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2023 Raw Gu Shu Pu Erh Tea Cakes 4x357g

2023 Raw Gu Shu Pu Erh Tea Cakes 4x357g

Regular price €280,00 EUR
Regular price Sale price €280,00 EUR
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A set of 4 single origin, raw pu erh tea cakes (Lao Ban Zhang, Bing Dao, Xi Gui and Yi Wu Gua Feng Zhai) made from tea leaves harvested from ancient trees in Yunnan. Hand-picked and manually stone pressed!

Lao Ban Zhang (357g): This tea cake is from Lao Ban Zhang village in the Bulang mountains of Yunnan. At an altitude of 1500m, the ancient tea trees enjoy a mild summer and winter climate, allowing the leaves to accumulate a lot of flavour. This cake offers a full texture, intense explosive aroma, and a cooling sensation in the mouth.

Bing Dao (357g): This tea cake from Bing Dao is harvested at an 2200m elevation. It taste like a spring breeze with a floral aroma and sweetness of rock sugar. The texture is delicate and velvety.

Xi Gui (357g): For those who prefer a powerfu pu erh tea, this Xi Gui cake is a must try. It starts with a powerful floral aroma and a pleasant bitterness that quickly transforms in a sweet and exceptionally long lasting after taste. When compared to the other three cakes, this Xi Gui cake has the strongest hui gan (after taste) and cha qi (tea energy). The wet leaves appear thick, elastic and clearly showing their veins.

Gua Feng Zhai (357g): This tea cake is from Gua Feng Zhai, in the Yiwu tea region. The thick and smooth entrance of this tea is intriguing, followed by a beautiful mountain charm and honey sweet taste. The aroma is thick and heavy but balanced, the bitterness is restrained, and the after taste has great stamina.

  • Year: 2023
  • Season: Spring
  • Origin: Lao Ban Zhang, Bing Dao, Xi Gui, Gua Feng Zhai
  • Leaf grade: gushu
  • Varietal (cultivar): large leaf Assamica (Da Ye Zhong)
  • Batch: 1
  • Compression: manually stone pressed
  • Type: raw (sheng)
  • Shape: pu erh tea cake
  • Weight: 4x357g

Read this article to learn more about how to make pu erh tea.

Delivery time: 1-10 day EU delivery. For estimates per country, please visit the shipping info page at the bottom of our website.

Import taxes?: because we ship from our EU warehouse, you will NOT be charged import taxes upon delivery if you're based in the EU. All taxes are already included in our prices.

Free shipping: available for orders over €59 for The Netherlands/Belgium, €80 for other EU countries (excluding Portugal & Hungary) & UK, and over €100 for other countries.

Returns: orders can be returned for a refund within 30 days. Products should returned in unopened, unused condition.

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Customer Reviews

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Thomas S N
Great value Gu Shu teas, with different personalities.

A great deal for 4 very different sheng Puers.

Gua Feng Zhai: smallish leaves with a few buds. Very smokey, leathery and mineral. It should be brewed with caution, or the bitterness will be very noticeable. Not a tea for me right now, but maybe after some aging. I guess fans of a robust, smoky whiskey will like it now.

Xi Gui: my favorite of the 4. Aromas of flowers, rock sugar, a summer garden after a rain shower with hints of bergamot. Definitely the most sweet and intense tasting, with peaches, cooked pear, and aromatic wood. Sweet and rounded, comforting and very alive in the mouth. Love it!

Bing Dao: Big whole leaves. Aromas of melon rind, ripe yellow fruits, baked blackcurrant pie with hints of mint. The taste is woody and sweet, verging on lacquer and mango. It has got some cooling sensation in the throat, but not as prominent as other Bing Dao's I've tried.

Lao Ban Zhang: second place for me. LOTS of aromas, more than the other 3 combined. Like grapefruit, cooked strawberries, crust of a white bread, poppy seeds, freshly cut flower stems, lacquered wood, and a little bit of smoke and mint. Taste is less prominent, but reminds me of an aged tea; lacquered teak wood, leather and stone, with some fruity peach in the aftertaste.

What unites them though, is a very potent tea energy/qi. Most likely due to the Gu Shu material.

I think they will age well, but I don't think I will find out for the Xi Gui or the Lao Ban Zhang, as I will probably have drunk them up by then 😆

Thomas, what a wonderful, super detailed and honest review! We can't for which anything better. Perhaps we should list the Xi Gui and sell it separately, if we can still get stock from the factory.

Our design work is inspired by the artwork “Along the River During the Qingming Festival” by the Zhang Zeduan in the Song Dynasty. Instead of displaying the daily lives of people in the capital of China (as the original artwork), we display the tea making process of farmers through the same bird’s eye perspective.

When examining our packaging design in detail, tea enthusiasts will observe the tea making process, featuring tea farmers picking, drying, rolling, and frying tea leaves. The tea is then tasted in a pavilion and transported by horses along the ‘ancient tea road’.

Together, the traditional Chinese landscape and tea making theme, symbolise heritage, tradition, and respect for hard work of tea farmers.