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Aged sheng (10–15 years) 老生

Bulang 2010 sheng — Foshan cellared

<i>Bùlǎng 2010 nián shēng — Fóshān cún jiào</i>

布朗2010年生 — 佛山存窖

A fourteen-year Bulang mountain sheng refined in Foshan's mid-humidity partner cellar — structured, deep, and resinous with a long resonant finish.

$EUR · 357 g

Weight
357 g
Harvest
Spring 2010
Cultivar
Bulang da ye (大叶)
Processing
Traditional sheng — sun-withered, pan-fired, rolled, sun-dried, stone-pressed, then aged in Foshan mid-humidity cellaring.
Sourced by

Foshan cellaring: a Mongolian buyer’s experiment in mid-humidity aging

I first visited this Bulang cake in its raw 2010 state at a small family workshop near Laobanzhang. The maocha carried enormous bone structure — broad-leaf, intensely mineral, almost brutal. I bought a basket and shipped it to our Foshan partner, an old herbarium keeper who had been conditioning teas for Cantonese fine dining since the 1990s.

The Foshan cellar sits between a river and an old lychee orchard. Humidity stays around 68–72%, temperature 22–25°C. It’s slower than Kunming, faster than Hong Kong. Over fourteen years, the cake absorbed a mellow depth: the early bitterness relaxed, the camphor note sweetened, and a plummy, savoury core emerged. It tastes like the place — warm, earthy, layered with the memory of fruit trees and antique wood.

I age teas in Russia, Mongolia, and Guangdong, always comparing. This Foshan lot taught me that mid-humidity is not a compromise; it’s a distinct voice. The cake still holds plenty of power, but it’s now conversational, not shouting. Pour it for someone who needs a slow, deliberate session.

The leaf, brewed

Camphor-edged stonefruit with a calm, enduring sweetness

dry leaf

Pressed cake with glossy, dark-brown leaves and scattered silver tips. Aroma of dried plum, camphor bark, and old bookstore.

wet leaf

Leaves unfold slowly, deep coppery brown. Scent of damp forest floor, chestnut honey, and a hint of leather.

liquor

Clear, deep amber with a golden rim, viscous and heavy in the cup.

aroma

Warm camphor, osmanthus, and cool mineral slate. A touch of dried persimmon and aged wood.

taste

Supple and coating, with dried cherry, aged resin, and a soft bitterness that quickly melts into a broad, savory sweetness.

finish

Long, cooling aftertaste (huí gān 回甘) with gentle throat resonance and a memory of minty camphor.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5g / 100ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
10
Subsequent
8–12 infusions, increasing time by 5 seconds each steep. Flash rinse the first one.

Use a zisha or high-porosity clay pot to round out the texture. For an even deeper experience, break off a small chunk, let it breathe for a day, then brew with a slightly lower leaf-to-water ratio.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

Full profile →