2018年 小虎賽生プーアル | メンク生茶ケーキ
2018年 小虎賽生プーアル | メンク生茶ケーキ
中程度の熟成を経た乾倉 丨 蜂蜜と蘭の香り 丨 「小さな冰島」原産地
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7年間の完璧な乾燥保存により、この勐庫村の宝石は絹のようなハチミツ風味の生プーアルに変貌し、伝説的な Bingdao に匹敵する品質ながらも価格はその一部です。
遠隔地の小戸賽村から生まれた希少な中程度熟成の生プーアル——手つかずの生態系、古代茶樹、そして7年間の丁寧な乾燥保存が合わさり、Bingdao 級の甘さを驚異的な価値で提供します。
何がそれをユニークにしているのか
- 「小さな Bingdao」の血統 — 小戸賽はコレクターの間で「手頃な Bingdao の代替品」として知られ、同じ象徴的なハチミツの甘さと蘭の香りをはるかに低いコストで楽しめます。
- 7年間乾燥保存された中程度熟成茶 — 2018年から昆明および西安の乾燥倉庫でプロフェッショナルに保存され、この生プーアルは最適な初期熟成の飲み頃を迎えつつ、数十年の熟成ポテンシャルを維持しています。
- 遠隔地の高地生態系 — 標高1,300〜1,600メートルの手つかずで農薬を使わない森林環境で育った古代茶樹から採取され、アクセスの困難さが自然と供給を制限しています。
- 2016-2017年 プレミアム春摘み収穫 — 春摘みの葉(最も貴重な季節)のみを使用し、2018年に圧縮。芳香成分と甘さのピークを確保しています。
- 皇室茶の遺産 — 清王朝の宮廷に献上茶として選ばれた地域の一つで、何世紀にもわたり洗練された優雅なプーアル生産の評判を持っています。
このお茶に隠された物語
小戸賽(別表記:小富赛)は勐庫茶地区で最も有名な村の一つであり、雲南省臨滄市の山奥深くに位置しています。この村は隣接する Bingdao と同様の魅惑的なハチミツと花の甘さを持つお茶で「小さな Bingdao」という愛称を得ましたが、有名な名前だけで高額を支払うことを拒むコレクターにとっても手が届く存在です。
小戸賽への旅は容易ではありません。曲がりくねった山道と遠隔地の地形が、この村を商業化から遠ざけ、その結果として生態系が手つかずのまま保たれています。標高1,300〜1,600メートルの森林の天蓋の下で古代茶樹が自然に育ち、農薬や化学肥料は使われず、ミネラル豊富な土壌、澄んだ山の空気、そして代々受け継がれてきた製茶の知識だけがあります。この手つかずの環境は、熟成に美しく反応するバランスの取れた内部化学と深い味わいを持つ葉を生み出します。
この特別な圧縮茶は、2016年と2017年のプレミアム春摘みの葉を使用し、伝統的な生プーアルの方法で丁寧に加工され、2018年に茶餅に圧縮されました。それ以来、この茶は昆明と西安の厳格な乾燥倉庫で保管されており、プーアルの熟成に理想的な湿度と温度で知られる2つの都市です。7年間の忍耐強い変化によって若さの渋みが和らぎ、天然のハチミツの甘さ、蘭の香り、そして絹のような口当たりが強調されました。
清王朝時代には、この広域の茶が皇室への献上品として選ばれました——今日でも響き渡る品質の歴史的証です。小戸賽を淹れるとき、あなたはただお茶を飲んでいるのではなく、何世紀にもわたるテロワール、伝統、そして有名な名前を必要としない村の静かな自信を体験しているのです。
あなたの生プーアル茶の旅を始めましょうか?
なぜこのお茶を信頼できるのか:
- 検証済みの乾燥保管履歴 — 2018年から昆明と西安で管理された条件下で継続的に倉庫保管され、湿気による損傷や不快な風味には一切さらされていません。
- 本物の単一原産地調達 — 100% 小戸賽村の素材を使用しており、低品質な地域の葉とのブレンドはありません。
限定販売: 遠隔地の立地と困難な収穫条件により、小戸賽の生産量は毎年自然に限られています。現在の在庫である2018年圧縮分がなくなると、この品質レベルでの追加調達がいつ、あるいは可能になるかは保証できません。
30gのサンプルから始めましょう、または357gの茶餅を確保しましょう。 — コレクターが小戸賽を「賢い Bingdao の代替品」と呼ぶ理由を体験し、この中程度熟成の宝石が無くなる前に供給を確保してください。
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- Tea Type: Sheng Pu-erh (Raw Pu-erh / 生普洱)
- Pressing Year: 2018
- Harvest Year: 2016–2017 Spring Season
- Origin: Xiao Hu Sai Village (小户赛), Mengku Tea Region, Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China
- Terroir Coordinates: Approximately 23.5°N, 99.8°E
- Elevation: 1,300–1,600 meters above sea level
- Tree Type: Ancient arbor tea trees (Gushu / 古树), naturally grown under forest canopy
- Cultivation: Pesticide-free, fertilizer-free, ecologically managed
- Available Formats: 357g Traditional Qizi Bing (Seven-Son Cake) / 30g Tasting Sample
- Maturity Stage: Early-Aged / Mid-Aged (适饮期初期) — Currently in its optimal early drinking window; suitable for further aging 15–25+ years under proper storage conditions
- Storage History: Dry warehouse storage (干仓 / Gān Cāng) maintained in Kunming, Yunnan and Xi'an, Shaanxi since 2018
- Storage Guarantee: Clean, odor-free dry storage with no mustiness, no off-flavors, and no humidity damage
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Appearance & Aroma (Dry Leaf)
- Compression: Moderately tight pressing with visible leaf structure; edges break cleanly for easy portioning
- Color: Dark olive-green to aged brown tones, with visible silver-white buds (Bai Hao / 白毫) indicating quality spring material
- Dry Aroma: Immediately apparent floral-honey sweetness with subtle notes of dried apricot and sun-dried hay; no musty or off-putting storage odors—a hallmark of proper dry-warehouse aging
Wet Leaf (After Brewing)
- Leaf Integrity: Large, intact leaves that unfurl to reveal supple, pliable texture; minimal breakage indicates careful hand-processing
- Color: Vibrant yellow-green with amber edges, showing healthy oxidation progression
- Wet Aroma: Intensified orchid and wildflower honey notes emerge, layered with hints of fresh bamboo and mountain herbs
Liquor Color
- Description: Bright Golden Amber, exceptionally clear and luminous with noticeable viscosity ("tea oil") visible when swirled—a sign of rich dissolved solids from ancient tree material
Mouthfeel
- Texture: Silky, smooth, and almost oily; the liquor glides across the palate with zero roughness or drying astringency
- Body: Medium-full, with satisfying weight that coats the mouth without heaviness
- Huigan (回甘 / Returning Sweetness): Rapid onset, beginning within seconds of swallowing; sweetness builds and persists for several minutes, concentrated at the back of the throat and root of the tongue
- Shengjin (生津 / Salivation): Pronounced salivary response, particularly under the tongue and along the inner cheeks; creates a refreshing, hydrating sensation that encourages continued sipping
- Throat Resonance (喉韵 / Hóu Yùn): Deep and lingering; the sweetness travels down the throat and remains perceptible for an extended period—a signature of high-quality Mengku teas
Core Flavor Notes
- Primary: Wildflower Honey, Orchid Blossoms
- Secondary: Dried Apricot, Marzipan, Light Muscatel
- Tertiary (with aging): Subtle hints of sandalwood, aged parchment, and sweet bamboo emerging as the tea continues to mature
- Comparable Profile: Similar to a floral Darjeeling First Flush crossed with the honeyed depth of late-harvest Riesling; approachable yet complex
Empty Cup & Finish
- Empty Cup Aroma (挂杯香 / Guà Bēi Xiāng): Persistent honey-caramel sweetness clings to the cup for 10+ minutes after pouring; floral high notes gradually give way to warm, toasted grain undertones
- Finish Length: Long and evolving; the aftertaste transitions from bright floral sweetness to a warm, comforting sweetness reminiscent of buckwheat honey over the course of 5–10 minutes
- Complexity: Multi-layered aroma development rewards patient appreciation—this is a tea that continues revealing new dimensions as the cup cools
Body Sensation / Chaqi (茶气)
- Physical Response: Gentle warming sensation beginning in the chest and radiating outward; some drinkers may notice mild perspiration on the forehead and back after multiple steepings—a sign of the tea's penetrating energy
- Character: Xiao Hu Sai's chaqi is not aggressive or "heady"; instead, it offers a grounded, calming energy that feels centering rather than stimulating. This makes it ideal for contemplative solo sessions or afternoon drinking.
- Relaxation Effect: Many drinkers report a pleasant sense of mental clarity paired with physical relaxation; the tea's energy feels supportive rather than overwhelming
- Chaqi Intensity Rating: 3.5 / 5 — Moderate strength with exceptional penetration and duration; more refined than powerful, befitting its "elegant sweetness" character
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What does Xiao Hu Sai Sheng Pu-erh taste like, and how does its flavor compare to other famous Pu-erh regions?
Xiao Hu Sai delivers a flavor profile that balances elegant sweetness with aromatic complexity—qualities that have earned it the nickname "Little Bingdao." On the first sip, you will notice a pronounced honey sweetness that feels natural and clean, never cloying or artificial. This is layered with delicate orchid and wildflower notes that lift the aroma and give the tea a refined, feminine character compared to more assertive mountain styles. The mouthfeel is remarkably silky and smooth, with a medium-full body that coats the palate without any harsh astringency. What distinguishes Xiao Hu Sai from neighboring villages is its exceptionally rapid and persistent huigan (returning sweetness)—the sweet sensation begins within seconds of swallowing and lingers for several minutes, concentrated in the throat. Compared to classic Yiwu teas, Xiao Hu Sai offers similar softness but with more pronounced floral aromatics. Compared to Bingdao, the honey sweetness is nearly identical, but Xiao Hu Sai tends to be slightly lighter in body and more approachable in price. After seven years of dry storage, this 2018 pressing has developed additional depth: subtle notes of dried apricot, sandalwood, and sweet bamboo now complement the primary honey-floral character. This tea rewards patient sipping—allow each cup to cool slightly to experience the full evolution of its complex flavor layers.
What makes Xiao Hu Sai mountain and its teas so special?
Xiao Hu Sai (also known as Xiao Fu Sai) is a remote village located in the Mengku tea-growing region of Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan. Its reputation among serious Pu-erh collectors rests on three distinguishing factors: exceptional terroir, pristine ecology, and limited accessibility. The village sits at elevations between 1,300 and 1,600 meters, where ancient tea trees grow naturally beneath a dense forest canopy. This high-altitude, shaded environment creates ideal conditions for slow leaf development, which concentrates aromatic compounds and produces the signature honey-orchid fragrance Xiao Hu Sai is known for. The forest ecosystem also means the tea trees share soil with diverse native vegetation, contributing to the mineral complexity and clean taste of the finished tea. Crucially, Xiao Hu Sai's remote location—accessible only via winding mountain roads—has protected it from over-commercialization. The tea trees here have never been treated with pesticides or chemical fertilizers; they grow in a truly organic, undisturbed environment. This isolation also limits annual production volume, making authentic Xiao Hu Sai material genuinely scarce. Local farmers still process the leaves using traditional methods, hand-picking only the finest spring growths and processing them in small batches to preserve their delicate character. The result is a tea that experts often describe as having "Bingdao quality without Bingdao prices"—a rare convergence of world-class flavor, ecological purity, and relative accessibility.
Why is Xiao Hu Sai Pu-erh relatively expensive compared to standard Sheng Pu-erh?
The price of authentic Xiao Hu Sai tea reflects several real-world factors that directly impact production costs and quality. First, geography plays a significant role: Xiao Hu Sai is located deep in the mountains with poor road access, making transportation of fresh leaves and finished tea both difficult and costly. Harvesters must physically carry material out of the mountains during peak season, limiting how much can be collected. Second, the tea trees themselves are predominantly old-growth arbor trees (gushu) rather than plantation bushes. These ancient trees produce far less leaf volume per tree than cultivated varieties, but their deep root systems extract more minerals and complex nutrients from the soil, resulting in superior flavor depth. Third, the entire village maintains pesticide-free, fertilizer-free cultivation—not as a marketing claim, but as a practical reality of their remote, traditional farming methods. This ecological authenticity is increasingly rare and increasingly valued. Fourth, the material available in this listing comes from 2016–2017 spring harvests—the most prized picking season, when leaves contain peak concentrations of aromatic compounds and sweetness. Finally, seven years of professional dry-warehouse storage adds both time value and quality assurance; proper aging transforms good raw material into exceptional drinking tea, and storage facilities require ongoing investment to maintain optimal conditions. When you purchase Xiao Hu Sai at this quality level, you are paying for genuine scarcity, verified provenance, and years of careful stewardship—not simply a famous name.
How will this tea change with further aging, and is it worth storing long-term?
This 2018 Xiao Hu Sai pressing is currently entering what Pu-erh collectors call the "early-aged sweet spot"—a stage where initial youthful green notes have mellowed, honey sweetness has intensified, and the tea drinks beautifully right now while still holding significant aging potential. If you enjoy drinking it today, you can confidently continue aging it for another 15 to 25 years or more under proper storage conditions. Over time, the floral-honey character will gradually evolve: expect the orchid notes to deepen into more resinous, woody tones; the honey sweetness to become richer and more complex, potentially developing hints of dried fruit compote and aged honey; and the mouthfeel to grow even silkier and more viscous. The chaqi will also intensify and become more penetrating with age. To preserve and enhance these qualities, maintain your tea in dry storage (40–70% relative humidity), away from direct sunlight, strong odors, and temperature extremes. Avoid refrigerator storage entirely—cold, enclosed environments trap moisture and introduce food odors that will permanently damage the tea. Kunming-style dry storage, like what this tea has already experienced, is ideal for slow, clean maturation. If you purchase multiple cakes, consider drinking one now to establish a baseline flavor memory, then revisiting another cake in 3–5 years to appreciate the evolution. High-quality Xiao Hu Sai material like this is an excellent candidate for long-term cellaring, and its current price point makes it a particularly smart investment compared to more famous (and expensive) village names that offer similar aging trajectories.
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Brewing Guide
Equipment Recommendations
- Preferred Vessel: Gaiwan (盖碗) — 100–150ml capacity; allows precise control and easy observation of leaf development
- Alternative: Yixing clay teapot (宜兴紫砂壶) — unglazed clay absorbs and enhances the tea's character over repeated use; dedicate one pot to Sheng Pu-erh only
- Water: Filtered spring water or low-mineral bottled water; avoid distilled water (too flat) or heavily chlorinated tap water
Waking the Tea (醒茶 / Xǐng Chá)
Waking the tea is an essential step for aged and compressed Pu-erh. This process reactivates the leaves and removes any storage-related dullness, allowing the tea's full aroma and flavor to emerge.
Short-Term Wake (Recommended before each session):
- Use a Pu-erh knife or pick to carefully separate your desired portion from the cake. Work from the edge inward, following the natural leaf layers to minimize breakage.
- Place the loosened leaves in an open, clean container (unglazed clay jar or porcelain dish).
- Leave uncovered in a clean, dry, odor-free room for 30 minutes to 2 hours before brewing. This allows the compressed leaves to "breathe" and release any dormant aromas.
Long-Term Wake (For optimal enjoyment of aged cakes):
- If you plan to drink through an entire cake over several weeks, break off a larger portion (50–100g) and store it loosely in an unglazed clay caddy or breathable container.
- Allow 1–2 weeks of open-air resting before beginning to brew. This extended wake period can dramatically improve the tea's aromatic clarity and mouthfeel.
Brewing Parameters
- Tea-to-Water Ratio: 5–7 grams per 100ml of water (adjust to taste; more leaf = stronger body, more infusions)
- Water Temperature: 95°C–100°C (203°F–212°F) — fully boiled water is appropriate for this mid-aged Sheng Pu-erh
- Rinse: Pour boiling water over the leaves and discard immediately (within 3–5 seconds). This rinse awakens the leaves and removes surface dust from storage. Do not skip this step.
Steeping Sequence
- Steeps 1–3: 10–15 seconds each. The tea will open gradually; expect lighter body with prominent floral-honey aroma.
- Steeps 4–6: 15–20 seconds. Peak flavor intensity; full honey sweetness, maximum huigan, and silky mouthfeel.
- Steeps 7–10: 25–45 seconds. Gradually extend time as leaves exhaust; sweeter, more mellow character emerges.
- Extended Steeps (11+): 1–3 minutes. Quality Xiao Hu Sai material can yield 12–15+ infusions; late steeps offer a gentle, soothing sweetness ideal for relaxed drinking.
Pro Tips
- Pour with a steady, circular motion to ensure even saturation of all leaves.
- Drain completely between steeps—do not leave leaves sitting in water.
- If astringency appears, shorten steep time or reduce leaf quantity; this tea should be smooth when brewed correctly.
- Save spent leaves to examine quality: intact, supple, olive-green leaves with reddish edges indicate authentic old-tree material.
Storage Recommendations
Proper storage is critical for preserving and improving your Sheng Pu-erh over time. Follow the Three-No Principles (三无原则) of Pu-erh storage:
The Three-No Principles
- No Foreign Odors (无异味): Pu-erh tea readily absorbs surrounding smells. Store away from kitchens, spices, perfumes, cleaning products, and any aromatic substances. Dedicated tea storage space is ideal.
- No Excess Moisture (无潮湿): Maintain relative humidity between 40–70%. Excessive humidity promotes mold growth and creates musty "wet storage" flavors that permanently damage the tea. Use a hygrometer to monitor conditions if possible.
- No Direct Sunlight (无阳光直射): UV exposure degrades tea compounds and accelerates unwanted oxidation. Store in a dark location or opaque container.
Additional Storage Guidelines
- Temperature: Room temperature is ideal (15–30°C / 59–86°F). Avoid extreme heat or cold.
- Never Refrigerate: Do not store Pu-erh in refrigerators or freezers. The cold, enclosed environment traps moisture and food odors, causing irreversible damage to the tea's flavor and aging potential.
- Air Circulation: Some air exchange benefits Pu-erh aging. Avoid completely airtight containers; original paper wrapping, bamboo leaf packaging, or breathable cardboard boxes are appropriate.
- Isolation: If storing multiple teas, keep Sheng and Shou Pu-erh separate. Store highly aromatic teas (e.g., Jasmine, smoked teas) in a different location entirely.
- Consistency: Stable conditions are more important than perfect conditions. Avoid locations with frequent temperature or humidity fluctuations (e.g., near windows, heating vents, or exterior walls).
For This Tea Specifically: Having already benefited from seven years of professional dry storage in Kunming and Xi'an, this 2018 Xiao Hu Sai is well-established on its aging trajectory. Simply maintain clean, dry, odor-free conditions, and the tea will continue to improve for decades to come.
7年間の完璧な乾燥保存により、この勐庫村の宝石は絹のようなハチミツ風味の生プーアルに変貌し、伝説的な Bingdao に匹敵する品質ながらも価格はその一部です。
遠隔地の小戸賽村から生まれた希少な中程度熟成の生プーアル——手つかずの生態系、古代茶樹、そして7年間の丁寧な乾燥保存が合わさり、Bingdao 級の甘さを驚異的な価値で提供します。
何がそれをユニークにしているのか
- 「小さな Bingdao」の血統 — 小戸賽はコレクターの間で「手頃な Bingdao の代替品」として知られ、同じ象徴的なハチミツの甘さと蘭の香りをはるかに低いコストで楽しめます。
- 7年間乾燥保存された中程度熟成茶 — 2018年から昆明および西安の乾燥倉庫でプロフェッショナルに保存され、この生プーアルは最適な初期熟成の飲み頃を迎えつつ、数十年の熟成ポテンシャルを維持しています。
- 遠隔地の高地生態系 — 標高1,300〜1,600メートルの手つかずで農薬を使わない森林環境で育った古代茶樹から採取され、アクセスの困難さが自然と供給を制限しています。
- 2016-2017年 プレミアム春摘み収穫 — 春摘みの葉(最も貴重な季節)のみを使用し、2018年に圧縮。芳香成分と甘さのピークを確保しています。
- 皇室茶の遺産 — 清王朝の宮廷に献上茶として選ばれた地域の一つで、何世紀にもわたり洗練された優雅なプーアル生産の評判を持っています。
このお茶に隠された物語
小戸賽(別表記:小富赛)は勐庫茶地区で最も有名な村の一つであり、雲南省臨滄市の山奥深くに位置しています。この村は隣接する Bingdao と同様の魅惑的なハチミツと花の甘さを持つお茶で「小さな Bingdao」という愛称を得ましたが、有名な名前だけで高額を支払うことを拒むコレクターにとっても手が届く存在です。
小戸賽への旅は容易ではありません。曲がりくねった山道と遠隔地の地形が、この村を商業化から遠ざけ、その結果として生態系が手つかずのまま保たれています。標高1,300〜1,600メートルの森林の天蓋の下で古代茶樹が自然に育ち、農薬や化学肥料は使われず、ミネラル豊富な土壌、澄んだ山の空気、そして代々受け継がれてきた製茶の知識だけがあります。この手つかずの環境は、熟成に美しく反応するバランスの取れた内部化学と深い味わいを持つ葉を生み出します。
この特別な圧縮茶は、2016年と2017年のプレミアム春摘みの葉を使用し、伝統的な生プーアルの方法で丁寧に加工され、2018年に茶餅に圧縮されました。それ以来、この茶は昆明と西安の厳格な乾燥倉庫で保管されており、プーアルの熟成に理想的な湿度と温度で知られる2つの都市です。7年間の忍耐強い変化によって若さの渋みが和らぎ、天然のハチミツの甘さ、蘭の香り、そして絹のような口当たりが強調されました。
清王朝時代には、この広域の茶が皇室への献上品として選ばれました——今日でも響き渡る品質の歴史的証です。小戸賽を淹れるとき、あなたはただお茶を飲んでいるのではなく、何世紀にもわたるテロワール、伝統、そして有名な名前を必要としない村の静かな自信を体験しているのです。
あなたの生プーアル茶の旅を始めましょうか?
なぜこのお茶を信頼できるのか:
- 検証済みの乾燥保管履歴 — 2018年から昆明と西安で管理された条件下で継続的に倉庫保管され、湿気による損傷や不快な風味には一切さらされていません。
- 本物の単一原産地調達 — 100% 小戸賽村の素材を使用しており、低品質な地域の葉とのブレンドはありません。
限定販売: 遠隔地の立地と困難な収穫条件により、小戸賽の生産量は毎年自然に限られています。現在の在庫である2018年圧縮分がなくなると、この品質レベルでの追加調達がいつ、あるいは可能になるかは保証できません。
30gのサンプルから始めましょう、または357gの茶餅を確保しましょう。 — コレクターが小戸賽を「賢い Bingdao の代替品」と呼ぶ理由を体験し、この中程度熟成の宝石が無くなる前に供給を確保してください。
- Tea Type: Sheng Pu-erh (Raw Pu-erh / 生普洱)
- Pressing Year: 2018
- Harvest Year: 2016–2017 Spring Season
- Origin: Xiao Hu Sai Village (小户赛), Mengku Tea Region, Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China
- Terroir Coordinates: Approximately 23.5°N, 99.8°E
- Elevation: 1,300–1,600 meters above sea level
- Tree Type: Ancient arbor tea trees (Gushu / 古树), naturally grown under forest canopy
- Cultivation: Pesticide-free, fertilizer-free, ecologically managed
- Available Formats: 357g Traditional Qizi Bing (Seven-Son Cake) / 30g Tasting Sample
- Maturity Stage: Early-Aged / Mid-Aged (适饮期初期) — Currently in its optimal early drinking window; suitable for further aging 15–25+ years under proper storage conditions
- Storage History: Dry warehouse storage (干仓 / Gān Cāng) maintained in Kunming, Yunnan and Xi'an, Shaanxi since 2018
- Storage Guarantee: Clean, odor-free dry storage with no mustiness, no off-flavors, and no humidity damage
Appearance & Aroma (Dry Leaf)
- Compression: Moderately tight pressing with visible leaf structure; edges break cleanly for easy portioning
- Color: Dark olive-green to aged brown tones, with visible silver-white buds (Bai Hao / 白毫) indicating quality spring material
- Dry Aroma: Immediately apparent floral-honey sweetness with subtle notes of dried apricot and sun-dried hay; no musty or off-putting storage odors—a hallmark of proper dry-warehouse aging
Wet Leaf (After Brewing)
- Leaf Integrity: Large, intact leaves that unfurl to reveal supple, pliable texture; minimal breakage indicates careful hand-processing
- Color: Vibrant yellow-green with amber edges, showing healthy oxidation progression
- Wet Aroma: Intensified orchid and wildflower honey notes emerge, layered with hints of fresh bamboo and mountain herbs
Liquor Color
- Description: Bright Golden Amber, exceptionally clear and luminous with noticeable viscosity ("tea oil") visible when swirled—a sign of rich dissolved solids from ancient tree material
Mouthfeel
- Texture: Silky, smooth, and almost oily; the liquor glides across the palate with zero roughness or drying astringency
- Body: Medium-full, with satisfying weight that coats the mouth without heaviness
- Huigan (回甘 / Returning Sweetness): Rapid onset, beginning within seconds of swallowing; sweetness builds and persists for several minutes, concentrated at the back of the throat and root of the tongue
- Shengjin (生津 / Salivation): Pronounced salivary response, particularly under the tongue and along the inner cheeks; creates a refreshing, hydrating sensation that encourages continued sipping
- Throat Resonance (喉韵 / Hóu Yùn): Deep and lingering; the sweetness travels down the throat and remains perceptible for an extended period—a signature of high-quality Mengku teas
Core Flavor Notes
- Primary: Wildflower Honey, Orchid Blossoms
- Secondary: Dried Apricot, Marzipan, Light Muscatel
- Tertiary (with aging): Subtle hints of sandalwood, aged parchment, and sweet bamboo emerging as the tea continues to mature
- Comparable Profile: Similar to a floral Darjeeling First Flush crossed with the honeyed depth of late-harvest Riesling; approachable yet complex
Empty Cup & Finish
- Empty Cup Aroma (挂杯香 / Guà Bēi Xiāng): Persistent honey-caramel sweetness clings to the cup for 10+ minutes after pouring; floral high notes gradually give way to warm, toasted grain undertones
- Finish Length: Long and evolving; the aftertaste transitions from bright floral sweetness to a warm, comforting sweetness reminiscent of buckwheat honey over the course of 5–10 minutes
- Complexity: Multi-layered aroma development rewards patient appreciation—this is a tea that continues revealing new dimensions as the cup cools
Body Sensation / Chaqi (茶气)
- Physical Response: Gentle warming sensation beginning in the chest and radiating outward; some drinkers may notice mild perspiration on the forehead and back after multiple steepings—a sign of the tea's penetrating energy
- Character: Xiao Hu Sai's chaqi is not aggressive or "heady"; instead, it offers a grounded, calming energy that feels centering rather than stimulating. This makes it ideal for contemplative solo sessions or afternoon drinking.
- Relaxation Effect: Many drinkers report a pleasant sense of mental clarity paired with physical relaxation; the tea's energy feels supportive rather than overwhelming
- Chaqi Intensity Rating: 3.5 / 5 — Moderate strength with exceptional penetration and duration; more refined than powerful, befitting its "elegant sweetness" character
What does Xiao Hu Sai Sheng Pu-erh taste like, and how does its flavor compare to other famous Pu-erh regions?
Xiao Hu Sai delivers a flavor profile that balances elegant sweetness with aromatic complexity—qualities that have earned it the nickname "Little Bingdao." On the first sip, you will notice a pronounced honey sweetness that feels natural and clean, never cloying or artificial. This is layered with delicate orchid and wildflower notes that lift the aroma and give the tea a refined, feminine character compared to more assertive mountain styles. The mouthfeel is remarkably silky and smooth, with a medium-full body that coats the palate without any harsh astringency. What distinguishes Xiao Hu Sai from neighboring villages is its exceptionally rapid and persistent huigan (returning sweetness)—the sweet sensation begins within seconds of swallowing and lingers for several minutes, concentrated in the throat. Compared to classic Yiwu teas, Xiao Hu Sai offers similar softness but with more pronounced floral aromatics. Compared to Bingdao, the honey sweetness is nearly identical, but Xiao Hu Sai tends to be slightly lighter in body and more approachable in price. After seven years of dry storage, this 2018 pressing has developed additional depth: subtle notes of dried apricot, sandalwood, and sweet bamboo now complement the primary honey-floral character. This tea rewards patient sipping—allow each cup to cool slightly to experience the full evolution of its complex flavor layers.
What makes Xiao Hu Sai mountain and its teas so special?
Xiao Hu Sai (also known as Xiao Fu Sai) is a remote village located in the Mengku tea-growing region of Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan. Its reputation among serious Pu-erh collectors rests on three distinguishing factors: exceptional terroir, pristine ecology, and limited accessibility. The village sits at elevations between 1,300 and 1,600 meters, where ancient tea trees grow naturally beneath a dense forest canopy. This high-altitude, shaded environment creates ideal conditions for slow leaf development, which concentrates aromatic compounds and produces the signature honey-orchid fragrance Xiao Hu Sai is known for. The forest ecosystem also means the tea trees share soil with diverse native vegetation, contributing to the mineral complexity and clean taste of the finished tea. Crucially, Xiao Hu Sai's remote location—accessible only via winding mountain roads—has protected it from over-commercialization. The tea trees here have never been treated with pesticides or chemical fertilizers; they grow in a truly organic, undisturbed environment. This isolation also limits annual production volume, making authentic Xiao Hu Sai material genuinely scarce. Local farmers still process the leaves using traditional methods, hand-picking only the finest spring growths and processing them in small batches to preserve their delicate character. The result is a tea that experts often describe as having "Bingdao quality without Bingdao prices"—a rare convergence of world-class flavor, ecological purity, and relative accessibility.
Why is Xiao Hu Sai Pu-erh relatively expensive compared to standard Sheng Pu-erh?
The price of authentic Xiao Hu Sai tea reflects several real-world factors that directly impact production costs and quality. First, geography plays a significant role: Xiao Hu Sai is located deep in the mountains with poor road access, making transportation of fresh leaves and finished tea both difficult and costly. Harvesters must physically carry material out of the mountains during peak season, limiting how much can be collected. Second, the tea trees themselves are predominantly old-growth arbor trees (gushu) rather than plantation bushes. These ancient trees produce far less leaf volume per tree than cultivated varieties, but their deep root systems extract more minerals and complex nutrients from the soil, resulting in superior flavor depth. Third, the entire village maintains pesticide-free, fertilizer-free cultivation—not as a marketing claim, but as a practical reality of their remote, traditional farming methods. This ecological authenticity is increasingly rare and increasingly valued. Fourth, the material available in this listing comes from 2016–2017 spring harvests—the most prized picking season, when leaves contain peak concentrations of aromatic compounds and sweetness. Finally, seven years of professional dry-warehouse storage adds both time value and quality assurance; proper aging transforms good raw material into exceptional drinking tea, and storage facilities require ongoing investment to maintain optimal conditions. When you purchase Xiao Hu Sai at this quality level, you are paying for genuine scarcity, verified provenance, and years of careful stewardship—not simply a famous name.
How will this tea change with further aging, and is it worth storing long-term?
This 2018 Xiao Hu Sai pressing is currently entering what Pu-erh collectors call the "early-aged sweet spot"—a stage where initial youthful green notes have mellowed, honey sweetness has intensified, and the tea drinks beautifully right now while still holding significant aging potential. If you enjoy drinking it today, you can confidently continue aging it for another 15 to 25 years or more under proper storage conditions. Over time, the floral-honey character will gradually evolve: expect the orchid notes to deepen into more resinous, woody tones; the honey sweetness to become richer and more complex, potentially developing hints of dried fruit compote and aged honey; and the mouthfeel to grow even silkier and more viscous. The chaqi will also intensify and become more penetrating with age. To preserve and enhance these qualities, maintain your tea in dry storage (40–70% relative humidity), away from direct sunlight, strong odors, and temperature extremes. Avoid refrigerator storage entirely—cold, enclosed environments trap moisture and introduce food odors that will permanently damage the tea. Kunming-style dry storage, like what this tea has already experienced, is ideal for slow, clean maturation. If you purchase multiple cakes, consider drinking one now to establish a baseline flavor memory, then revisiting another cake in 3–5 years to appreciate the evolution. High-quality Xiao Hu Sai material like this is an excellent candidate for long-term cellaring, and its current price point makes it a particularly smart investment compared to more famous (and expensive) village names that offer similar aging trajectories.
Brewing Guide
Equipment Recommendations
- Preferred Vessel: Gaiwan (盖碗) — 100–150ml capacity; allows precise control and easy observation of leaf development
- Alternative: Yixing clay teapot (宜兴紫砂壶) — unglazed clay absorbs and enhances the tea's character over repeated use; dedicate one pot to Sheng Pu-erh only
- Water: Filtered spring water or low-mineral bottled water; avoid distilled water (too flat) or heavily chlorinated tap water
Waking the Tea (醒茶 / Xǐng Chá)
Waking the tea is an essential step for aged and compressed Pu-erh. This process reactivates the leaves and removes any storage-related dullness, allowing the tea's full aroma and flavor to emerge.
Short-Term Wake (Recommended before each session):
- Use a Pu-erh knife or pick to carefully separate your desired portion from the cake. Work from the edge inward, following the natural leaf layers to minimize breakage.
- Place the loosened leaves in an open, clean container (unglazed clay jar or porcelain dish).
- Leave uncovered in a clean, dry, odor-free room for 30 minutes to 2 hours before brewing. This allows the compressed leaves to "breathe" and release any dormant aromas.
Long-Term Wake (For optimal enjoyment of aged cakes):
- If you plan to drink through an entire cake over several weeks, break off a larger portion (50–100g) and store it loosely in an unglazed clay caddy or breathable container.
- Allow 1–2 weeks of open-air resting before beginning to brew. This extended wake period can dramatically improve the tea's aromatic clarity and mouthfeel.
Brewing Parameters
- Tea-to-Water Ratio: 5–7 grams per 100ml of water (adjust to taste; more leaf = stronger body, more infusions)
- Water Temperature: 95°C–100°C (203°F–212°F) — fully boiled water is appropriate for this mid-aged Sheng Pu-erh
- Rinse: Pour boiling water over the leaves and discard immediately (within 3–5 seconds). This rinse awakens the leaves and removes surface dust from storage. Do not skip this step.
Steeping Sequence
- Steeps 1–3: 10–15 seconds each. The tea will open gradually; expect lighter body with prominent floral-honey aroma.
- Steeps 4–6: 15–20 seconds. Peak flavor intensity; full honey sweetness, maximum huigan, and silky mouthfeel.
- Steeps 7–10: 25–45 seconds. Gradually extend time as leaves exhaust; sweeter, more mellow character emerges.
- Extended Steeps (11+): 1–3 minutes. Quality Xiao Hu Sai material can yield 12–15+ infusions; late steeps offer a gentle, soothing sweetness ideal for relaxed drinking.
Pro Tips
- Pour with a steady, circular motion to ensure even saturation of all leaves.
- Drain completely between steeps—do not leave leaves sitting in water.
- If astringency appears, shorten steep time or reduce leaf quantity; this tea should be smooth when brewed correctly.
- Save spent leaves to examine quality: intact, supple, olive-green leaves with reddish edges indicate authentic old-tree material.
Storage Recommendations
Proper storage is critical for preserving and improving your Sheng Pu-erh over time. Follow the Three-No Principles (三无原则) of Pu-erh storage:
The Three-No Principles
- No Foreign Odors (无异味): Pu-erh tea readily absorbs surrounding smells. Store away from kitchens, spices, perfumes, cleaning products, and any aromatic substances. Dedicated tea storage space is ideal.
- No Excess Moisture (无潮湿): Maintain relative humidity between 40–70%. Excessive humidity promotes mold growth and creates musty "wet storage" flavors that permanently damage the tea. Use a hygrometer to monitor conditions if possible.
- No Direct Sunlight (无阳光直射): UV exposure degrades tea compounds and accelerates unwanted oxidation. Store in a dark location or opaque container.
Additional Storage Guidelines
- Temperature: Room temperature is ideal (15–30°C / 59–86°F). Avoid extreme heat or cold.
- Never Refrigerate: Do not store Pu-erh in refrigerators or freezers. The cold, enclosed environment traps moisture and food odors, causing irreversible damage to the tea's flavor and aging potential.
- Air Circulation: Some air exchange benefits Pu-erh aging. Avoid completely airtight containers; original paper wrapping, bamboo leaf packaging, or breathable cardboard boxes are appropriate.
- Isolation: If storing multiple teas, keep Sheng and Shou Pu-erh separate. Store highly aromatic teas (e.g., Jasmine, smoked teas) in a different location entirely.
- Consistency: Stable conditions are more important than perfect conditions. Avoid locations with frequent temperature or humidity fluctuations (e.g., near windows, heating vents, or exterior walls).
For This Tea Specifically: Having already benefited from seven years of professional dry storage in Kunming and Xi'an, this 2018 Xiao Hu Sai is well-established on its aging trajectory. Simply maintain clean, dry, odor-free conditions, and the tea will continue to improve for decades to come.