A private pressing from Mahei’s Gao family, resurrected by a cross-continental cellar
In the spring of 2001, the Gao family — known in Mahei for their old plantations and uncompromising hand-processing — pressed a tiny batch of sheng for their own collection. No branded wrapper, only a simple paper with the family name inked by brush. Roughly eighty cakes were produced, most kept in their Yunnan home, some given as gifts. Amgalan Chin encountered the tea during a 2012 trip tracing old tea routes along the Mongolia–Russia trade corridors; he recognised its potential immediately. He acquired twenty-six cakes directly from the family, with the understanding that they would continue their aging under his supervision.
Amgalan moved the cakes first to a dry Guangdong warehouse to complete their initial transformation, then to his own ventilated cellar in Russia, where the slow, cool environment drew out the tea’s resinous depths without pushing the fermentation too fast. Over more than two decades, the tea lost its youthful bite and gained a silken mouthfeel and a camphor-rich complexity rarely found outside top-tier Yiwu. Today only a handful of cakes remain, released with full provenance records and quarterly photo documentation since 2012.