Shou Pu-erh
Pu-erh tea
About this tea
Shou Pu-erh ('ripe' or cooked pu-erh) is the modern, post-fermented style of Yunnan pu-erh: large-leaf sun-dried maocha that has been deliberately aged in a few weeks of warm, damp pile-fermentation (wo dui) to mimic decades of natural aging. The finished tea is deep mahogany to nearly black in the cup, with smooth, low-astringency flavors of damp earth, wet wood, cocoa, dates, and aged tobacco. Shou was developed at Kunming Tea Factory in the early 1970s and refined at Menghai shortly after, and it has since become one of China's most widely consumed and exported teas, beloved as an easy, soothing everyday cup that does not need to be aged for drinkability.
How to brew: 98°C, 25s, 5 g per cup.
Caffeine
Medium
How to brew
Flavor notes
earthy, woody, smooth
Often associated with
Comfort, Digestive comfort
Best time to enjoy
Early afternoon, Mid-afternoon, After a meal
Tags
Origin & Production
Like Sheng, Shou Pu-erh must be made from large-leaf Yunnan assamica tea and processed within the protected pu-erh production area. Most Shou is produced at large, climate-controlled fermentation factories in Menghai (Xishuangbanna) and Kunming, where temperature and humidity can be tightly managed during the wo dui pile-fermentation. Many top-end producers source their maocha from established Sheng terroirs such as Bulang, Menghai, or Lincang and apply lighter, more controlled fermentation regimes.
Production process
Start with sun-dried maocha
Shou begins with the same sun-dried base material as Sheng: large-leaf Yunnan assamica that has been withered, pan-fired, rolled, and dried in the sun ('shai qing maocha').
Wo dui pile-fermentation
Maocha is heaped into large piles roughly 70 cm to over 1 meter tall on the factory floor, sprayed with clean water, and covered with cloths. Inside, naturally present microbes — including Aspergillus niger and other fungi and bacteria — drive a controlled post-fermentation that lasts roughly 40–60 days.
Turning and monitoring
Workers turn the pile periodically and monitor temperature (often around 50–65 °C in the core) and moisture so that fermentation is even and does not overheat. Skilled wo dui management is what separates a clean, layered Shou from one that tastes flat or 'fishy'.
Drying and sorting
Once the desired level of fermentation is reached, the pile is broken down, spread out to dry, and sorted by leaf size and grade. The maocha now has the dark color, gentle aroma, and mellow character of finished Shou.
Steaming and compression
Sorted Shou maocha is briefly steamed and pressed into cakes (bing), bricks, or tuocha (mushroom-shaped) using cloth bags and stone or hydraulic molds. Loose Shou is also widely sold for everyday brewing.
Resting
Pressed Shou is rested for at least a few months — and ideally a year or more — so that the 'pile smell' (dui wei) from fermentation airs out and the cup becomes cleaner and smoother. Unlike Sheng, Shou is meant to be drinkable quickly and ages much more slowly afterward.
History & Tradition
Shou Pu-erh is a remarkably young style of tea. It was developed in the early 1970s to mimic the character of long-aged Sheng for export markets that wanted ready-to-drink pu-erh, and it transformed Yunnan's tea industry within a few decades.
Wo dui developed in Kunming
A team from Kunming Tea Factory studied 'aged' pu-erh that had naturally fermented in humid Hong Kong and Guangdong warehouses and developed a controlled wet-piling (wo dui) process to reproduce that character in weeks instead of decades. 1973 is widely cited as the year Shou Pu-erh was born.
Menghai 7572 recipe
Menghai Tea Factory adopted and refined the technique, releasing its now-classic '7572' Shou cake recipe — '75' for the year the recipe was set, '7' for the blend grade, '2' for the producing factory code. 7572 became the benchmark Shou recipe and is still produced today.
Hong Kong and Southeast Asia
Shou became the favored 'dim sum' tea in Hong Kong teahouses thanks to its smooth body, low astringency, and aged-style character. Strong demand in Hong Kong and Southeast Asia drove output at Menghai and Kunming.
Pu-erh boom and crash
Demand for pu-erh on mainland China exploded in the mid-2000s, with both Shou and Sheng prices reaching speculative highs around 2007 before crashing. The episode ultimately professionalized the industry and pushed quality-focused producers to refine their wo dui techniques.
Pu-erh GI standard
China's national pu-erh standard (GB/T 22111) formalized Shou as one of two recognized pu-erh styles — defined by deliberate post-fermentation — and protected the pu-erh name as a Yunnan-only designation.
Health Benefits
Smooth, low-astringency cup
Wet-pile fermentation transforms most of the catechins responsible for green-tea astringency into larger polymerized compounds. The result is a notably smooth, mellow tea that is easy on the stomach and drinkable in large volumes.
Traditional after-meal tea
Shou is the classic Cantonese 'dim sum' tea precisely because it pairs well with rich, oily dishes. Population and animal studies have explored possible effects of pu-erh on lipid metabolism, though clinical evidence in humans remains limited.
Post-fermentation polyphenols
Wo dui generates large molecules called thearubigins and theabrownins alongside residual catechins. These compounds are studied for antioxidant activity and are particularly characteristic of post-fermented teas such as Shou and Liu Bao.
Easygoing daily drink
Because Shou is unsweetened, low in astringency, and lower in caffeine than many young teas after long brewing, it works well as a daily warm beverage in place of sweetened drinks — a habit that population data link to better cardiometabolic outcomes.
Calm afternoon tea
Shou's deep, earthy character and gentler caffeine effect make it a popular afternoon choice when stronger Sheng or black tea would feel too stimulating. Many drinkers describe a grounded, settled feeling after a Shou session.
Grades & Varieties
Loose Shou
Unpressed Shou maocha, sold loose. The most accessible everyday format: easy to scoop, fast to brew either gongfu or Western style, and ideal for trying different producers and fermentation levels before committing to a cake.
Best for
- ✓Daily mug brewing
- ✓Beginner Shou drinkers
- ✓Office use
Classic factory cakes (e.g. 7572)
Compressed Shou cakes following established blends from large producers — Menghai's 7572, Dayi V93, Xiaguan tuocha, and similar. Consistent year to year, well-balanced and widely available, with a recognizable house style.
Best for
- ✓Gongfu brewing
- ✓Cellaring for slow maturation
- ✓Reliable everyday drinking
Premium / 'gong ting' Shou
Top-grade Shou made from very fine buds and small leaves, often labelled 'gong ting' ('palace' or 'tribute') in the marketing. The cup is thicker and sweeter, with cocoa, glutinous rice, and dried-fruit notes and very little pile-character. Usually pressed into smaller bricks, tuocha or top-grade cakes.
Best for
- ✓Special-occasion gongfu
- ✓Gifts
- ✓Showcasing refined Shou
Did you know?
Shou Pu-erh was invented in 1973 at Kunming Tea Factory: a wet-piling process called wo dui compresses the effect of decades of natural aging into about six weeks, and Menghai's 1975 "7572" recipe is still produced as the benchmark Shou cake today.
Foods with this tea
What to Eat with Shou (Ripe) Pu-erh
Shou Pu-erh's earthy, woody depth is the after-meal tea par excellence—braised meats, mushroom hot pot, and dim sum yum cha all sing alongside a cup.
Red-Braised Pork Belly with Shou Pu-erh
Hong shao rou braised in a shou pu-erh broth—glossy, melting, earthy, and balanced by the tea's gentle astringency.
Shou Pu-erh Dark Chocolate Banana Bread
A dense, fudgy banana bread laced with shou pu-erh and 70% dark chocolate chunks—surprising, earthy, and the new excuse for an afternoon cup.
Drinks with this tea
Shou Pu-erh Digestive with Ginger and Tangerine Peel
Ripe Shou pu-erh brewed with fresh ginger and dried tangerine peel—a classic Yunnan after-meal digestive that warms, grounds, and gently cuts grease.
Iced Shou Pu-erh with Dark Caramel and Oat Milk
Strong-brewed Shou pu-erh poured over dark caramel and oat milk—a creamy, woody, coffee-like iced tea that drinks like dessert without the sugar crash.
Shou Pu-erh Old Fashioned
Dark rum infused with Shou pu-erh, stirred with demerara syrup and orange bitters—an earthy, woody Old Fashioned variation that drinks like a midnight tea ceremony.