Teanet 2012 Wu Liang Shan Zhuan Cha 250g
Mini Tuocha 2012
Meng Hai 2007 Tuocha 100g
Tuocha 沱茶 denotes Pu'er pressed into the shape of a nest or bowl. It is one of the basic shapes into which Pu'er is traditionally pressed. The package usually consists of 5 pieces wrapped in bamboo or paper. However, the usual traditional weight is 250g in recent years, and due to the increased interest in Pu'er and its higher exports, smaller nests can usually be found, usually weighing 100g or 50g. However, these small nests are not commonly available on the Chinese market because there is no demand for them.
Orijin 2017 Jing Mai Tuocha 100g
Orijin 2017 Jing Mai Bing Cha 180g
Orijin 2018 Mini Pu Erh Bing Cha 7pcs / 56g
Small pu-erh cakes (xiaobing) from Wu Liang Shan of our own production.
Dark infusion with sweet aroma, complex, balanced and smooth sweetening taste.
Ideal for travel, work, home, just about anywhere and for any kind of preparation from gongfuch to grandpa style.
Yunnan Da Ye
Yunnan Hong Cha [jun-nan hong ča] - Basic and most common Chinese red tea. In China, all middle-class red teas from Yunnan belong to this group. The only condition is the production of teas from the Yunnan Da Ye cultivar, ie a large-leaved variety of the Yunnan tea tree. The higher the proportion of golden tips, the higher the tea, the smoothness is less welcome - it means a higher drying temperature and thus faster tea production.
The color of the infusion is orange-red to light brown, the tea smells like prunes, the taste is full, massive, when properly prepared, it is not bitter at all, aftertaste is significantly sweet to honey. Excellent tea for a great price.
Phoenix Hong Cha
"Red orchid" - red tea processed from the cultivar Shuixian, var. Mi Lan Xiang, which beautifully combines the delicate honey aroma of the popular oolong and the refreshing fruitiness of red teas.
Dark orange infusion of fruity-honey aroma & refreshing full taste. At first, it tastes pleasantly fruity and straightforward, but in the end, the typical complex character of oolongs from the Phoenix mountains returns.