I have been meaning to get a review of this tea up for awhile now. I was just looking back over my notes and realized that I should probably go ahead and post this while I have the time. This review references the Autumn 2015 edition of this tea.
I prepared this tea gongfu style. I more or less followed Verdant Tea’s suggested gongfu brewing method, though I did make a few slight alterations. Rather than using 205 F water, I used 208 F water. I did not really mean to do this, but unfortunately I just glanced at the suggested temperature and ended up misreading the number. I did not realize my mistake until after I had finished the session. After a very quick rinse (approximately 2-3 seconds), I steeped 5 grams of loose tea leaves in 4 ounces of 208 F water for 5 seconds. I followed this infusion with 10 additional infusions. Steep times for these infusions were as follows: 8 seconds, 11 seconds, 14 seconds, 17 seconds, 20 seconds, 23 seconds, 26 seconds, 29 seconds, 32 seconds, and 35 seconds. I could have easily gotten 1-2 more infusions out of this tea, but decided to cut it off a little early since I did not see any surprises coming down the pipe.
Prior to the rinse, the dry leaves presented a slightly dusty aroma. There were also fairly strong scents of dark chocolate, black cherry, and roasted grain. Following the rinse, I picked up on strong cherry, chocolate, roasted grain, malt, and toast aromas. The first infusion presented a similar aroma, though there was a slight honey presence that I did not pick up on before. In the mouth, forceful notes of dark chocolate, roasted grain, black toast, toffee, char, black cherry, clover honey, and marshmallow swirled around the palate. Subsequent infusions saw the roasted aromas and flavors recede momentarily, allowing a balance of dark chocolate, black cherry, clover honey, toffee, and marshmallow to envelope the palate. By the fifth or sixth infusion, this had turned into a very mellow tea, presenting a balance of the aromas and flavors previously described and a hint of minerality on the finish. The final series of infusions saw the tea gently fade. It lost a good deal of its grainy character, as milder aromas and flavors of toast, malt, cherry, chocolate, honey, and minerals flitted across the palate. By the final infusion, everything I was picking up on was very mild, though the tea was not quite flat.
I am a little bit surprised to see that this tea has an aggregate score that is substantially lower than the regular Laoshan Black here on Steepster. I found this to be a very good and very interesting tea despite a few rough edges. To me, this tea seemed a little more focused and a little more powerful than the regular Laoshan Black, though I also felt that it had a bit more heavy-handed of a grainy, toasty presence that I could see being a turnoff to people looking for a sweeter, lighter tea. Still, I thought this one had a lot to offer.
Flavors: Brown Toast, Char, Cherry, Dark Chocolate, Grain, Honey, Malt, Marshmallow, Mineral, Toffee