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Bulang Shan Raw Pu-erh Tea Mini Cake

Rich & aromatic, easy to brew

$2.50 $2.50
Ship from U.S. Warehouse (2-5 days delivery)
Bulang Shan Raw Pu-erh Tea Mini Cake

Rich & aromatic, easy to brew

Rating:
88% of 100
Categories:
TeaPu-erh
Summary
Origin:

Bulang Mountain, Menghai County, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan Province, China

Harvest Date:

March 14, 2021

Production Date:

April 23, 2021

Dry Leaf: 

Tight and round small cake, the stripes are clear with a little white fuzz

Aroma: 

Fresh and floral aroma, the wet leaves have slight plum notes

Liquor: 

Light yellow

Taste: 

Full and rich in taste, a little bit bitter but disappear fast following by the sweet aftertaste, producing a secretion of saliva

Tea Bush:

Menghai large-leaf tea bush species (60-80 years)

Tea Garden:

Bulang Mountain Ancient Tea Garden (1500-1600 meters altitude)

Caffeine:

Low caffeine (less than 10% of a cup of coffee)

Storage:

Store in cool, dry place away from sunlight; keep ventilated

Shelf Life:

The aged the better

Angel's Comment:

You don't need to buy a whole 357 grams cake to taste the thick and nectar-flavored tea liquid of Bulang puerh. One mini cake is easy to brew and carry.

This Bulang mini raw cake comes from Bulang Mountain tea area. It has rich aroma and a slight plum notes. The tea liquid has the typical Cha Qi and strong taste of Bulang tea. Meanwhile, the taste is a little bitter but will become to the sweet aftertaste quickly, producing a secretion of saliva. Besides, the individually mini cake design is great for portability, brewing, and storage.

Recommend Brewing Method

Cup Method

Chinese Gongfu Method

Teacup: 12oz / 355ml Gaiwan: 3.8oz / 110ml
203℉ / 95℃ 203℉ / 95℃
1 piece tea 1 piece tea
Brewing time: 2 - 3 mins 11 steeps: rinse, 20s, 30s, 15s, 15s, 20s, 20s, 20s, 35s, 50s, 80s, 120s
      Rinse time is 5 seconds
Tea Garden

Bulang Mountain has a long history of tea planting. As early as more than 1,000 years ago, Bulang nation people here began to grow tea. Bulang Mountain Ancient Tea Garden includes a number of pollution-free alpine forest areas, of which Banzhang and Lao Man'e are the most famous. The soil here is fertile, sunny, and rainfall is abundant. The average annual rainfall is about 1300 mm, and the annual average temperature is 18 ℃ ~ 21 ℃. Furthermore, Bulang Mountain tea is a green and healthy ecological tea that is free of chemical fertilizers and pesticides. Therefore, it is very popular among tea lovers.

tea trees

tea trees

Origin

Bulang Mountain sits in Menghai County of Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, and is a famous area of pu-erh production. This mountain houses the largest concentration of ancient tea trees within a 100,000-hectare area.

The mountain rolls and stretches across Menghai, with deep valleys cutting through hills that can reach up to 1216 meters on average, with the highest point, Sanduo Peak, rising almost 2100m above sea level. Bulang Mountain experiences a subtropical monsoon climate, with abundant sunlight and rainfall of about 1374mm per year, and the average temperature between 18 and 21℃. There is little risk of frost here, and the season for it is also short; during the spring and winter a heavy fog blankets the mountain, while the summer and autumn months are often overcast and rainy.

Map of Yunnan,Bulang Mountain

Tea Bush

Native to Menghai County in Xishuangbanna, the Menghai large-leaf tea species was rated as the most improved national variety in 1984. It grows up to 7m tall in the wild with bold green leaves noticeably larger than more common varieties, and the buds of this species are yellowish-green and coated in fuzz. The leaves are high in phytochemicals, with one bud and two leaves containing 2.3% amino acids, 32.8% polyphenolic compounds, 4.1% caffeine, and 18.2% catechinic acid. Because of this, pu-erh tea made from this species is high in quality, rich yet soft in taste, and maintains a full-bodied essence.

Menghai large leaf tea tree species

History

Pu-erh is one of the oldest types of tea in China with a history stretching back over 1700 years to the Eastern Han Dynasty, when the tea was called Jing Cha. It is named after the town of Pu’er in Yunnan province, which was originally the early trading center for this tea. In early history pu-erh was used as a bartering currency in southwest China, with the famed Cha Ma Gu Dao, the Tea Horse Road, being built for the purpose of transporting this tea through the Himalayas to other countries and areas in Tibet.

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