’07 Silver Peacock — Sweet Depth and the Confidence of a Nearly 20‑Year Cure

Lightly Fermented Ripe Puerh

The ’07 Silver Peacock carries the authenticity and tradition that define Xinghai Tea Factory, long nicknamed “Menghai Tea Factory #2″ for its lineage and processing discipline. Zhang Jianli — one of the Five Golden Flowers of Menghai Tea Factory — founded Xinghai with a clear intention: preserve Menghai craft while shaping a factory identity rooted in her own professional and regional background. The Hai in Xinghai signals that heritage directly.

Sweet, bready depth rises immediately, the kind of warmth that feels baked into the leaf itself. Perfect bitterness follows — firm, clean, and beautifully aligned with the cake’s mid‑aged character. The light fermentation, achieved through a shorter wet‑piling duration, gives the tea structure and clarity without muting the grain‑sweetness or the woody warmth.

The Silver Peacock arrives fully formed. Sweet bread. Perfect bitterness. A depth shaped but by nearly two decades of steady curing, where the material settles, integrates, and gains the quiet sweetness that only time can produce.  I stack this production giving two soaks of a minute-and-a-half, and a final of about five minutes.

  • 10-11g of ripe Silver Peacock in 150ml water
  • 1st infusion 1.5 min
  • 2nd 2 min stacked with first
  • drink.  Soak 3rd infusion 5 min

Enthusiasts who chase balanced mid‑aged sheng will feel the pull of this everyday treasure immediately. The cake offers sweetness with backbone, warmth with definition, and a calm emotional resonance that reflects both its lineage and its maker. It stands as a confident expression of Zhang Jianli’s craft — a tea with history, intention, and a clear sense of self.

Under the Spell of Snowy Florale

Snowy Florale continues to evolve most satisfactorily. At its current stage, sweetness and texture shine through more than ever before, casting a spell that bewitches with each infusion.

All the remarks in its product description—citrus and rose honey nose, expansive qi, cheek and tongue activation—remain true, but they’re now enhanced by a velvety sweetness. Experts recognize that MKRS offerings are known for their youthful astringency, yet Snowy Florale has gracefully crossed into a realm far beyond feisty bite. Its transformation reveals a tea that’s coherent, steady, and deeply satisfying.

From one steep to the next, Snowy Florale exhibits old-tree depth and balance, ideal for those who favor mid-aged raw puerhs untainted by heavy storage. Stored in Los Angeles since 2020, it retains clarity and vibrancy while remaining a harmonious brew.

Its true Lincang, Daxueshan pedigree excels in the huigan and retro-nasal stage of drinking. A resonating red rose finish combines with comforting ripe delicious apple and clover honey.  Throw in hints of thyme and hay.

For lovers of mid-aged sheng, Snowy Florale offers a delightful foray into MKRS’s mature side. It’s a sheng that rewards patience and invites reflection. Under its spell, one finds sweetness where once there was savory soy sauce and peanut brittle, and enveloping texture where once there was a wait-and-see attitude.

 

Zhang’s Signature: Star Anise & Amber Depth

Zhang’s Signature explores a standout patch in the vast Bulang terroir, delivering a character that defies expectations. While Bulang teas often earn their reputation for bitterness, not all fit that mold. Some offer a rock-sugary Zen. Others—especially early spring harvests—exhibit floral traits reminiscent of Yibang, an Yiwu mountain, and the Lincangs from Daxueshan and Xigui.

The Bulang region, sprawling and diverse, includes mountains like Laoman’e, Hekai, and the storied Laobanzhang. This breadth makes “Bulang” one of the most generic labels in puerh, not in terms of quality but in predictability—just as vague as saying “Menghai.”

A Summer Evolution of Zhang’s Signature

In spring 2025, Zhang’s Signature revealed bold notes of Yunnan Gold, echoing black tea intensity. Now, in summer, it pivots: the leaves channel star anise and fennel vibes, akin to Tiger CM/S, Cherub’s Bile, and the erstwhile Quincy.

The balance impresses. Sweetness shows up without excess, dancing alongside Xinghai’s assertive astringency. Liquor clarity also earns a nod, with its rich, dark amber hue, appropriate for its mid-aged puerh status.

Brewing Notes for Mid-aged Raw Puerh

Compression from this 2007 production feels moderate, avoiding the ultra-dense atomic mold. While infusions may take slightly longer, steeping remains manageable.

  • Start with a waking soak of 30+ seconds
  • Follow with 15 minutes of rest
  • First infusions reveal sweeter tones with longer wake times (2–3 hours proves worthwhile)
  • Letting the cake air out for a day or two enhances character

For optimal results, keep the water temperature under boiling. Puerh Junky recommends brewing raw puerh at 96°C / 205°F to amplify the tea’s natural sweetness and nuance.

🔚 Final Pour: Zhang’s Signature Distills the Unexpected

Zhang’s Signature challenges the notion of what a Bulang raw puerh should taste like. While the region often evokes bitterness, this cake carves its own lane—showcasing sweet clarity, a fennel-forward twist, and a brewing depth that rewards patience. From the star anise whispers to the amber liquor and measured compression, it delivers a mid-aged experience that surprises without straying from the Xinghai boldness that die-hards appreciate.

For raw puerh lovers chasing complexity, this one’s a masterclass in how terroir, time, and technique converge.