shop.puerh.app · sampling channel Encyclopedia · School · Atlas · Pu-erh · Equipment EN · RU · · · FR · ES · AR
shop.puerh.app Cart (0)
dry
wet
liquor
plantation

home · shu

Shu (cooked pu‘er) — Ménghǎi classic, 2024 pressing

Menghai V93

<i>Ménghǎi V93 — 2024 shú bǐng</i>

勐海V93熟饼

A luminous young shu that breaks the stereotype of heavy, earthy ripe pu’er — bright, clean, and already deeply drinkable.

$83.5USD · 250 g

Weight
250 g
Harvest
Spring 2024
Processing
Traditional Ménghǎi wet-pile fermentation, pressed into 250g cake.
Sourced by

Charting the V93 recipe from Ménghǎi’s blending rooms to my Mongolian cellar

I first encountered V93 during a 2019 visit to the Ménghǎi Tea Factory, when the master blenders pulled an older sample from their archive — the recipe, originally developed in 1993, was designed to offer a more aromatic, brighter shu than the iconic 7572. When the 2024 cakes were pressed, I knew I wanted to bring this batch to shop.puerh.app immediately, so that drinkers could follow its evolution from the very first days.

Crossing the border from Menghai back to my aging room in Ulaanbaatar, I carried the cakes through cold, dry air — a sharp contrast to the humid Xīshuāngbǎnnà autumn. That temperature shock, I’ve found, helps lock in the volatile camphor notes that often fade too quickly in young shu. Now resting in my cellar for a short acclimatization, the 2024 V93 already shows a striking clarity: the fermentation was light and precise, preserving the natural sweetness of the leaf while building a structure that will hold up beautifully over the next 5–8 years.

This cake is for those who think they don’t like shu — and for seasoned drinkers who want a daily brewer that doesn’t demand decades of waiting. I’m proud to list it alongside my aged sheng from Bulang and Yīwǔ, because even though it’s young, the craftsmanship is unmistakable.

The leaf, brewed

Camphor, dried jujube, and a whisper of incense cedar

dry leaf

Tightly compressed 250g cake with glossy, dark chocolate-brown leaves and a few golden tips. Aroma of aged wooden chest, faint vanilla, and clean cellar air.

wet leaf

After rinse, the leaves unfurl into a deep mahogany, releasing a soft, baked-bread sweetness and a hint of damp forest floor.

liquor

The liquor pours a brilliant garnet-red, crystal clear, with a silky, oily mouthfeel.

aroma

Warm camphor and dried Chinese jujube rise first, followed by a subtle incense-cedar note and sweet, sun-warmed hay.

taste

Smooth entry with gentle weight: caramelized sugar, toasted rice, and a touch of walnut shell. No fermentation off-notes; a clean, mineral backbone keeps it lively.

finish

Medium-long with a cooling sensation in the throat (huí gān), leaving a lingering brown-sugar sweetness and a trace of petrichor.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5g : 100ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
10
Subsequent
8+ infusions, increase by 5s after the 4th steep

Flash rinse for 3s to awaken the leaves. Use a porous clay pot (zǐ shā) to soften the texture and highlight the camphor, or a gaiwan to track the clear liquor.

Sourced by

Amgalan Chin

Cross-Regional Tea Expert & Technical Specialist

Full profile →