Mid-aged sheng: capturing the turning point
What we call lǎo shēng (老生) — aged raw pu-erh — is not a passive product of time but an active partnership between leaf and place. For our 10–15 year window, the starting material is almost always spring-plucked dà yè zhǒng (large-leaf varietal) from Yunnan’s ancient tea gardens. After kill-green, rolling, and sun-drying — the shài qīng máo chá stage — the young cakes begin their real journey.
Stored in Kunming, a dry, high-altitude city, the tea ages slowly, preserving clarity and building a crisp, mineral backbone. In Buryatia, where winters are long and humidity low, the ageing is even more restrained, producing a cooler, almost mentholated expression. Neither storage is a mistake; both are deliberate signatures. By the 10th year, a cake from Bulang Shan may drop its punchy bitterness and reveal notes of dried jujube, sandalwood, and a fleeting smokiness. A 2014 Yiwu, meanwhile, might unfold as dark honey, petrichor, and a whisper of wild orchid — all while the body remains silky and the finish stands for minutes.
This middle age is where the collector’s patience begins to pay, yet the tea still holds decades of potential. It is old enough to be generous, young enough to be dynamic. For a deeper dive into the chemistry behind these changes, visit the encyclopedia at thetea.app — or explore ageing theory through a course on tea.school.
Two expressions of aged character, one cellar master
Each cake in this category was selected by Amgalan Chin from his direct network of small producers. The 2012 Bulang Shan and 2014 Yiwu offer contrasting terroir and storage stories — both exactly at the inflection where raw power becomes lingering depth.