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Pu'er — Pǔ'ěr (普洱)

Jingmai 2025 spring sheng — 357g

<em>Jǐngmài 2025 chūn shēng bǐng</em>

景迈2025春生饼

A thick, honeyed sheng from Jingmai’s ancient tea forests — a golden liquor redolent of wild orchid and apricot, with a cooling finish that hums long after the cup empties.

$240USD · 357 g

Weight
357 g
Harvest
Spring 2025
Elevation
1550 m
Cultivar
Jingmai Da Ye
Processing
Pan-fired, sun-dried maocha from old-growth trees, stone-pressed into a traditional 357g cake.
Sourced by

From Jingmai’s protected forests — a sheng built for the cellar

I walked the Jingmai gardens in late March 2025, just as the first flush of buds pushed through the canopy. These trees — many over a century old — grow scattered across the mountain’s UNESCO-protected forests, shaded by camphor and wild orchid. The air was thick with the scent of wet earth and blossoms. I sourced this lot from a smallholder cooperative that still hand-picks by the traditional standard of one bud and two leaves, then pan-fires in wood-fueled woks before rolling and sun-drying on bamboo mats. The result is a maocha with a clear, bright energy and a structure that I recognized immediately: honeyed top notes, mineral depth, and that unmistakable Jingmai cooling finish.

This is a sheng I’ll watch over the decades. The 2025 spring cake has the kind of tight, resilient compression that lets it mature slowly — developing leather, camphor, and dried fruit notes without losing its vibrant high tones. It’s a tea that bridges worlds: the ancient tea forests of Yunnan, the nomadic tea routes north through Mongolia, and the careful stillness of a cellar. I pressed it into 357g cakes in April, and now I’m offering a small number from that batch. Brew it today for the floral lift, or tuck it away and let time add its own chapters.

The leaf, brewed

Honeyed, aromatic sheng with deep mineral backbone

dry leaf

Twisted silver-green buds among dark olive leaves; aroma of dried apricot, sun-warmed hay, and a whisper of smoke.

wet leaf

Leaves unfurl to glossy olive-green, releasing steamed bamboo, orchid petal, and a hint of forest floor.

liquor

Clear, shimmering gold-amber — bright and clean from the first infusion.

aroma

Wild orchid, honey, apricot kernel, and a faint, toasty grain note that builds across steeps.

taste

Round, full-bodied honey sweetness with a thread of stonefruit. A fleeting bitterness appears mid-palate, then dissolves into a cooling, minty lift.

finish

Lasting huigan and a crisp mineral aftertaste that lingers on the tongue — cool, clean, and deeply satisfying.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
1 g : 16 ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
10
Subsequent
Up to 10 steeps; add 5 seconds each round after the third infusion.

Give the cake a quick rinse to wake the leaves. Keep early steeps short to avoid harshness — the honeyed core rewards patience.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

Full profile →