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Small cakes & tuocha

Bulang bird-nest — 50g 2024 sheng

*Bù Lǎng Niǎo Cháo*

布朗鸟巢

A single-session sheng pressed into a delicate bird-nest shape, offering the boldness of Bulang with young, vibrant energy — an easy daily companion.

$38USD · 50 g

Weight
50 g
Harvest
Spring 2024
Elevation
1300 m
Cultivar
Yunnan Da Ye Zhong
Processing
Kill-green, rolling, sun-drying, steam-pressed into 50g bird-nest
Sourced by

From Bulang’s old gardens — a traveler’s press

Bulang Mountain holds a singular place in pu-erh lore — deep, bodied teas with a wild energy that refuses to be tamed. In 2022, while tracing old tea-horse routes through Xishuangbanna, I stopped at a small workshop on the eastern slopes where the family still presses tiny bird-nest shapes for their own journeys on horseback and on foot. The tradition goes back generations: compact, leaf-preserving, easy to carry. They used spring 2024 maocha from a garden at 1,300 metres, mostly 30–40-year-old trees growing in the red laterite soil typical of the area. The leaf was finished simply: a precise kill-green kept the bitterness intact, rolling was gentle, and sun-drying locked in the brightness. I arranged for a modest batch to be pressed exclusively for the shop, as a bridge between the old nomadic convenience and the modern drinker’s daily ritual.

I’ve opened three nests myself across different months — they age gently even in this small format, the sharp edges rounding into stone fruit and the huigan growing longer. For me, this tea speaks of the cross-cultural shortcuts that brought Bulang’s strength into the Russian and Mongolian tea bowls a century ago, now compressed into a single-session nest for your own kettle.

The leaf, brewed

Bold young Bulang with citrus and cooling huigan

dry leaf

Tightly compressed nest of silver-green buds, abundant white down; scent of hay, apricot, and distant wood smoke.

wet leaf

After rinse, leaves open to sturdy dark olive-green; aroma deepens to warm stone fruit and fresh herb.

liquor

Clear, pale gold with a luminous green rim, bright and clean.

aroma

Grapefruit peel, fresh-cut hay, and a whisper of meadow flowers from the warm cup.

taste

Lively upfront bitterness quickly shifts to juicy citrus sweetness — apricot kernel, a faint mineral tang, and a smooth medium body.

finish

Cooling huigan returns swiftly, leaving a lingering sweet aftertaste in the throat and on the tongue.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5 g : 100 ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
10 s (after a quick rinse)
Subsequent
5–8 infusions, add 5–10 s each round

Break off a chunk from the nest with a needle or knife, aiming for whole leaves. A duan ni clay pot or porcelain gaiwan works best.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

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