Black Friday Countdown 丨 20% Off Sitewide + Free Gifts!
No codes, no fuss – gifts and discounts are all automatic!
Yiwu Raw Pu-erh Cake – 2013 Spring Tea, Hand-Pressed 2023 (100g)
Worldwide shipping for just $9.5 on every order. Shipping Policy
14-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Need help? Contact us
Your details are protected and safe with us.
Yiwu Raw Pu-erh Cake – 2013 Spring Tea, Hand-Pressed 2023 (100g)
Ten-Year Loose-Aged Yiwu Blend, Freshly Pressed – Mid-Maturity Sweetness Meets Limitless Potential
- Unit price
- / per
Ten years of loose-leaf aging unlocked Yiwu's legendary sweetness, then hand-pressing in 2023 gave this rare old-material tea a second life—delivering mid-aged complexity today with decades of transformation still ahead.
There's an old saying among Pu-erh connoisseurs: "Banzhang is King, Yiwu is Queen." While Banzhang brings power and dominance, Yiwu offers elegance, restraint, and a sweetness that deepens into profound complexity with time. Located at the heart of Yunnan's ancient Six Great Tea Mountains, Yiwu has produced tribute tea for emperors and remains the gold standard for "rou zhong dai jin" (柔中带劲)—"softness concealing strength." Young Yiwu is gentle; aged Yiwu is formidable. This tea embodies both.
What makes this 2013 Yiwu Raw Pu-erh exceptional isn't just its pedigree—it's the revolutionary "old material, new pressing" approach that's rarely seen in premium tea. Here's the journey: in 2013, master tea makers sourced spring leaves (one-bud-two-to-three-leaf grade) from four of Yiwu's most revered villages—Mahei, Guafengzhai, Luoshuidong, and Wangong—each contributing distinct aromatic signatures. Rather than immediately pressing these leaves into cakes, the material was stored loose in dry warehouses across Kunming and Xi'an for ten full years (2013-2023). This extended loose-leaf aging is critical: without compression, the leaves maintain greater surface area and oxygen exposure, allowing them to transform more actively and evenly than compressed tea. The result? By 2023, this material had developed mid-aged sweetness and layered complexity while retaining remarkable vitality and future aging potential.
Then came the artisan touch: in 2023, these ten-year loose leaves were meticulously hand-pressed using traditional stone molds—a labor-intensive process that respects leaf integrity and creates optimal density for continued aging. Since pressing, the cakes have undergone additional maturation through 2024-2025, allowing the post-compression "shock" to settle and flavors to re-integrate. What you're drinking today is a mid-aged Yiwu masterpiece with a dual timeline: ten years as loose tea plus two years as pressed cake, equating to roughly 12 years of total aging character.
Open this 100g cake and the aroma speaks volumes: classic Yiwu elegance—orchid blossoms, honeysuckle, brown sugar, and sweet cream—contained and refined ("含蓄雅致"), never sharp or aggressive. The Chinese description says "不飘不张" (bu piao bu zhang)—"neither floating nor exaggerated"—meaning the fragrance is integrated into the tea structure rather than superficial. Brew it, and the liquor glows honey-amber with oil-rich luminosity ("蜜黄油亮"), a visual promise of what's to come. The texture? Thick, silky, almost viscous ("汤质细腻稠厚")—like drinking liquid velvet. Flavor arrives in distinct layers: initial honeyed sweetness (think wildflower honey mixed with brown sugar), mid-palate mineral complexity (wet stone, autumn forest floor), and a finish that lingers for 15-20 minutes with waves of returning sweetness (huigan) and deep throat resonance (throat rhyme, 喉韵).
The leaf structure reveals its quality: "Yiwu tendon tea" (易武筋条茶)—long, slender, dark black with glossy oil sheen, typical of Yiwu's ancient-tree genetics. This isn't plantation tea; these are large-leaf varietals with robust cellular structure that can age for 30-50 years. The body sensation (chaqi, 茶气) is pronounced and comfortable—you'll feel gentle warmth spreading through your chest, mental clarity without jitters, and a subtle energizing calm that persists for hours.
But here's the thrilling part: this tea is only beginning its aging story. At 10-12 years of equivalent aging, it's in the "sweet transition" phase—past the harsh greenness of youth, entering honeyed maturity, but with decades of runway ahead. Continue dry storage, and by 2030 you'll taste deeper caramelized sugars and aged wood notes; by 2035, medicinal complexity and profound chaqi; by 2040, the kind of museum-quality aged Yiwu that commands collector prices. The 100g format is ideal for personal aging experiments—drink 30g over the next year to establish a baseline, age the remaining 70g for 5-10 years, and witness Yiwu's legendary transformation firsthand.
Tea Profile
- Tea Type: Sheng Pu-erh (Raw Pu-erh / 生普洱茶)
-
Origin: Yiwu Tea Region, Xishuangbanna, Yunnan Province—first among the Ancient Six Great Tea Mountains
- Specific Village Blend: Mahei (麻黑), Guafengzhai (刮风寨), Luoshuidong (落水洞), Wangong (弯弓)—four of Yiwu's most prestigious micro-regions
- Each village contributes unique characteristics: Mahei (honey sweetness), Guafengzhai (wild elegance), Luoshuidong (floral complexity), Wangong (ancient forest depth)
- Material Harvest Year: 2013 Spring Tea
- Pressing Year: 2023 (ten-year loose-leaf aging before compression)
- Current Age: Approximately 12 years total aging equivalence (10 years loose + 2 years pressed)
- Raw Material Grade: One-bud-two-to-three-leaf spring picking (一芽二三叶)—optimal balance of tenderness and substance
-
Processing Method:
- Traditional Yunnan sun-dried green tea (晒青茶) processing
- Ten-year dry storage as loose leaf (2013-2023) in Kunming and Xi'an warehouses
- Hand-pressed using traditional stone molds (2023)—preserves leaf integrity and creates ideal compression density
- Leaf Appearance: "Yiwu tendon tea" (易武筋条茶)—long, slender, dark black with glossy oil sheen; classic ancient-tree morphology
- Net Weight: 100g compressed cake (ideal personal-aging or exploration format)
- Aging Stage: Mid-Maturity Sheng (10-12 year equivalent)—past harsh astringency, entering honeyed sweetness phase; still vibrant and energetic
- Storage Condition: Premium Dry Storage—Kunming and Xi'an climate-controlled warehouses; clean, slow transformation pathway
- Current Drinkability: Excellent for immediate enjoyment—smooth, sweet, layered; no aging required but massively rewarding if cellared
- Aging Potential: Elite (30-50 year transformation runway; Yiwu ancient-tree genetics are legendary for long-term evolution)
- Unique Processing Advantage: "Old Material, New Pressing" (老料新压)—loose-leaf aging preserved greater vitality and transformation potential than traditional immediate compression; this tea has the character of 10-year aged material with the structural vitality of recently pressed cake
Flavor & Body Sensation (Sensory Profile)
| Attribute | Current Profile (2024-2025, ~12 Years Equivalent) | Expected Development (5–15 Years, Total 17–27 Years) |
|---|---|---|
| Aroma | Classic Yiwu Elegance: Orchid blossoms, honeysuckle, brown sugar, sweet creamCharacter: Contained and refined ("含蓄雅致")—neither floating nor exaggerated ("不飘不张")Integrated fragrance: Aroma embedded in tea structure rather than superficialEvolution notes: Clear floral-sweet dominance with emerging aged honey depthSubtle undertones: Autumn hay, light camphor, mineral stone | Deepening into aged honey and wood: Caramelized sugar, aged sandalwood, dried longanFloral notes mature: Dried orchid, osmanthus, aged incenseMedicinal complexity emerges: Sweet herbal notes, aged ginseng, forest resinClassic aged Yiwu signature: Profound depth with retained elegance—the "Queen" fully matured |
| Liquor Color | Honey-amber with oil-rich luminosity ("蜜黄油亮")Visual quality: Bright, clear, glossy—indicates clean dry storage and active transformationDepth: Mid-range amber suggesting proper mid-age development | Transitioning to deeper amber-cognac, eventually reaching rich mahogany-red with continued agingMaintains brilliant clarity (hallmark of quality Yiwu and dry storage) |
| Texture (Kougon 口感) | Thick, silky, viscous ("汤质细腻稠厚")—liquid velvet qualityMouthfeel: Full-bodied, coating palate with oily richnessAstringency: Minimal and refined—ten-year aging has mellowed any harshnessSmoothness: Exceptionally rounded and comfortable | Increasing oil-rich density approaching syrupy viscosityVelvety softness intensifies—zero astringency, pure silk-smooth textureAged complexity in mouthfeel: Layered sensations that evolve across the palate |
| Flavor Core | Primary: Honeyed Sweetness ("口感甜润")—wildflower honey, brown sugar, sweet creamSecondary: Mineral Backbone—wet stone, autumn forest floor (Yiwu's terroir signature)Tertiary: Fruit Depth—dried longan, white peach, hint of apricotLayered complexity ("层次分明")—flavors unfold in distinct phases rather than flat profileBalance: Sweet and full-bodied ("饱满") without cloying heaviness | Primary shifts to Caramelized Depth—aged honey, dark caramel, dried dates, aged wood (sandalwood, cedar)Medicinal complexity develops—sweet herbal notes, aged ginseng, forest resinFruit notes mature—dried stone fruit, aged plum wine characterProfound layering—each steep reveals new dimensions; classic aged Yiwu "endless depth" |
| Finish (Huigan 回甘 & Throat Rhyme 喉韵) | Returning sweetness: Immediate and persistent ("回味甘甜")—sugar floods mouth 15-20 minutes after swallowingDeep throat resonance ("喉韵丰富")—sensation extends deep into throat, not just surface palateAftertaste character: Sweet honey-floral notes with mineral coolnessSalivation: Active and continuous (生津)—mouth produces extra saliva, creating refreshing sensation | Intensifying into profound huigan—20-30 minute sweet return with multiple wavesThroat rhyme deepens—sensation reaches chest; classic aged Yiwu "drinking warmth"Complex aftertaste evolution—flavors morph across time rather than fading linearlyAged Yiwu hallmark: The "echo" of the tea lasting for hours |
| Body Sensation (Chaqi 茶气) | Strong and comfortable ("茶气足、体感舒适")Physical warmth: Gentle heat spreading through chest and upper backMental clarity: Focused alertness without jitters or anxietyEnergizing calm: Simultaneously relaxing and invigoratingDigestive ease: Stomach feels settled and comfortable (Yiwu traditionally valued for gentleness) | Chaqi intensifies into grounding presence—energy radiates through entire torsoMeditative potency: Deep body resonance; the kind of chaqi that stops conversationSustained vitality: Effects persist for 3-4 hours after drinkingClassic aged Yiwu power: "Softness concealing strength" fully realized—gentle yet formidable |
| Brewing Endurance | Exceptional longevity ("经久耐泡")—easily 12-15 Gongfu infusions with sustained qualityFlavor evolution: Each steep reveals different facets; not front-loadedLate steeps: Still sweet and complex (not watery or flat) | Endurance increases to 15-20+ quality infusionsLate steep character deepens—develops woody-honey complexity rather than fadingAncient-tree genetics shine in prolonged steeping capacity |
| Aging Notes | Currently at "sweet mid-maturity phase"—✓ Ten-year loose aging delivered honeyed smoothness✓ Recent pressing (2023) preserved vitality and transformation potential✓ Unique advantage: Combines mid-aged sweetness with young-pressed structural integrity | Will develop "classic aged Yiwu masterpiece" (2030-2040):- Caramelized sugar and aged wood dominance- Medicinal herbal complexity (ginseng, forest resin)- Profound chaqi and throat resonance- The "Queen of Pu-erh" in full regal maturity |
Storage Guidelines for Continued Aging
- Current Status: Already 10+ years dry-aged; ideal trajectory established
- Recommended Conditions: 60-70°F (15-21°C), 55-65% relative humidity, dark space, away from strong odors
- Continue Dry Storage: This tea's pristine transformation came from Kunming/Xi'an clean aging—maintain this approach for optimal long-term results
- Special Advantage of 100g Format: Flexible aging strategy—drink 30g now to establish baseline, age remaining 70g for 5-10 years, create personal time-lapse comparison
- Long-term Potential: This tea can age 30-50 years; Yiwu ancient-tree genetics are legendary for sustained transformation without degradation
Quality Guarantees & Authentications
"Old Material, New Pressing" Verification:
- Documented timeline: 2013 spring harvest, ten-year loose-leaf storage (2013-2023), hand-pressed 2023—traceable three-phase process rarely seen in budget-tier tea; represents significant capital investment by producer
- Leaf morphology confirms age: Dark black oil-glossy appearance, "Yiwu tendon" structure, and honey-amber liquor color verify 10+ year dry-aging character; visual and sensory markers align with claimed material age
Yiwu Regional Authenticity:
- Four-village strategic blend: Mahei, Guafengzhai, Luoshuidong, Wangong sourcing delivers complexity no single-origin Yiwu can achieve; each micro-region's distinct aromatic signatures (honey, wild florals, minerals, forest depth) are detectable in layered steeping progression
- Classic Yiwu sensory markers present: "含蓄雅致" (contained elegance), dominant sweetness ("口感甜润"), deep throat resonance ("喉韵丰富"), strong comfortable chaqi ("茶气足、体感舒适")—these are textbook Yiwu characteristics difficult to fake with non-Yiwu material
- Ancient-tree leaf grade: One-bud-two-to-three-leaf spring picking with visible "tendon tea" structure indicates large-leaf varietal genetics; high-altitude ancient trees from elevation zones around 1,400-1,800m (Yiwu's prime growing altitude)
Storage Guarantee – Twelve Years of Pristine Dry Aging:
- Dual-location premium storage: Kunming and Xi'an climate-controlled warehouses—both are renowned dry-storage cities in Chinese Pu-erh industry (low humidity, stable temperatures)
- Clean transformation verified: Honey-amber liquor clarity ("蜜黄油亮"), bright glossy appearance, zero musty or off-notes confirm proper dry-aging conditions; this is aging that preserves vitality rather than accelerating through humidity
- Ten-year loose-leaf aging advantage: Material aged in un-compressed state (2013-2023) maintained greater oxygen exposure and cellular activity; when finally pressed (2023), tea retained transformation potential typically found in much younger cakes
Artisan Processing Certification:
- Traditional hand-pressed stone mold: Labor-intensive process that preserves leaf integrity and creates optimal compression density for long-term aging (not overly tight machine pressing that inhibits transformation)
- Sun-dried processing (晒青茶, shaiging cha): Traditional Yunnan method that maintains enzymatic activity necessary for decades-long aging; avoids over-roasting that would stall transformation
Aging Potential Assurance:
- Mid-maturity with decades ahead: At 10-12 year equivalent, this tea has shed harsh youth while retaining 30-50 year transformation runway; Yiwu ancient-tree genetics are legendary for sustained evolution
- Yiwu's proven aging trajectory: "New tea soft, old tea strong" (新茶柔,老茶劲)—this tea is entering the phase where Yiwu's legendary depth emerges; documented examples of 30-50 year Yiwu demonstrate this material's potential
Why This Tea Represents Exceptional Value and Urgency
The Three-Timeline Advantage:
This tea occupies a rare convergence point in Pu-erh's value matrix:
- Material harvested 2013—over a decade of age
- Aged loose for 10 years—unusual vitality preservation
- Pressed recently (2023)—fresh structural integrity for continued aging
You're essentially acquiring mid-aged character at near-young-tea prices because the pressing date is recent. In 5-10 years, when this tea shows 17-25 year total aging character, comparable cakes will command 3-5x current pricing—this is structural market arbitrage based on how Pu-erh is valued (pressing date vs. material age).
The 100g Format Opportunity:
- Low-commitment exploration: Unlike 357g cakes (significant financial and storage commitment), 100g allows serious engagement without overwhelming investment
- Personal aging experiment: Perfect size for controlled transformation study—drink portion now, age remainder, document evolution
- Ideal gift format: Share Yiwu's legendary profile with curious friends; introduce them to why "Queen of Pu-erh" deserves reverence
The Four-Village Blend Rarity:
Most Yiwu cakes are single-village (Mahei-only, Guafengzhai-only, etc.) or vague "Yiwu blend" without specificity. This tea's documented four-village sourcing (麻黑、刮风寨、落水洞、弯弓) is uncommon in 100g format—typically reserved for premium 357g cakes. You're accessing collector-grade blending in accessible size.
Current Availability Reality:
- Finite inventory: This is not replenishable commodity—2013 material aged 10 years loose, then pressed in 2023, represents specific historical moment
- Small-batch production: 100g cakes are often limited runs; once depleted, next availability requires waiting for 2024-2025 material to age a decade (not available until 2034-2035)
- Dry-stored premium material increasingly scarce: As Pu-erh market matures, quality dry-aged material is being consumed or hoarded by collectors; clean 10+ year Yiwu becomes harder to source annually
Secure Your Yiwu Journey Before This Pressing Becomes Unobtainable
For mid-aged Yiwu of verified provenance, currently in pristine dry-storage sweetness phase, with documented "old material, new pressing" pedigree, in convenient 100g personal-aging format—this represents a convergence of factors rarely aligned in accessible pricing.
Three Strategic Approaches:
Exploratory Drinker:
Purchase one 100g cake—experience Yiwu's legendary sweetness and layered complexity over 6-8 Gongfu sessions. Decide whether this regional profile deserves permanent place in your tea rotation. Minimal risk, maximum education.
Serious Collector:
Acquire 3-5 cakes—implement staged consumption strategy: drink one entirely (2024-2026) to establish intimate knowledge; sample second periodically (2027-2031) to track transformation; age remaining cakes untouched to 2035-2040 for peak aged Yiwu experience. Create personal time-lapse study.
Investment-Minded Enthusiast:
Consider 10+ cakes—build long-term aging library. Drink 20-30% over next 3-5 years; age 70-80% for 10-20 years. By 2035-2045, you'll own rare aged Yiwu that's nearly impossible to acquire at any price. Share evolved cakes with tea community; establish reputation as collector with foresight.
Contact our tea specialists for personalized guidance on Yiwu's aging characteristics, storage optimization strategies, or volume purchasing. We're here to support your exploration of why this ancient tea mountain earned its "Queen" designation across centuries.
Add to Cart Now—Each Gram Contains Yiwu's Ten-Year Transformation Journey
Limited 2013 Material, Hand-Pressed 2023 | Four Legendary Villages Blend | 30-50 Year Aging Potential | 100g Personal Format
Once this inventory depletes, the next "12-year equivalent old-material-new-pressing Yiwu in 100g format" won't exist until someone ages 2025 material as loose leaf until 2035, then presses it—over a decade away. This is your window into a rare processing approach and legendary tea region, converging in accessible format.
When a tea mountain earns the title "Queen" over centuries, when material ages a decade as loose leaf before finding its compressed form, when four legendary villages contribute their distinct voices to a harmonious blend—you're not just buying 100 grams of tea. You're acquiring passage into Yiwu's patient transformation, where softness conceals strength, where sweetness deepens across decades, where throat resonance speaks louder than aggressive flavor. This is aged Pu-erh as meditation, as education, as edible time itself.
Yiwu Raw Pu-erh 2013 (Hand-Pressed 2023)—Where a decade of careful aging meets centuries of tea mountain wisdom, compressed into 100 grams of liquid poetry waiting for your water to unlock its secrets.
Tea type: Puerh Tea
Tea shape: Cake
Origin: Yunnan
Picking year: 2013
Picking Season: Spring
Tea shape: Cake
Fermentation degree: 🟢🟢🟢Non-fermented
Suggested teaware:
- Gaiwan☕
- Glass Cup🥛
- Porcelain Cup
- Clay Teapot🫖
- Elegant Cup
Tea-to-100g Water Ratio: 5g
Brewing Water Temperature:
- ♨️♨️♨️~100℃/212℉
Medthod:
Gongfu Style (Optimal for Experiencing Yiwu's Layered Complexity):
- Tea-to-Water Ratio: 5-6g per 100-120ml gaiwan (adjust slightly higher for 100g cake—use approximately 1/20 to 1/15 of cake)
- Water Temperature: 95-100°C (203-212°F)First 3-4 steeps: Start at 95°C to emphasize floral elegance and sweetness5th steep onward: Increase to 100°C to unlock deeper mineral and wood notes
- Vessel: Porcelain gaiwan ideal for showcasing Yiwu's delicate aromatics; Yixing clay pot enhances sweetness and body
- Infusion Times:Rinse: 5 seconds (awaken leaves, discard—note the explosive orchid-honey aroma)1st-3rd steeps: 10-15 seconds (capture peak floral-sweet character)4th-7th steeps: 20-30 seconds (layered complexity emerges; minerality and depth build)8th-12th steeps: 40-60 seconds (remarkable endurance—sweetness and throat resonance persist)Late steeps (13+): 1-2 minutes (honey-water sweetness; meditative sipping)
Pro Tip: Yiwu rewards patience and attention—each steep offers distinct flavor phases. Don't rush. Notice how the sweetness arrives in waves, how the throat resonance deepens with each cup, how the chaqi builds gradually rather than hitting immediately.
For a detailed guide, please refer to our Blog: A Guide to Brewing Perfect Pu-erh Tea
Initial Brewing Time: ⏰⏰⏰~20s
Subsequent Brewing Time: initial brewing time+5S
Q: What does "old material, new pressing" mean, and why does it matter?
A: This is a rare and valuable processing approach that fundamentally changes how aged Pu-erh develops. Let me explain the difference:
Traditional Approach:
- Fresh spring leaves harvested → immediately sun-dried → immediately compressed into cakes (within weeks/months of harvest)
- Tea then ages in compressed form for years/decades
- Aging pace: Slower (compression limits oxygen exposure and surface area)
- Transformation pattern: Core of cake ages more slowly than surface; potential unevenness
"Old Material, New Pressing" Approach (This Tea):
- Fresh 2013 spring leaves harvested → sun-dried → stored loose for 10 years (2013-2023)
- Only then compressed into cakes in 2023
- Aging pace: Faster and more active during loose-leaf phase (greater oxygen exposure, all leaves age evenly)
- Result: By pressing time (2023), the material had already developed 10-year aged character—honeyed sweetness, mellowed astringency, layered complexity
Why This Matters for Your Drinking Experience:
Advantage 1: Mid-Aged Character NOW
- You're drinking tea with 10-12 years of aging character immediately
- No need to wait 5-10 years for "drinkability"—it's already smooth, sweet, layered
- Yet the tea retains vitality because pressing was recent (2023)
Advantage 2: Enhanced Transformation Potential
- Loose-leaf aging preserves greater cellular activity in leaves
- When finally compressed, the tea has "reset" aging potential—like winding a clock that was running
- You get both: established mid-age flavor profile plus decades of future evolution
Advantage 3: Even Maturation
- All leaves aged equally as loose material (no "surface vs. core" discrepancy)
- When pressed, the entire cake has uniform maturity—every gram tastes consistent
Why This Is Rare:
- Financially risky: Producer must store loose tea for a decade without selling it—significant capital tied up
- Technically demanding: Loose tea requires more warehouse space and careful monitoring than compressed cakes
- Most common for premium material: Only used for exceptional harvests worth the decade-long investment
For You as a Buyer:
This means you're drinking premium material that's been through two distinct aging phases:
- 2013-2023: Active loose-leaf transformation (developed sweetness and complexity)
- 2023-present: Pressed cake maturation (integrating flavors, building future runway)
You essentially get a "time advantage"—drinking mid-aged complexity today while retaining the aging potential typically found in much younger pressed tea.
Q: Why is Yiwu called "Queen of Pu-erh," and what makes this tea particularly representative?
A: The "Banzhang is King, Yiwu is Queen" saying captures a fundamental dimension in Pu-erh: power versus elegance.
Banzhang (The King):
- Bold, aggressive, immediate impact
- High bitterness and astringency (even when aged)
- Strong chaqi that hits fast and hard
- Character: Masculine, dominant, attention-grabbing
Yiwu (The Queen):
- Elegant, refined, subtle yet profound
- Natural sweetness with minimal bitterness
- Chaqi that builds gradually and lasts for hours
- Character: Feminine grace concealing deep strength—the Chinese concept of "柔中带劲" (rou zhong dai jin): "softness concealing strength"
Why "Queen" Is Actually More Prestigious Among Serious Collectors:
- Aging trajectory: Young Yiwu is pleasant but unassuming; aged Yiwu (15-30 years) reveals astonishing complexity that Banzhang rarely achieves
- Subtlety as sophistication: Yiwu's flavors are layered and nuanced—it rewards careful attention rather than shouting for it
- Longevity: Yiwu ancient-tree tea can age 50+ years gracefully; Banzhang often peaks earlier
- Throat resonance: Yiwu's deep throat rhyme (喉韵) is considered the pinnacle of tea sensation—felt rather than tasted
What Makes THIS Tea Particularly Representative of Yiwu:
1. Four Legendary Villages Blend:
This cake combines material from Mahei, Guafengzhai, Luoshuidong, and Wangong—four of Yiwu's most prestigious micro-regions:
- Mahei (麻黑): Gateway village; classic honey sweetness and balanced profile
- Guafengzhai (刮风寨): High-altitude wild trees; intense floral elegance
- Luoshuidong (落水洞): Famous for aromatic complexity and mineral backbone
- Wangong (弯弓): Deepest forest; ancient trees with profound chaqi
Each village contributes distinct notes, and the master blend achieves synergy—you get complexity no single-origin can deliver.
2. Classic Yiwu Leaf Morphology:
The description notes "Yiwu tendon tea" (易武筋条茶)—long, slender, dark black leaves with glossy oil sheen. This is genetically distinct from other regions' leaves and indicates ancient large-leaf trees with robust aging potential.
3. Textbook Yiwu Flavor Profile:
- "含蓄雅致" (contained and refined elegance)—aromatics are integrated, not showy
- "不飘不张" (neither floating nor exaggerated)—sophistication through restraint
- "回味甘甜" (returning sweetness)—the hallmark Yiwu huigan
- "喉韵丰富" (rich throat resonance)—the deep sensation that defines great Yiwu
4. Aging Pedigree:
At 10-12 years equivalent, this tea demonstrates Yiwu's transformation arc:
- Youth (Years 1-5): Gentle, floral, pleasant but not profound
- Mid-age (Years 8-15, where this tea is): Honeyed sweetness emerges, layering becomes evident, chaqi strengthens
- Maturity (Years 20-50): Full complexity—caramelized sugars, medicinal depth, profound body sensations
For Collectors:
Owning this tea means experiencing the "Queen" mid-transformation. You can drink it now and appreciate current elegance, or age it further and witness how Yiwu becomes legendary over decades. Few teas offer this dual opportunity—immediate gratification plus long-term treasure potential.
Q: At 10-12 years of equivalent aging, is this tea still worth aging further, or should I drink it all now?
A: Both strategies are valid, but let me help you decide based on your goals:
Argument for Drinking Most of It Now (30-50% Consumption):
Peak Mid-Age Sweetness:
- At 10-12 years, this tea is hitting Yiwu's "sweet spot"—honeyed smoothness without losing vibrancy
- The floral-honey notes are at peak integration rather than fading (as they might after 20+ years)
- You get accessible complexity—layered enough to be interesting, smooth enough to be effortless
The "Old Material, New Pressing" Advantage:
- Because this tea aged loose for 10 years before pressing, it has unusual vitality for mid-aged material
- Right now, you're experiencing the best of both worlds: established flavor depth + energetic chaqi
- Drinking it now captures this unique transitional moment
100g Format Limitation:
- Unlike a 357g cake (which you can sample across decades), 100g gets consumed relatively quickly
- If you age all of it for 10 more years, you'll have very little to drink when it peaks—4-5 sessions max
Argument for Aging Significant Portion (50-70% Reserve):
Yiwu's Legendary Long-Term Transformation:
- Yiwu is famous for taking 15-30 years to reveal its full complexity
- At 10-12 years, this tea is mid-adolescence—imagine tasting it at 20-25 years (2033-2038):
Caramelized sugar and aged wood dominance
Medicinal herbal complexity (aged ginseng, forest resin)
Profound throat resonance that lasts for hours
Classic aged Yiwu "endless depth"
Proven Dry Storage Track Record:
- This tea has 12 years of pristine Kunming/Xi'an dry aging—you know exactly how it transforms
- The trajectory is clean and refined (no humid storage risks)
- Continuing this path guarantees exceptional results by 2035-2040
Collectible Rarity:
- Old material, new pressing Yiwu is uncommon; 10-12 year equivalent in 100g format is rarer still
- By 2035, this tea will be 22-year aged Yiwu—extremely difficult to find and command premium prices
- Your "investment" of patience yields genuinely rare aged tea
Comparative Aging Experiment:
- If you have access to multiple 100g cakes, you can implement staged drinking strategy:
Cake 1: Drink now (2024-2026)—establish baseline of current profile
Cake 2: Age to 2030 (total ~18 years)—experience deeper honey-wood development
Cake 3: Age to 2035-2040 (total 23-28 years)—witness peak aged Yiwu complexity
Recommended Hybrid Strategy (If You Have Only One 100g Cake):
Year 1-2 (2024-2026):
- Drink 30-40g (approximately 6-8 Gongfu sessions)
- Goal: Establish intimate knowledge of current flavor profile; document tasting notes
- Frequency: Once every 2-3 months—savor rather than rush
Year 3-7 (2027-2031):
- Sample 10-15g (2-3 sessions across this period)
- Goal: Track evolution—note how floral notes deepen, how throat resonance strengthens
- Purpose: "Check-in" tastings to decide whether to continue aging or accelerate consumption
Year 8-15 (2032-2039):
- Reserve final 45-55g for this window
- Goal: Experience peak aged Yiwu complexity (total 20-27 years)
- Approach: Drink slowly across these years, savoring transformation that most tea drinkers never experience
Decision Factors:
Drink More Now If:
- You rarely age tea long-term (storage constraints, life mobility)
- You prioritize immediate experience over future potential
- You're exploring Yiwu for first time and want prolonged exposure to current profile
- You have access to other aged Yiwu for future comparison
Age More If:
- You have stable storage and enjoy cellaring tea
- You're fascinated by time-transformation and patient enough to wait
- You want to experience what 20-25 year Yiwu tastes like (rare and valuable knowledge)
- You can acquire multiple 100g cakes to implement parallel drinking/aging strategies
Pro Collector Tip:
If truly serious about this tea, consider buying 3-5 of these 100g cakes:
- Cake 1: Drink entirely over next 1-2 years (learn the tea intimately)
- Cake 2: Sample periodically over 5-7 years, finish by 2030
- Cakes 3-5: Age to 2035-2040 without touching—these become your aged Yiwu treasures
This approach gives you education now and legendary tea later—the best of all worlds.
Q: How do I verify this is authentic Yiwu from those specific villages (Mahei, Guafengzhai, etc.)?
A: Excellent question—tea authentication is challenging, especially for regional blends. Here's how to evaluate this tea's authenticity using sensory verification rather than relying solely on paperwork:
Leaf Morphology (Visual Authentication):
When you break the cake open, examine the dry leaves:
Authentic Yiwu Large-Leaf Indicators:
- Length: Leaves are long and slender ("条索细长")—often 4-6 cm when whole; NOT short, stubby plantation-style leaves
- Color: Dark black with glossy oil sheen ("黑亮油润")—indicates proper sun-drying and aging; avoid dull brown or artificially dark leaves
- "Tendon" structure: Leaves show visible veins and stems (筋条, jin tiao)—sign of ancient-tree material with robust structure
- Bud presence: One-bud-two-to-three-leaf grade means you'll see some golden/silver buds, but not excessive (over-tippy tea is usually lower elevation)
NOT Authentic If:
- Leaves are uniformly small and broken (indicates low-grade or machine-processed)
- Color is uniform dull brown (suggests humid storage or poor processing)
- Leaves are brittle and dusty (over-oxidized or poor storage)
Aroma Profile (Olfactory Authentication):
Authentic Yiwu Village Blend Should Present:
- "含蓄雅致" (contained elegance)—aroma is complex but not aggressive; you lean in to smell it rather than it hitting you
- Floral notes: Orchid, honeysuckle (NOT jasmine or rose, which suggest added scenting)
- Honey-sweetness: Clean, natural (NOT caramel/burnt sugar, which suggests wok over-roasting or humid storage)
- Mineral undertones: Wet stone, autumn forest floor (Yiwu's iron-rich soil signature)
Red Flags:
- Sharp, grassy, vegetable notes: Suggests non-Yiwu origin (possibly Menghai factory blends or lower-altitude material)
- Musty, earthy, damp basement smell: Humid storage or poor-quality base tea
- Artificial perfume quality: Added scenting or contaminated storage
Taste Verification (The Ultimate Test):
Authentic Yiwu Multi-Village Blend Will Deliver:
1. Sweetness Dominance:
- Immediate honey-sweet entry ("口感甜润")—NOT bitterness-first profile
- If the tea hits with strong bitterness or astringency (even in mid-age), it's likely NOT Yiwu (possibly Bulang or Banzhang mislabeled)
2. Layered Complexity:
- As brew progresses across 8-12 steeps, you should taste distinct flavor phases:
Early steeps: Floral honey
Mid steeps: Mineral depth + fruit complexity
Late steeps: Sustained sweetness (not watery collapse)
- Single-note tea (one-dimensional sweetness or flat profile) suggests non-Yiwu or low-grade blend
3. Throat Resonance (喉韵):
- After swallowing, sensation extends deep into throat—NOT just surface palate
- You should feel warmth and soothing in your throat for minutes after
- Shallow finish (flavor disappears immediately) suggests plantation tea or non-Yiwu origin
4. Body Sensation (茶气):
- Within 3-4 cups, you should feel gentle warmth spreading through chest
- Mental clarity without jitters (Yiwu's caffeine profile is balanced, not aggressive)
- If tea makes you anxious, sweaty, or uncomfortable, it may be over-roasted or contaminated
5. Returning Sweetness (回甘):
- 15-20 minutes after swallowing, sweetness should return to your mouth in waves
- This is Yiwu's signature—if huigan is weak or absent, authenticity is questionable
Storage Verification (Dry vs. Humid):
This tea claims Kunming/Xi'an dry storage—verify:
Authentic Dry Storage Signs:
- Liquor color: Honey-amber with clarity and brightness ("蜜黄油亮")—NOT murky or opaque
- Aroma: Clean florals and honey—NO musty, basement, or fermented notes
- Aftertaste: Clean and persistent—NO muddy or sour finish
- Leaves after brewing: Open up fully, show green-brown interior (NOT blackened or over-fermented)
Humid Storage Red Flags:
- Dark, opaque liquor (excessive oxidation)
- Musty or earthy aroma (mold exposure)
- Sour or "fishy" aftertaste (bacterial activity)
Documentation (Secondary Verification):
What to Ask Vendor:
- Storage location specifics: "Kunming and Xi'an" is good; "Guangdong warehouse" would raise humid-storage concerns
- Pressing facility: Hand-pressed stone mold should leave visible compression marks (not perfectly uniform machine pressing)
- Material traceability: Reputable vendors can provide harvest year documentation (2013) and pressing date (2023)
However: In Pu-erh market, documents can be faked—your sensory evaluation is more reliable than paperwork for 100g cakes (which are often small-batch, limited documentation).
Final Authentication Advice:
If This Tea IS Authentic Yiwu:
You'll experience immediate sweetness, layered complexity, deep throat resonance, and comfortable chaqi. The tea will be immediately pleasant (not requiring "acquired taste"), yet reveal new dimensions across many steeps.
If It's NOT Authentic (e.g., Menghai-area blend mislabeled as Yiwu):
You'll likely taste more bitterness, less sweetness, shallower finish, and one-dimensional flavor. Still drinkable, but missing Yiwu's signature elegance.
Recommendation:
Brew this tea side-by-side with a known Menghai or Banzhang Sheng (if you have access). The contrast will be immediately obvious—Yiwu's sweetness and refinement vs. Menghai's boldness. This teaches your palate regional signatures better than any written guide.
Trust your senses. If the tea tastes honeyed, layered, and elegant with deep throat sensation, it's delivering Yiwu character regardless of exact village authenticity. The precise village blend is less critical than overall Yiwu regional quality—and this tea's sensory profile strongly suggests genuine Yiwu material.
Enjoy worldwide shipping for just $9.5 on every order.
Order processing in 2 working days.
We offer a guarantee for returns within 14 days of receiving the merchandise.
For more shipping information, please refer to: shipping policy
For more return policy, please refer to: refund policy
Adding product to your cart
Worldwide shipping for just $9.5 on every order. Shipping Policy
14-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Need help? Contact us
Your details are protected and safe with us.
REVIEWS
Recommended products
Read More of Our Tea 101 Blogs
- Tea Guide
The Beautiful Bubbles in Your Tea: A Guide to Understanding Chinese Tea Foam
A deep yet accessible guide to understanding tea foam in Gongfu brewing—what causes it, why it varies between teas, and how tradition and science explain its beauty.
- Tea Guide
The Best Tea for Your Body Type: A TCM Guide to Personalized Wellness
Explore the ultimate TCM guide to personalized tea. Identify your body type, understand tea energy, and find the perfect match for daily health and wellness.
- Tea Guide
The Art of Stove-Boiled Tea: A Guide to China's Coziest Social Ritual
Explore the cozy, centuries-old Chinese practice of Stove-Boiled Tea. From choosing the right tea leaves to creating a warm, social experience at home, discover how this ritual transforms ordinary gatherings...
- Tea Guide
From Ancient Necessity to Modern Art: The Ultimate Guide to Compressed Chinese Tea
Discover the evolution of compressed tea, from practical ancient bricks to modern masterpieces. Learn about tea cakes, aging, brewing, and safe enjoyment.