Sunday, February 15, 2026

What 5 days of fasting feels like

 

Not long ago I wrote about fasting basics and some more detailed approach, here, but it occurs to me that there's another dimension that's harder to describe.  Fasting is a unique experience.  It's hard to just describe what hunger is like, once you acclimate, and the form changes.

Of course this has nothing to do with the theme of why to fast, and not all that much with how to do it, but it does overlap with that.  That earlier post was on the latter, and it's hard to pin down what research says, and not as reliable to convey hearsay or first person accounts of benefits.  I think I'm mentally clearer as a result of the practice, for example, but who knows how to place that.  Maybe I'm not, at all.  Maybe ramping up exercise or improving diet caused that, and there is no connection.  Or maybe I lose my mental faculties and don't know it.

So let's run through some parts of what it's like to fast instead, which will cover before and after acclimation.  I'm only having the latter experience now, because I've fasted for at least two months so far, in total.  

I try to fast 4 times a year, at 5 days each, and I'm on day 5 just now, not so many hours away from wrapping it up, at 4 days and maybe 19 hours.  I "call it" early because I fast from one dinner time to the one 5 days later, so for me it works better to "only" fast for 4 days and 22 hours or so, and if it works out to 20 or 21 that's fine too.  Otherwise I'd have to eat that first meal not so long before sleeping, which wouldn't be ideal.  I usually end up drinking milk after dinner the day before a fast, the last food to clear.

Reading back through those last ideas one might think that 5 days of fasting should really be 5 days and 6 nights, so really 5 1/2 days as clock time goes.  Maybe I will try breaking a fast the next morning instead at some point.  The mental pressure of fasting for "only" 5 days is already a bit to get through, though.


Fasting experience themes


Hunger:  the main factor, maybe.  Early on, for the first 2 or 3 trials, your body is shocked by the experience, and hunger is intense.  Physical cravings are coupled with what people call "food noise," repeating thoughts of eating.  Your body releases plenty of ghrelin, a hunger related hormone, so you keep producing digestive fluids, and experience stomach gas and discomfort.  Or at least that's my guess for why it feels like that.

After 4 or 5 fasts the experience completely changes, and that high degree of hunger largely drops out.  But you're still hungry.  It just takes on a feeling of emptiness, that runs in the background, so that if you smell food you really want it, but so that you can go a few hours without thinking about having not eaten.

One might naturally consider what they could drink to lessen the hunger experience (eating doesn't apply; pretty much no one ever eats paper or some other calorie deficient input).  It's normal for people to drink coffee, tea, or herb tea, and some drink diet sodas.  

I've had one diet soda in the past 5 days, a diet Strawberry Cream Pepsi.  It doesn't seem to change much, but I don't drink much of that.  I've had tea every day, and herb tea 3 of the days.  This time I started in on some pandan leaf and roselle tea I bought not so long ago, along with lemongrass tea, that I didn't get to.  All of those are common types in Thailand.  I don't use stevia to sweeten any of it, but I could.  

Related to the tea I usually drink shou pu'er or aged white tea, because they're easy on your stomach, but I also had some hei cha (Fu zhuan) and relatively oxidized sheng pu'er.  It would be nice to drink coffee but I'm not acclimated to drinking my coffee black, and that my hurt your stomach.  

I think it helps most to drink a tisane that you tend to drink a lot of, perhaps mostly because it boosts hydration input.  I can drink three 16 ounce mugs of chrysanthemum, and that adds well over a quart / liter to my daily fluid intake.  It's best to try to drink 3 liters of water a day, if you can, but that's a lot to get down.  You need to supplement quite a bit of salts (sodium, potassium, and magnesium; there's more on that in the earlier post), and I'm always struggling to get the intake amount right, and to work through salt water tasting awful, even in a diluted form.


Special hunger triggers:  I need to go to grocery store every time I fast because I let my food supply run out, and need to re-up it, usually on the last day.  Sometimes chance will have me visiting a market or restaurant with others I happen to be with.  In one sense it's not so bad, but in another it is.  Sometimes I'll cook for other people, and that is a different level of exposure.  Your digestive system can seem to turn back on, even when you just smell food.  

At worst that will lead you back to the earlier phase of stomach growling, that you tend to only experience early in fasting trials.  I just went grocery shopping on day 4, taking my mother-in-law to a store, and it was a little like that.  But even that level of exposure you acclimate to.  Cooking not so much.


Stress:  this is the other part of the experience of hunger.  It feels like an extra underlying stress, to me not completely unlike what extreme jet lag feels like.  If your normal stress baseline isn't bad it's no problem, but when other stressors enter in it can be too intense.  It's not hard to be productive when you fast, and that deserves it's own section, the extra mental clarity.  Even walking a lot or light exercise is fine.  But getting it all to balance requires a bit of extra attention.  

For me if other stressors add up too much I'll stop the fast.  The last example that comes to mind is too harsh to cite here, but even if work gets unusually busy it might throw it all off.


Other side effects (dizziness, low energy level, sleepiness):  this probably varies a lot by person, so what any one has to say wouldn't apply broadly.  But I'll include it.  In those first 3 or 4 fasts these negative factors were a lot more to deal with, especially the first two.  That's why I recommend people try period eating first (20-22 hour fasts), then 24, and build up.  I might feel a little dizzy a couple times a day.  Getting electrolyte balance (intake) dialed in offsets a lot of it, but your body seems to also need to adjust to a new range of experience.  If you fasted every other month you might stay well-adjusted to it, but if you let 3 or 4 months go between fasts you might end up adjusting again.

I don't really feel low energy level now, which is strange.  I've been walking 10,000 steps a day for all of the 5 days.  Typically I don't try to do much with losing weight, fasting for other reasons, but since I've climbed to 81 kg (178 pounds), up from 74 kg (163) I'd like to get that to drop again.  My blood pressure has been running high, and it might help.  I've been swimming a lot over the past year, and keep on adding a little extra muscle, so it's not that much fat gain, but it's some.

Lots of other potential side effects could be concerning.  If my electrolyte balance runs low I'll feel mild cramping, mostly in my calves, and that's not good.  That leads back into a longer and off-topic discussion about how hard it is to dial in an optimum electrolyte intake (sodium, potassium, and magnesium).  It should be easy, figuring out how much you need by trial and error, mixing up a diluted batch of that with water, then drinking that over the day (and taking magnesium by pill / tablet, because you need much less).  It's not so simple.  Some of that is probably user error, that I make it harder than it needs to be.  I'm back to just drinking some salt mix a few times a day, mixing it up without measuring it out per day, not using that more standard approach (standard within "fasting circles").  

This Reddit group is what I experience of that online discussion; it all requires some interpretation, and some extreme views come up, but that's normal for social media.  Note that the high end of their fasting wiki recommended electrolyte intake range is an awful lot of salt (or had been; per this following citation it's the opposite now); I have no idea how that could work out.





I take that back; in the past that wiki recommended a high end range of at least 3 grams each of sodium and potassium, and now it's a fraction of that.  There was a "snake juice" recipe for that daily mix for people to drink, and they've deleted that.  Lots of people had complained the high end was way too high, or maybe even the relative average, and maybe moderation staff changed on the page, and the guidance opinions they wanted to share with them.

This is the second version of that advice in two days; I cited it from yesterday (Feb. 15) and it was completely different.  Just keep in mind it's a rough guideline, not a final answer.  Individual requirements and tolerance for dosages would vary.  


One part that was interesting, in past versions of advice there in the r/fasting Electrolytes 101 wiki page, was that you can use either sodium chloride or baking soda, (sodium bicarbonate), and that food grade epsom salts can be used for magnesium input.  There is endless discussion there on what is the best magnesium compound form to supplement.  Maybe glycinate is recommended most, but I use magnesium oxide, because it's cheaper.  The concern is laxative effect.  Magnesium that is absorbed too quickly will cause that, so the compound form matters.  That's what laxatives often are (like milk of magnesia).


mental clarity, positive side effects:  mental clarity is about it for positive changes in the short term.  Even that comes and goes.  There are flashes where I can really get a lot done, and see complicated themes much clearer than I normally would.  My subconscious mind is also in on it; my dreams have picked up a really novel clarity and complexity over the last 3 nights (the first night I had eating hours prior).  

In one dream I dreamt I had accidentally broken the fast by eating, then woke up to realize it was a dream, but woke up in another dream where I experienced that.  I had an interesting exchange about child rearing practices with a fictional character in one last night.  I suppose the waking clarity is more meaningful and impactful.

I think the clarity extends to be a main positive effect from the fasting.  Maybe I'm also experiencing some aging effects less, but this is where it gets hazy.  My hair has returned to mostly colored since taking it up; I've lost the few grey hairs I had, except for very few around my temples, less than 10.  It's strange seeing a hair that's two colors, that had been grey and returned to brown, but I've experienced that.  I'm 57; I really should have greying hair now.  I don't care much about the aesthetic side, since I'm married, and it just doesn't matter, but it's an interesting change.



a visa renewal selfie from last month; you can see some grey hair


More on the vague side, I think that I have more energy when I run now, from greater "metabolic flexibility," or ability to use fat as an energy source.  Who knows; it would be easy to imagine that.  Or training experience tends to change in those kinds of ways over time. 

I think for many a main positive effect is a reduction of "food noise," and an ability to manage diet better.  My diet was pretty good to start out with, and I never snack that much, but I've used the fasts as resets, to make minor positive adjustment.  I keep going back to eating ice cream, and some chocolate, but the overall balance shifts.  It's much harder in the US than in Thailand; when Ben and Jerry's is on sale what can you do?  

I eat more fruit and vegetables than just about anyone now, and prefer that basis for my diet.  I eat some meat, to keep up protein intake, to adjust for exercising a good bit, but I eat nuts as a snack, a good bit of eggs and dairy, and use soy or pea protein shakes as a supplement.  

All that is a bit beside the point; the idea is that it's easier to improve your diet and change habits after a reset, of sorts.  For me I can only make minor changes each time, and if I try to shift too much after a fast it won't work.


risk:  I don't think much about this, but it's worth considering.  What could go wrong?  If your electrolytes get too far out of balance then lots of things could, up to and including having a heart attack.  It's important to get that dialed in as fast as possible, and probably gradually acclimating to fasting makes sense, even though it's more common for people to get the idea to try 3 to 7 days from an online video, and just go for it.  

The problem I do experience with dizziness could be much worse.  In the past 5 days I've stood up and felt light dizziness two or three times, which is pretty moderate.  It's something to keep an eye on.

The main risk is that if you ingest a lot of electrolytes at one time then you will experience diarrhea, even if you haven't eaten in days.  It's that "don't trust a fart" theme.  Then that carries over to "re-feeding;" if you eat low quality food to re-start eating you'll experience that for a couple of days.  

I've only tested that once though, and that was my experience.  I usually eat a burger and fries for a first meal, which sounds pretty low quality, but if you use good ground beef or pork (we don't eat beef much in Thailand), good bread, fresh potatoes or sweet potatoes for the fries, and some vegetables (tomato and spinach, usually), then it's not low quality food.  Of course most people who fast use an even more sensible approach, and eat different things in stages.  

Later editing note:  I ate a burger and fries again, yesterday, and my body digested it in 4 hours or so.  Maybe because I was still hungry and ate some yogurt, a little chocolate, and a bowl of cereal some hours later?  Or maybe looking forward to ending the fast too much prompted more rapid digestion.  What works would always vary by individual anyway.  The riskier "refeeding" cases relate to much longer fasts, well over a week in duration.  Then just winging it wouldn't be safe.


talking about fasting:  this is a bonus tangent; that pretty much already covers fasting experience.  In fasting circles people usually recommend keeping fasting experience a secret, especially during fasts.  Some people react negatively, of course.  In one online story an HR department told the person to start eating, not to fast.  People can be judgmental.  I don't talk much about it, but I don't avoid it either.  If people have problems with accepting someone else not eating, or a life practice they see as absurd, and probably harmful, then that's on them.

You can never really fully explain it.  People can only experiment with fasting and make of it what they do, for themselves, and that would vary by person.  It wouldn't be for everyone.  For some the negative side effects would be a complete deal-breaker.  For others acclimation, that I've been describing, might never seem to happen, even though it's my guess that within 4 or 5 trials most people would see negative aspects reduce.  And then a more primary point, for many there just wouldn't be any point to it, if they're not trying to lose weight, and see the health benefits as possible but not a given, and perhaps unlikely to occur.

I first tried out fasting, as an adult, because I met a guy who claimed he did it for spiritual reasons.  That's not entirely right; in an earlier life phase we would do multi-day juice fasts as some sort of cleanse / detox.  It made more sense in that life context.  I fasted for the very first time at the age of 10 or 11, passing 24 hours, but not fasting to my goal, 36 hours, or one complete day and night after waking.  I don't remember why I did that.  

Then I "fasted" a lot cutting weight as a wrestler in high school; I would go as long without eating as I needed to in order to make a competition weight.  Our team was really strong, and I didn't have the experience to be above average (I wrestled for 2 years), so I had to slot in at varsity wherever I could beat the other guys competing.  Good times!

So not eating for weight loss could work, and those other reasons may or may not be appealing.


Friday, February 13, 2026

Oolong pu'er, revisited

 

one of my all-time favorite teas;  it was fresh, bright, sweet, fruity, and approachable


I wrote about this theme long ago (in 2018, here).  Before posting this I'll re-read that, but it's really on a slightly different topic.  In the past people that's what people called sheng pu'er that was approachable when young (newish), or else "pulong," if it wasn't bitter and astringent.  That could have related to some oxidation occurring as a processing input, but the tea character could have worked out that way for whatever varying reasons.  Plant type material and processing varies, and climate and weather input does, and so on, so a tea could be approachable and lack challenging forms of aspect intensity for different reasons.  One other input could be that it was over-heated, so more similar to green tea, which works out in some comparable ways, but that isn't the same thing.

The main idea, as I remember it, was that sheng pu'er that is sweet, mild, floral, and fruity (often including that range) early on won't usually age as positively, and it's more suitable for drinking within a couple of years of production.  Or maybe that was just my take, which could've shifted some since then?

This is about pu'er with actual oxidation input, more specifically about a few related versions like that from Vietnam, so really "pu'er-style tea," given the Yunnan origin naming designation limitation.  That naming convention is a bit odd, to me.  Matcha isn't restricted, that name, or Oriental Beauty isn't (which is kind of politically incorrect now anyway), and limiting something like Darjeeling to that named origin area is completely different.  But I get it, and will just move on.


the 2023 (left) and 2024 versions; it may not only be extra age making one darker



Quang Tom Lao Cai origin examples


This theme comes up a good bit related to South East Asian origin sheng pu'er (or the same tea under whatever name you apply), but not as explicitly as in this case, where the vendor is open about the input.  It's written on the label (for a tea I just reviewed, from the Quang Tom producer out of Lao Cai, Vietnam):


Name: Freshly Fermented Green Tea Cake (Green Tea Series) 

Ingredients: 100% ancient Shan Tuyet tea buds, sun-dried and fermented

Storage: Store in a cool, dry place with humidity < 70%, away from direct sunlight. 

Shelf life: Suitable for long-term storage under appropriate conditions. 

Instructions for use: Take 5g of tea and brew with 250ml of boiling water (>95 degrees Celsius), steep for 30 seconds, then pour into a cup or mug to enjoy. 

Food Safety Certificate: 04/2024/NNPTNT Phone: 0961.129.186 Address: Bac Ha Town, Bac Ha District, Lao Cai Province 

Produced by: Quang Tom Cooperative, Bac Ha District, Lao Cai Province, Vietnam Production date: 06/2023 Net weight: 350g


Then again it's not really green tea (mentioned on that label), but what else would they call it?  Some South East Asian producers call it pu'er anyway, but I can see why more don't.  The most common work around is to call SE Asian "pu'er" dark tea, a reference to hei cha, and that doesn't work very well either, because pu'er may or may not be hei cha, depending on how one interprets the category breakdowns.

That reference to fermentation could just mean aging input, change related to fungus and bacteria activity since it was produced, but I'm taking this to relate to an addition of extra oxidation.  Whatever words cover those two processes in Vietnamese may not be clearly distinguished through translation, or a decade ago it was pretty common for Chinese producers to refer to oxidation as fermentation (again probably related to a translation error).

I usually use "sheng" to describe the tea type, but if they translate that on to "raw," that actual meaning, then it makes no sense.  Raw what?  The old Vietnamese name related to the sun-dried form, per some hearsay input, calling it "dried tea," which doesn't really help.  I've seen it marketed as snow tea or shan tea, but none of that is a real common type name (and per some recent input some of that is a reference to plant type range there, so I guess to some range within the Assamica variety, not processed tea type).  So green sort of works, even though it's not really that.

Related to this tea, to 2022, 2023, and 2024 versions of it that I've reviewed here and here, base flavors of honey and dried apricot stand out, with citrus or other spice range varying by version.  That makes it sound like there is some pleasant complexity, and that's true; to me the teas were quite enjoyable, complex, and well-balanced.  They are personal favorites.  They just lacked typical sheng bitterness and astringency, which for many would be giving up a lot.  For people who have only tried factory tea versions it might be hard to relate to that being a problem, but those inputs balance a lot better in higher quality, more whole leaf versions.


In discussing this with Steve of Viet Sun he raised a good point about why some might not like teas like this:


I think they are interesting. And also very easy drinking compared to traditional or semi traditional young sheng.

One of the big things people are into with puerh is the terroir inputs so making reddened puerh really takes a lot of that away. 

So you can have teas from different places that taste similar.  That kills the experience for a segment of that community.


I agree completely, even though I hadn't been thinking of it that way.  A version tasting like pear, honey, dried apricot, and citrus is distinctive, but somehow a lot of the complexity young sheng expresses does seem to get narrowed down in related versions.  It can be hard to write out the list of a half dozen distinctive flavors, as people tend to, but even without generating such a list you generally get a sense that there is a lot going on with many forms of sheng, usually seemingly accurately attributed to a narrow origin terroir input.  

Bitterness balances the rest in an interesting way, and that astringency adds depth.  There might not be more flavors expressed, so complexity could be similar in one sense, but somehow it often seems there is more going on.  It's not always completely positive, but in the better half of all cases it all is generally good.  Transitions across infusion rounds can vary more, even though that also just depends.


Farmerleaf more oxidized sheng pu'er examples


This theme comes up elsewhere, in other cases than atypical South East Asian tea processing.  Here is an online post from Farmerleaf on this subject; that I see as interesting background:




That's labeled as "Partially oxidized Puerh tea: let's try it again!," relating to a 2023 experiment.


William regularly explores and experiments with tea style variations; his channel includes lots of reference to that.  To me it's especially interesting related to descriptions of sheng and black tea processing.

Of course I'm not saying that this processing is somewhat identical (in the Farmerleaf experiment and the Quang Tom producer version).  That tea, in his video, was oxidized through a very long wither, prior to the frying (sha qing / kill green), and per discussion with Phuoc, the Quang Tom producer, at least some of the oxidation in the other Vietnamese versions occurred after that step instead, and maybe more of it.  I'm listening to that video again now as I write this; I lose track of what I've seen.

The darkening of his leaves during the frying step does look similar to the darkened Quang Tom version.  It's interesting that William mentions using a low heat to limit the charring of the leaves, in that extra dried conditioned (the withered leaves, left to rest for an extended time, weren't re-wetted).  His description goes further; it's really worth watching.  He says that roasting the tea can be included but it will simplify the tea character, so it has to be used sparingly, and that he isn't including that extra step for that batch.


I think I want to keep it that way [not pressed, as moacha] because it's an entertaining tea of course but maybe not achieve that a tea Enthusiast would would like to have every day.

He ends up saying more about how processing inputs, the frying approach, changes things than how the extra oxidation makes a difference, but that's especially interesting:


I don't Shuffle it too much because I want the steam to build up in the batch, so I will use minimum shuffling just to prevent any strong burning.  And then if we want to make a roast I think we'll try to do that a bit towards the end.  But I'm a bit scared of doing that roast because a light roast can really enhance the complexity of the tea, but on the other hand if you do it too much it also simplifies everything, so roasting is a bit like putting sugar in the tea.  It's a bit like it somehow when you smell it's more complex but the mouth feel tends to be a bit more simple... 




He never did include video content description from when it was finished, in that clip, beyond this comment:


I can smell both and you could say a new long-like fragrance so an oxidized fragrance mixed with some notes of roasting...


photo of the leaves from the product listing, probably before sun-drying


A bit of Google search turned up the product listing:


Spring 2023 Reddened Puerh tea


Processed on April 8th 2023

Ancient tea garden leaves from Nuo Gu Wan, Jingmai village

24 hour-long withering, check the video to know more

This is a continuation of an experiment we made last year. While conventional Pu-erh tea benefits from 2 to 6 hours of withering, we let these leaves on our bamboo baskets for a whole day. This leads to a reddened tea, which has to be processed carefully due to the lack of water in the leaves. After pondering the question over the length of a video, I decided against roasting the tea, and kept the temperature on the lower side during the session.


Still no aspects description there, but we can accept a customer comment as limited feedback:


Nice experiment. I was lucky to get a bag of 70g.

On then first infusion seems to be a white tea, fragrant, elegant smooth sweet thin no astringency and bitterness. With the second infusion it is showing slowly up its raw puer character . I like it very much.


Another comment mentioned the approachable nature, limited astringency and bitterness, and a hint of citrus.  


If the Quang Tom producer had used an extra roasting step that could explain the darkened leaves in the 2023 version, since they look to be charred a bit in processing.  Or maybe they also pan-fried (kill-greened) partly dried leaves, also using a long wither, and that led to some being singed a little during the frying step.  William stressed that you need to be careful to avoid over-roasting, and the related trade-offs he is cited as mentioning here.  In a limited form it might be fine, but extending those comments a little going too far it could add a flaw to the tea, not just a tradeoff, but also some actual char effect, as we more often see in roasted Wuyi Yancha oolongs.  


You really should watch his video instead of accepting my summary, if those ideas are of interest.  He goes further with background and outcome descriptions, which I could cite more of word for word to avoid mischaracterizing that or getting it wrong, but it seems better to just cross reference it here.  It's not that long a video, and it's interesting.


That earlier post on oolong pu'er (in 2018)


This tied to a past favorite sheng version that I was talking about just then (in 2018; before I had the same degree of exposure to pu'er experience, only a few years into main exploration then):


A comment about a Moychay Nan Nuo sheng relates directly to that (here on Reddit, by Jay, if he's familiar, who sells tea here):

It'll be interesting to watch it age over several years but my gut instinct is that it will fade rather quickly in BKK. The fruity flavors often indicate oolong style pu that will fade out with age.

I had framed a similar idea in that original review more as a question.

I love the fruit in it, and that overall "bright" effect.  Often when I'm drinking sheng made within the past year I'm saying this might be better in a year or two, a little less edgy, but in this case I'm not so sure.  If that brightness were to decline, as it would to some extent, the balance might be just as positive, or more so, or the tea could've been best drank when very young like this.


All that is probably as good a subject theme intro as what I've written.  That tea did die a couple of years later; it shifted to include warmer and deeper tones, and lost the brightness and fruit, most of what was positive about it.  If my tea budget had been deeper I would've re-bought that, or the next year's version, to try aging what I didn't drink right away, but I didn't.  Kind of unrelated background, I bought that tea in a shop in St. Petersburg at New Years time in 2017-18.


so many amazing sights on that Russia trip, but this captures my favorite part



the more iconic scene version



I retried that 2017 Moychay Nan Nuo in 2020, documenting where it was then, and it was fine as a 3 year old version, but as I remember from trying it since it was going quiet.

Then there is the "awkward teen years" theme to account for.  At a tasting meetup over this past weekend we tried a nice Xiaguan version from 2018 that I really like, that is good, but is at an awkward stage in its transition process (reviewed here last year).  It's missing part of the more forward, higher end flavor range and punch, and the warm flavor tones haven't completely swapped in for that brighter floral scope yet.  I still kind of like it like that, even though it is a little out of balance.  It's sort of supposed to be; aging transition makes the most sense earlier on, when it's limited, and then later, when it's more complete, but not so much in the middle.  The timing of that varies; I've tried 10 year old tea that still seems pretty fresh, stored cool and dry, but 8 years of time in Bangkok contributes a lot more transition, just not in exactly the same form.

It seems like a good place for me to add the next source of evidence, something that really brings all this into clearer focus, related to a tea I've tried over a decade of aging.  I've tried Thai versions that were somewhat approachable early on that I've experienced changing over a few years, but the starting point was never the same (really bright, sweet, and fruity, with really limited bitterness and astringency), and I haven't tried any aged longer than this last 4 year example (nearly that; it will be 4 in 4 more months).  I've probably tried a good bit that was older that had already went dead; I mean examples of the entire sequence. 

I've tried at least a couple versions of somewhat older Wawee Tea Thai sheng, but if anything their versions run a little closer to standard Yunnan style, so that really doesn't work.  Of course the same applies to Hong Tai Chang versions, if that is familiar.


Other cited input in that Tea in the Ancient World "Oolong Pu'er" post


Returning to this post section theme, I re-read that 2018 post from this blog, and it's interesting (kind of new to me too, for being that far back).  It includes input from William, again of Farmerleaf, citing him as the Bannacha owner.  His 2023 thoughts on the subject represent what he now thinks, instead of from way back when, but I'll cite part of it to get a feel for the input range:


By controlling the Sha Qing time and the wok temperature, you can make redder or greener tea, and, as long as it's not extreme, I think there's a large span of well processed tea. Then, it depends on your personal taste, what kind of aroma you prefer, and which mountain you're dealing with. I like a greener processing on Mengku tea, because it brings out the high pitched fragrance of this area. Redder tea might be good to emphasize on the body, the mouth feeling.


The subject of tea community discussion history is interesting to me (which is something of a tangent here).  It's no secret that William re-branded to Farmerleaf as a new business when moving to Yunnan; this is from the Farmerleaf "about us" page:


Farmerleaf was created in 2016; it is the continuation of our efforts to provide high-quality teas worldwide.  We started selling tea online in 2011 with www.bannacha.com which is based in France and offers mostly Pu-erh tea. We are now based in Puer city, Yunnan, in which we have our office and storehouse. We have chosen this city because it is in the center of the Pu-erh tea production areas and the region produces a wide range of white, green and black teas, it is also a good place for storing Pu-erh tea.


So some of that blog post is about discussion of this theme on Tea Chat prior to 2016, written about in 2018.  This post reviews a 2016 Jing Mai Miyun version from Farmerleaf in March of 2017; maybe I knew how it all connected in 2018, that his business had either renamed or reset, or maybe that had got by me.

It's all an interesting read, to me, that old oolong pu'er post, but it's lots of mixed input from lots of sources.  People talk about primary flavors, body / feel, and aroma varying, probably using terminology in comparable but perhaps slightly different ways.  Shah82 passes on input in an extended citation, that doesn't narrow down to a short phrase that I can pass on about this subject here.  His accounts of his experiences were always interesting.  And probably still are; after checking in on that shaving forum he had discussed tea in, Badger and Blade, the last post by Shah8 (probably the same Shah) was last Monday, on page 401 of a sheng of the day thread.

Here is what he said about "oolong pu'er" in that post citation (of Tea Chat discussion):


I will say that taste itself is highly deceptive. It depends on your water, whether you let the dry leave sit in the bowl a week or two, or any number of things. It can change with the years. The classic way people buy bad tea is by preferentially buying "approachable" flavor or aroma puerh. Which is why you see so much problematically tinkered puerh that gives a oolongly fruity or floral taste (or more red and mellow malt). 

For me, the easy way to tell, again, is to see whether that aroma *endures*. Many of these teas also will betray badness by becoming hard to drink or pointless to drink by about brew 6-8. *Few* puerh, however, are done straight processing green. A little butteriness is sought after. Or a little hongcha, or some nice smokiness. That's alright, so long as most of the underlying qualities are still there to age.


To me the rest doesn't condense down to ideas that I can simplify and clarify here.  Everyone isn't saying exactly the same things.  Intuitively the tea would become less like normal sheng for including this processing variation, and less like green tea by extension of a sort of relationship between the two types, and more like black tea.  That doesn't really work as a summary.  Bitterness and astringency decrease, and mouthfeel and flavor profile changes, in the ways described here, and in varying ways mentioned in discussions.


One interesting recurring theme was that overheated sheng, which would be much closer to green tea than oolong, could get mixed in with that category.  The typical flavor range wouldn't be the same, but the tea would be aromatic and fresh, losing bitterness and astringency (although it would retain a different kind of edge), and it wouldn't age in the same way.  Put another way it would include a different balance of main compounds than conventional sheng.  It still might seem like "oolong pu'er" to most people, but really it would be more of a hybrid matching green tea range.

I tried a version of Thai sheng from Aran tea that reminded me of this theme, reviewed here in 2020.  They called that pu'er, related to the naming convention issue I covered earlier.  It might sound like I'm saying that they don't know how to make sheng properly, which I don't intend, but even read that way they could have adjusted processing approach in the past 6 years.  I just keep repeating that the character reminds me of green tea in that review, and guess that it might not age-transition well.  I liked the tea; something in between normal sheng and green style would just be heated slightly more in pan-frying, and it could still be pleasant, novel, and fresh, as that was.


Conclusions:


So do these teas ever retain great aging potential, in any form?  I'm not sure.  The 2022 Quang Tom is still pretty good, just shifting to warmer flavor tones, which seems fine, except that I really liked the brighter, fruitier versions earlier.

How did William and Farmerleaf's versions work out?  There's a little on that in that section, a website comment, but trying such a tea fills in a lot more.

To me it's an even more interesting question if moderate aging ever works really well.  I've tried plenty of Yunnan sheng that worked well aged in the 5 to 7 year range under much cooler and drier conditions than in Bangkok.  Here is an example:  a 2021 Tea Mania Gua Feng Zhai version.

I don't keep track of any but the most common village names, and I suppose that could be one, with it presented as from an in-demand Yiwu local area.  That tea is still bright, fresh, and sweet, after five years.  That probably wouldn't be true if it had spent those years in Bangkok, where it's always 25 - 38 C (mid-70s to 100 F), and almost always 65 to 80% relative humidity.  At the coolest and driest times maybe only 60% RH, but that comes and goes fast.

Of course I'm not claiming that the Yiwu / Yunnan tea version I just mentioned was "oolong pu'er," that it was extra oxidized, or overheated in a kill-green step (so more like green tea), or that it doesn't have great aging potential (although a good number of Yiwu origin versions that I've tried didn't).  It seems likely that there is a direct opposition between versions being approachable early on, bright and sweet, highly floral or fruity, and lacking significant bitterness and astringency, or full and structured mouthfeel.  That tea had good feel at 5 years along, as I remember.  This is a mention of that, in that post:


...Spice range definitely picks up, but it's broader than the sassafras was last round...  Then that's rounded out with root spice, more like ginseng, maybe just not quite as punchy and medicinal as ginseng (which is also subtle, in a different sense).  It has changed a lot over the last three rounds [it had shifted from early pear and dried mango range on to floral scope, and then warmer spice tones].  

Of course these flavors link well with the pronounced base mineral tone, which isn't dropping out.  Feel and aftertaste are significant, but those can be more intense in some other versions.  Overall balance is the nicest part, the way it all comes together each round... 




So none of this condenses down to a simple generality, beyond that one (approachable new sheng probably won't age transition as positively, at some point).  But that is only part of a broader story, that would vary depending on why the tea is like that, and that generality could be wrong in some cases.

I think the positive complexity that we expect from sheng, as it ages / fermentation transitions over 20 years or so, wouldn't be present, across many different cases.  That last review excerpt only implies how that goes in lots of cases, mentioning warmer spice range entering in, but that related to a more standard form sheng.  I haven't clearly established that "oolong pu'er" will always just go dead, even though to me that's implied quite a bit here, with sources openly stating that.  William--again of Farmerleaf--explicitly stated that he was curious about this himself, in that video, wondering how the last experiment before that one would transition later on.


If a somewhat oxidized "oolong pu'er" example didn't balance well at 5 to 7 years along it still might not be clear if it's going dead or just in between character forms.  I would expect that I could tell the difference, from the interim aspects form, but it might not be as clear as I'd expect.  

None of this relates to that 2018 Xiaguan example, surely; the starting point must have been very different.  I could re-try the Nan Nuo version I referenced at the beginning to add more related background, but for sure it was never oxidized to the degree these Vietnamese versions are.  These are "oolong pu'er" in two different senses; that Nan Nuo one related to it being approachable, for whatever reasons, and then these Quang Tom teas are intentionally quite oxidized.  

The "somewhat green" overheated during pan-frying pu'er theme is surely a third and different thing.  One would expect that to age even more poorly than the other two types (oxidized sheng, and sheng that just happens to be approachable early on, due to mixed other inputs).  But it would be interesting to try a couple of versions to know better.


Saturday, February 7, 2026

Quang Tom 2022 Lao Cai sheng from Vietnam

 



I'm reviewing the last of a set of three Quang Tom producer Lao Cai Vietnamese sheng versions, from 2022, with the other two covered in the last post.  This extends the review of how these teas might age, with this one coming up on four years old.  I'll speculate at the end about how it might continue on after that, but I can't really be sure.

There is no product listing or description to site, since this is a producer, not a resale vendor.  This is their FB profile; that would work for a contact.  There are some photos and videos on there for background, just not as developed as vendor sites tend to be.  That first review post includes more background.






photo color seems a little off; lighting variations change that


Review:




First infusion:  a little light; I'll write out first impressions and the next round will tell more of the story.  It's similar to the other two versions, of course.  Honey sweetness stands out, and deep floral range, like chrysanthemum.  The fruit tone probably is dried apricot, but that will be clearer next round.  The main question here is about an aging transition pattern, beyond yearly version variation, and neither is answered yet.  It's really good; that's already apparent.




Second round:   it's interesting how this expresses a lot of the same range, maybe just not the brighter fruit or floral range, but heavy mineral depth stands out.  So far I think I like the character of the other two better, so although this is really nice that alone doesn't bode well for the short term aging potential of these teas, or the long term potential.  Maybe someone else would really value that mineral depth and come to the opposite conclusion.

If I had only tried this tea version, and not the others, I would be more surprised about and more positive in relation to this aspect set and character.  The honey, floral range, and integrated dried fruit tones are really positive.




Third infusion:  warm mineral tone actually settles out, replaced by more dried fruit.  It is heavier on dried apricot range now.  There's a cool medicinal tone in this, that's hard to place.  A touch of menthol?  If that really dialed up and heavier tones transitioned in this might become great in a novel way.  It's quite good now though; it's not at an awkward.


4:  this is a flash infusion, to see what that changes.  Character is the best yet, but it had already been trending towards that.  Those flavors are complex, packed within the range already described (honey, warm floral, dried fruit along the line of apricot, a touch of medicinal range, near menthol, and warm mineral base).  A hint of citrus might be picking up, or maybe even a little root spice, a root beer / sassafras flavor.  Balance of lighter and heavier flavors, and feel, are all really nice.


5:  more of the same, but that root spice is picking up.  I have a doctor's appointment to get to so I won't be able to describe another 3 rounds, and this will probably keep shifting.  It's great how clean this is, even though a heavy mineral tone could easily have been adjoined by a less clean flavor range.


6:  a hint of vegetal range finally enters in, a light wood tone.  It might not be over for the positive range of flavor transitions but it doesn't seem to keep improving further, based only on this round.  The somewhat dominant root spice, fruit, and floral range is still very pleasant.  Honey tone stands out, but not like in the 2023 version, where it's dominant.  Someone could reasonably interpret a toffee note as pronounced, but there's a lot going on that could be interpreted in different ways.


I just remembered that I never mentioned liquid tea clarity, related to the 2023 version being just a little cloudy in the early rounds.  This version isn't.  That version might have been incompletely dried after a pressing phase, or something else came up in production.  It didn't ruin the tea, or seem to cause much for noticeable flaws, beyond that indicator.


the second infusion of that cycle; it's easier to make out in person


Conclusions:


Experientially, at this point in time, this is my least favorite of the three versions.  So its story is more about what it conveys about aging potential, and beyond that if someone with different preferences might like it the best instead.

Sure, that's possible.  It has the warmest, heaviest, and most mineral intensive flavor profile of the three.  It only hints at menthol and root spice picking up, so there is a lot more potential for it to keep improving.  Or I guess it's possible that the trade-off may seem negative instead, that losing the bright floral and fruit tones over the next few years probably wouldn't be offset by those other flavor themes ramping up, even if that second type of change is positive.  This could be really good in an interesting way in another half dozen years; it's hard to say.

It's also anyone's guess what this will be like in 15 more years.  Some styles of teas just go dead over not much longer than this 4 year span, and it doesn't seem to be doing that.  But it's not clear that a longer term transition potential is positive.  I don't really have the right background of experiences to guess.  I've tried Yiwu that was probably bright and floral, and approachable, as a young version, that lost almost all flavor after 15 years or so, but surely this doesn't match that starting point.  

It's not conventional sheng, with this much oxidation input.  I don't know that aging sheng in Vietnam, or the styles varying, or teas matching this quality level, all goes back 15 to 20 years.  There is plenty of mention of decades old Vietnamese sheng; people convey trying that, even from the 1960s or 70s, and say that it's good.  I've tried some aged Vietnamese sheng.  But the match or mis-match to this style isn't ever clearly defined, I don't think.

The only way to be certain would be to buy a cake or two and wait out that 15 to 20 years.  If I had an open tea budget I'd do exactly that.  Since my case is the opposite, and more than all the free budget that we can spare goes into flying back and forth to Honolulu, and to cover high living expenses there, I'll use the three cakes I have as drinking stock, as I did the last ones.  It's always possible to stash the last 50 or 100 grams, but then you wonder if a large sample portion ages in the same way as a cake.

To me these cakes are great to drink just now, so there's no downside to drinking through them, even if their longer term potential is good.  In every case where I've tried approachable, bright, sweet, floral or fruity sheng that I've loved as a very young version they've never been as good a few years later.  That "approachable" description seems to be the key; sheng with considerable bitterness and astringency edge, even with all the other described aspects also included, might change positively over a few years, or a longer term.

Of course all of this is offered as a perspective based only on limited exposure.  I've tried however much pu'er over the last decade or so, with early exposure 15 years back, but I'm no expert on the theme.  Plenty of others have pushed further through much more experience, based on more outside input, and trying more highly regarded range versions.