King Tea Mall · 2011 DaYi "Wei Zui Yan" (the Strongest Flavor) Cake 357g Puerh Shou Cha Ripe Tea
Origin
Yunnan, China
Harvest
2011
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Tasting Notes
EarthyRichSmooth
Vendor Notes
This aged ripe Pu-erh delivers a profound and grounding experience. Expect a robust, thick body with deep earthy notes, perhaps hints of forest floor and a lingering, smooth sweetness. The 'strongest flavor' moniker suggests a powerful, satisfying brew.
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About This Tea
What does 2011 DaYi "Wei Zui Yan" (the Strongest Flavor) Cake 357g Puerh Shou Cha Ripe Tea taste like?
This aged ripe Pu-erh delivers a profound and grounding experience. Expect a robust, thick body with deep earthy notes, perhaps hints of forest floor and a lingering, smooth sweetness. The 'strongest . It leans earthy, rich and smooth.
How should I brew 2011 DaYi "Wei Zui Yan" (the Strongest Flavor) Cake 357g Puerh Shou Cha Ripe Tea?
Water around 95–100 °C (203–212 °F). In a mug, steep 3–5 min. For gongfu, use 5–7 g per 100 ml, 10–20 s steeps (10–20+ rounds). You'll get to see how the flavor changes across multiple rounds. Rinse the leaves once with boiling water before your first real steep. It cleans off storage dust and gets the flavor going.
Where does 2011 DaYi "Wei Zui Yan" (the Strongest Flavor) Cake 357g Puerh Shou Cha Ripe Tea come from?
Grown in Yunnan, China. This batch is from the 2011 harvest.
How much does 2011 DaYi "Wei Zui Yan" (the Strongest Flavor) Cake 357g Puerh Shou Cha Ripe Tea cost?
Starts at $6.99 from King Tea Mall, or about $0.08/g. A 30g package gets you around 5 gongfu sessions at ~6 g each, which works out to about $0.48 per session. Explore more dark teas on Teadar.