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Nannuo Shan 2024 sheng — 200g brick

<i>Nánnuò Shān 2024 Shēng Chá</i>

南糯山 2024 生茶

A vivid stone-fruit sheng from Nannuo’s mid-slope gardens, pressed into a compact brick for steady aging. Hani-village pluck, early April — already humming with honeydew, white flowers, and a deep, quenching minerality.

$170USD · 200 g

Weight
200 g
Harvest
Spring 2024
Elevation
1600 m
Cultivar
Yunnan da ye (large-leaf assamica)
Processing
withering → pan-fry kill-green → hand-rolling → sun-drying → steam-pressed into 200g brick
Sourced by

Hani village pluck — mid‑slope, slow‑pressed

Last spring, I traced an old horse trail up Nannuo Shan to a Hani village I’ve known for fifteen years. The family’s stone-paved courtyard was bright with fresh-plucked leaves withering on bamboo trays. This batch came from the mid‑slope gardens at roughly 1600 metres, where the soil — a mix of red clay and weathered sandstone — pushes water through quickly, stressing the trees just enough to concentrate flavour. The farmers follow a quiet, unhurried rhythm: pan‑firing over wood, rolling by hand on a bamboo mat, sun‑drying on the roof. I selected the lot for its immediate clarity of stone fruit and its promise of deep, cellar‑worthy age. Pressing 200‑gram bricks was a deliberate choice — easier to store, easier to share, and perfect for those who want to watch a tea mature without committing to a 357g cake. The Hani grandmother who oversaw the pressing blessed each brick with a muttered prayer for safe aging, a custom I’ve rarely seen repeated. When I tasted the maocha at the village, it already showed ripe honeydew and a crystalline minerality. Four months later, after resting in my Kunming storage, the tea has tightened slightly but gained an elegant floral lift. This brick will reward patience; I expect it to unfold its full character over five to fifteen years, developing dried‑fruit depth and that velvety texture we treasure in Nannuo sheng.

The leaf, brewed

Honeydew, white flower, mineral finish

dry leaf

Silvery-green buds mixed with darker leaves; aroma of dried apricot, hay, and a hint of smoke.

wet leaf

Deep green, soft, with aromas of steamed corn husk, fresh-cut cucumber, and orchid.

liquor

Pale gold, crystal clear, turning slightly amber in later infusions.

aroma

Floral-forward: gardenia and lily, then pear and a faint buttery note.

taste

Light-to-medium body, silky texture. Opens with honeydew melon, notes of green grape skin, a touch of white peach, evolving into a cool minerality like wet stone.

finish

Clean finish with a returning sweetness (huigan) that lingers, gentle astringency that coats the mouth before dissolving.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5g per 100ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
5-10
Subsequent
8-10; add 5 seconds each steep

A 200g brick can be broken with a pick; let boiling water cool to 95°C to preserve delicate florals. Rinse twice to open the compressed leaves.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

Full profile →