Buy Our Tea
2013 China Yunnan menghai Dayi 7572 qizi Pu erh Tea Cooked ripe Cake,er tee thé
2013 China Yunnan menghai Dayi 7572 qizi Pu erh Tea Cooked ripe Cake,er tee thé
Couldn't load pickup availability
Menghai Tea Factory (Chinese: 勐海茶厂; pinyin: měnghăi cháchăng) is a tea factory producing pu'er tea located in Menghai, Yunnan, China. The factory is well known for its old raw pu-erh cakes and is highly reputed in the tea industry of China.
Name: | Yunnan Menghai Dayi "7572" Cooked Qizi Pu Erh Tea Cake |
Origin: | Menghai Country, Yunnan, China |
Grade: | VERY GOOD |
Rating : | ★★★★★ |
State: | RIPE, Cooked, |
Production year: | 2013 |
Ingredients: | 100% Organic Puer tea leaves |
Manufacturer: | Menghai dayi tea factory |
Net Weight: | 357 Grams (12.5 oz) |
Expired Date: | Long Time |
Storage: | Clean, airy, dry, avoid direct sunlight, no pollution, No Srange Smell. |
Brewing Guide: Take 2-3g from Puerh Cakes and put into Tea Pot. Brew with boiling water about one minute and drain the water (washing the tea). Then, fill with boiling water (over 90 Celsius) again to brew the tea. Pour into Tea Cups after one minute.
ABOUT Ripe pu-erh Tea
Ripened" Shou Cha (熟茶) tea is pressed maocha that has been specially processed to imitate aged "raw" Sheng Cha tea. Although it is also known in English as cooked pu-erh, the process does not actually employ cooking to imitate the aging process. The term may come be due to inaccurate translation, as shú (熟) means both "fully cooked" and "fully ripened".
How to prepare compressed Pu-erh tea in a Congou style?
Step 1: Pry 3-5g tea off with Pu-erh Knife and add tea leaves to a Yixing teapot or Gaiwan.
Step 2: Pour boiling water into the teapot, give the tea leaves a rinse for 20 seconds. Then draining the water out, leaving only the soaked tea leaves
Step 3: Fill the teapot with boiling water again, cover the lid. After steeping 20 seconds or longer (according to your desired strength), the tea can be poured into a tea pitcher to be served.
Step 4: repeat Step 3 for several times. Gradually increase steeping time for subsequent brewing.


Share










