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Liu Bao

Dark tea

About this tea

Liu Bao is a classic post-fermented dark tea (hei cha) from Wuzhou in Guangxi province, southern China. Like its better-known cousin pu-erh, it undergoes a controlled microbial fermentation and is then traditionally aged in large bamboo baskets, where it slowly mellows over months and years. The cup is deep, smooth, and earthy, with low astringency and the distinctive 'betel-nut' aroma (bing lang xiang) that connoisseurs prize. Warming and gentle on the stomach, Liu Bao has long been valued as a digestive everyday tea and is one of the great basket-aged dark teas of China.

How to brew: 95°C, 20s, 5 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

95°C
20s
5 g per cup

Flavor notes

earthy, smooth, woody, sweet

Often associated with

Digestive comfort, Warmth

Best time to enjoy

Mid-afternoon, Afternoon, After a meal

Tags

DigestionWarmCalm

Origin & Production

China — Wuzhou, Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, southern China

Liu Bao takes its name from the town of Liubao in Cangwu County near Wuzhou, in the humid, subtropical hills of eastern Guangxi. The warm climate and high humidity of the region are ideal for the microbial fermentation that defines hei cha, and for the long basket aging that follows. Tea here was historically grown by local farmers, processed in village workshops, and floated downriver along the 'Tea Boat Road' to Guangzhou and on to overseas Chinese communities. The traditional large-leaf material and regional micro-flora give Liu Bao its unmistakable mellow, woody, betel-nut character.

Production process

1

Plucking & withering

Mature large-leaf tea is plucked and lightly withered to reduce moisture, preparing the leaves for the kill-green and fermentation steps that follow.

2

Kill-green & rolling

The leaves are pan- or steam-fired to halt enzymatic oxidation, then rolled to shape them and break cell walls, encouraging even fermentation later on.

3

Pile fermentation (wo dui)

The rolled leaves are dampened and heaped into warm, humid piles where beneficial microbes drive a controlled post-fermentation. This is the step that transforms the tea into a smooth, earthy hei cha.

4

Steaming & basket packing

The fermented tea is steamed to soften it and packed tightly into traditional woven bamboo baskets lined with leaves, which give Liu Bao its iconic shape and aging vessel.

5

Basket aging

The packed baskets are stored in cool, ventilated cellars for months to many years. Slow aging deepens the flavor, softens any sharpness, and develops the prized betel-nut aroma.

Post-fermentedBasket-agedEarthy & smoothDigestive tradition

History & Tradition

Liu Bao has been produced in Guangxi for well over a thousand years and rose to prominence as an export tea carried along riverways to Cantonese communities and the tin-mining regions of Southeast Asia, where it became a beloved daily brew.

1
Tang Dynasty

Early tea in Guangxi

Tea cultivation in the hills around Wuzhou is recorded from the Tang era, laying the groundwork for the regional dark-tea tradition that would become Liu Bao.

2
Qing Dynasty

Named tribute tea

By the Qing dynasty, Liu Bao was a well-known named tea and was counted among China's notable dark teas, sought after for its smoothness and aging potential.

3
1800s

Tea Boat Road trade

Liu Bao traveled the rivers from Liubao town to Wuzhou and Guangzhou, then by sea to Hong Kong, Macau, and Southeast Asia, becoming a staple export along this famous water route.

4
1900s

Miners' daily tea

Chinese laborers in the tin mines of Malaya and beyond drank Liu Bao daily, valuing it as a warming, digestive brew well suited to hot, humid working conditions.

5
2000s

Revival and collecting

Renewed interest in aged dark teas brought Liu Bao to specialty markets worldwide, with collectors prizing vintage baskets for their deep, mellow, betel-nut character.

Health Benefits

Digestive comfort

Liu Bao has been valued for centuries as an after-meal tea. Its smooth, post-fermented liquor is traditionally enjoyed to ease the feeling of fullness and bring a sense of warm digestive comfort.

Gentle on the stomach

The fermentation and aging mellow the tea's tannins, producing a low-astringency cup that many people find smooth and easy to drink even on a fuller stomach.

Microbial richness

As a post-fermented tea, Liu Bao develops beneficial microbes and compounds during aging. It is traditionally regarded as a nourishing, balancing daily brew in Chinese tea culture.

Warming and grounding

With its deep, earthy body and gentle warmth, Liu Bao is a grounding tea well suited to cooler weather and to slow, comforting moments at the end of a meal.

Moderate, steady caffeine

Liu Bao offers a moderate level of caffeine that feels smooth and sustained rather than sharp, providing gentle energy without the jolt of stronger black teas or coffee.

Grades & Varieties

Aged basket Liu Bao

Liu Bao aged for several years or more in traditional bamboo baskets. Deeply smooth and mellow with the prized betel-nut aroma, woody sweetness, and almost no astringency. The most treasured expression.

Best for

  • After-meal digestif
  • Slow gongfu sessions
  • Collectors and connoisseurs

Young / recent Liu Bao

More recently fermented Liu Bao that has not yet had long aging. Earthy and robust with a slightly fresher, more direct character that softens and deepens as it ages further.

Best for

  • Everyday earthy cup
  • Home aging projects
  • Bold dark-tea lovers

Loose-leaf Liu Bao

Liu Bao sold loose rather than compressed in baskets, convenient for easy daily brewing. It offers the classic smooth, mellow profile in a more accessible, ready-to-steep format.

Best for

  • Convenient daily brewing
  • Newcomers to hei cha
  • Casual gongfu or mug brewing

Did you know?

Liu Bao is traditionally aged in large woven bamboo baskets, where it slowly develops its prized 'betel-nut' aroma over months and years.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea