The beauty of the small format
Small cakes and tuocha are not a modern gimmick — they carry a deep history of trade, ritual, and practicality. The iconic tuocha (bowl‑shaped block) was born in Xiaguan for the Tibetan market, its tight compression protecting leaves on long journeys. Bird‑nest shapes, meanwhile, arose from family workshops in Bulang and Yiwu, where pressing a handful of maocha into a 50g lump was the natural unit for a single session.
These three offerings — a 100g Yiwu Mahei cake, a 100g Xiaguan tuocha, and a 50g Bulang bird‑nest — all come from the spring 2024 harvest. After withering, kill‑green, rolling, and sun‑drying, the raw máochá was steamed and pressed in simple forms that encourage even, gentle aging. With more surface area per gram than a full bing, small formats mature visibly year by year, rewarding the collector who wants to taste the evolution without opening a full cake.
Sensory profiles differ with terroir: Yiwu Mahei offers a soft, floral cup with honey sweetness and a calm, lingering yùn; the Xiaguan tuocha delivers a classic smoky‑camphor briskness; and the Bulang bird‑nest balances a powerful bitterness with a rapid, mouth‑watering huí gān. All are sheng (raw) pu‑erh, ready to drink now and ideal for cellaring.
For a deeper dive into the science behind small‑cake aging, our pu‑erh storage course at tea.school walks through temperature, humidity, and container choice with real‑world examples. You might also wander into puerh.app’s detailed entries on Mahei, Xiaguan, and Bulang to trace the full origin stories.
Spring 2024 sheng — three small formats
Amgalan Chin selected these lots during his spring sourcing trip through Yunnan. Each captures the character of its village in a tiny, age‑worthy package.