From Hong Kong cellars to Kunming attics — Amgalan Chin’s tracking of a 7542 time capsule
This cake began its life in 2003 at the Menghai Tea Factory, a year when the 7542 recipe still relied on broad-leaf material from the Bulang and Bada mountains. Amgalan Chin first encountered it in 2010, inside a porous, mid-floor Hong Kong warehouse — ambient humidity at 80%, temperature hovering near 26°C. The original collector, a retired tea merchant, had stored it in traditional bamboo tongs, letting the subtropical air to seep in gradually. Amgalan acquired a small lot at that time, noting its quick transformation: dark, glossy wet-leaves with a pronounced “Hong Kong cellar” character — ripe earth, aged citrus peel, and a distinct camphor undercurrent.
In 2015, Amgalan moved the remaining cakes to a dry-storage room in Kunming, where the thin mountain air and stable 20°C slowly lifted the heavy humidity notes. Over the next eight years, the tea underwent a secondary phase: the wet-born sweetness clarified into a honey-and-spice profile, while the body tightened and gained a lingering, crystalline finish. Quarterly photos and tasting logs, shared on puerh.app’s aging section, document every shift.
Today, this 7542 represents a rare dual-storage narrative — the generous softness of controlled Hong Kong aging framed by Kunming’s crisp precision. Amgalan offers it as a testament to deliberate, patient transformation.