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Regional flights — Lincang

Lincang Mengku flight — three pressings

*Líncāng Měngkù sān bǐng pǐnjiàn zhuāng*

临沧勐库三饼品鉴装

A window into Mengku’s evolving character across three consecutive springs — bright, honey-sweet, and already hinting at the soft leather and hay of early aging.

$105USD · 120 g

Weight
120 g
Harvest
Spring 2023, 2024, 2025
Elevation
1800 m
Cultivar
Mengku broad-leaf varietal (*Měngkù dàyè*)
Processing
Traditional sheng pu-erh — hand-picked, solar-withered, pan-fired, sun-dried, and stone-pressed in Mengku town, then wrapped in bamboo.
Sourced by

From the brick-red soil of Mengku to a Mongolian cellar.

I first walked these gardens in late spring of 2022, when the old roads were still being rebuilt after the rains. Mengku sits tucked in the Lincang range, where the broad-leaf varietal has been cultivated for centuries. The hills here are steep, the fog comes in thick, and the tea acquires a certain brightness — a honeyed clarity — that I have not found elsewhere.

The three pressings in this flight come from a cooperative I trust, one that still stone-presses small batches and dries the cakes slowly under bamboo sheds, never in forced heat. In 2023, the early drought gave remarkable concentration. 2024 was a more mellow year, with a balanced sweetness. 2025 already shows great promise — lively, floral, almost musky.

I’ve cellared each cake in my own aging room in Ulaanbaatar, where the dry, cold winters and mild summers slow the transformation. The dark, low-oxygen environment here — quite different from Kunming or Guangzhou — brings out leather and grain notes earlier, while preserving a fresh backbone. These samples arrived in vacuum-sealed foil only hours ago, ready for your gaiwan.

Sitting with them side-by-side, you can almost see the path from bright youth to quiet depth. It’s a journey I hope you’ll take slowly.

The leaf, brewed

A vertical of Mengku’s brightness, from fresh florals to early depth.

dry leaf

All three cakes show tight, silvery-green leaves with visible buds. 2025 lemon zest, 2024 dried apricot, 2023 a quiet leather and honey note.

wet leaf

Rinsed leaves open generously. 2025 still sharp and grassy; 2024 turning dewy with a hint of steamed milk; 2023 revealing old barnwood and ripe melon.

liquor

Pale gold for 2025, deepening to bright amber in 2023. Clarity is high across all three, with a slight chill haze in the youngest.

aroma

2025: fresh-cut fennel and white grape. 2024: honeycomb and sweet hay. 2023: toasted rice, vanilla husk, and a distant floral rear.

taste

2025 strikes with lively astringency and green apple, then shifts to sugar cane. 2024 is rounder — honey, a trace of almond, mild bitterness. 2023 carries the weight: wet stone, dried longan, a soft, mouth-coating sweetness that crests into gentle cooling.

finish

Huigan builds from the throat: quick and crisp for 2025, slower and deeper for 2023. The oldest leaves a pleasant, lingering mineral coolness that returns with each breath.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5 g per 100 ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
15
Subsequent
6–8 infusions; increase by 5–10 seconds after the third steep. Pour just off the boil, hit the teapot wall gently to release aromatics.

For a side-by-side flight, use three identical gaiwans. Rinse twice for the 2023, once for the young cakes. Let the leaves rest 10 seconds between infusions.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

Full profile →