brown aging started. |
Yunnan Sourcing US showed 18 cakes left today, but now it
will show at most 17, because I bought another. I cannot tell how many are
available on the new China site, and you know what is going to happen. Because the tea lacks a date stamp, Mr. Wilson has somewhat under-priced this little gem and he will figure that out all too soon. A 2005 tea for $66/68? I do not expect this price to stay so low for long.
New spring teas are on the horizon! I notice that Bitterleaf Teas are first out of the gate with 2017 spring puerh tea already. Unexpectedly I received a couple of samples today which I will try next time.
New spring teas are on the horizon! I notice that Bitterleaf Teas are first out of the gate with 2017 spring puerh tea already. Unexpectedly I received a couple of samples today which I will try next time.
Cwyn,
ReplyDeleteThanks again for such a thorough review! I was also eyeing this cake to restock my stash but was turned off by the "CNNP" . Perhaps I will throw one in the cart for the next order.
Do you feel that this cake has the character to drink now or is there something not quite "there"?
Peace
Thanks for asking, it's a good question. I feel like if the aged taste it has gets deeper then the tea will be really excellent. If I drink it now, I will miss out on that truly good aged note. The aged note, as you know, is a note that develops on a tea in addition to the flavors it already has. I guess wine has the same issue, it is drinkable and the question is whether to let it be to get even better. This tea has a great head start with more than a decade on it, so that shortens the remaining time for a reasonable span given my own age.
ReplyDeleteCwyn,
ReplyDeleteThat was a beautifully put explanation. You make a compelling argument for someone who is definitely not one of those "experienced storage folks" with many drinkers sitting around. Thanks again for this.
Peace
Oh, wow, so you have a nice stash of tea to look forward to! A good cellar, larder and the pumidor of life are indeed our riches to enjoy while resting from our life's labor. Cheers!
DeleteThanks for writing about the 2005 CNNP Big Yellow Mark. Two years later I found your poast and was inspired to pick up two cakes for aging :) Now I am tempted to try storing one in a crock and one in a Mr. Mopar style converted mini fridge/pumidor ;)
ReplyDeleteThanks for such a great post..your observations are spot on. I just bought two cakes and will probaby get another one soon. I love this tea even in its transitioning burly flavors transitioning stage..will be hard not to drink all at once.
ReplyDelete