I have not yet had a shou with pepper notes...that sounds very intriguing. I would love to try a shou with pepper notes. I am even newer to shou though..still getting my feet wet so to speak.mrmopu wrote: ↑Fri Feb 14, 2020 9:14 pmI read a few of his notes and just tried to get it in the ballpark. Sometimes you nail it and others not as well. I agree on too much tea and not enough time. In terms of aging some like it dank and wet and others dry. Just kind of depends on the person. And about the saline notes, ever get pepper from shou?
And life is too short to drink a lot of bad tea. Been down that road too.
I have had one sheng though, that had pepper notes..specifical a wonderful delicate white pepper. It was a 2004 Xiaguan Fang Zhuan from Norbu tea. Greg had told me about its unique pepper notes and atypical (for Xiaguan) lack of smoke. It had a lovely parchment bamboo hay flavors over which there was this lovely unique (to me) white pepper note and delicate astringnecy. These were balanced by a faint sweetness on the very back end along with a hint of menthol in later steeps. This little brick has become one of my favorite teas and I have quite a few in my collection. The only drawback is the compression. It practically required a jackhammer to pry apart - even for the small amount required for my iddy biddy teapots. Perhaps this is a good thing as it forces me to keep some back for aging.
Yes - life is far too short for bad tea. Add to that that I am limited to only 1-2 tea sessions per week due to health issues...my tolerance for bad or boring tea becomes even less
