I'm drinking liu an right now. I bought it at a local Chinatown ginseng shop back in autumn 2007.
When I bought it, it tasted musty and a little rancid..."in a good way" as I said at the liu bao tasting.
Today it tastes like liu bao, shu pu'er, and liu an mixed together, but it looks nothing like a blend. It has liu bao's richness, shu pu'er's earthiness, and liu an's old hay sweetness, and a creaminess all its own. The rancid replaced by depth, thankfully. Butterscotch appears early in the brewings and is the most interesting chord. I say "chord" because butterscotch simultaneously strikes the tongue and nose: it's a fragrance and a flavor.
Before, flavor disappeared around infusion 6, and now flavor lasts until infusion 10.
A year away from the scents of the medicine shop improved this tea. You might wonder why I bought this tea at all; who drinks a rancid tea that dies at the 5th infusion, of questionable provenance (it came loose), and sold so cheap it "can't be good"?
When I tried the tea at the store, two things struck me. First, the tea coated my mouth and made me salivate, and second, my body felt a rush. The former told me this tea could mellow into something decent, and the latter told me even if it aging failed to improve the tea, I could use it to meditate and enjoy the qi. This revealed something to me about my tea habits: I'm willing to forgive almost anything in a tea as long as it takes me somewhere. I reclassify it as a "meditation tea", and I have a few of them on my shelf. I don't serve them to others because these teas' flavors would register as mediocre to most.
With so little information about this tea, and aged teas in general, what we know about tea is merely what we choose to believe. From our belief in a tea's quailty to our belief that certain signs indicate quality, occasionally approaching tea from a meta, external standpoint offers the benefit of keeping our feet on the ground, realizing that when we drink tea, we are a conduit that allows our beliefs to communicate with our realities. It's a beautiful thing.
Thanks, Bears, for putting perspective on things ... a really fine post.
ReplyDeleteTeas can really absorb smells. We all do need to be careful where they are stored. I find it good news that good storage can improve one that did absorb bad smells. Raw Pu'er is like wine, you can damage them. It is so hard to keep the raw Pu'er till it is time to drink.
ReplyDeleteThankfully, this liu an sat in an area around other dark teas (pu'er, other liu an, and black tea). Although the teas abutted the side of the store the medicine, the medicines were kept in jars and drawers, and the tea kept lidded, so it wasn't too much of an exchange.
ReplyDeleteThat flavor of dried orange peel was there in the liu an when I bought it, but seems to have either disappeared or become some other flavor.
Yum.