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Lapsang Souchong

Black tea

About this tea

Lapsang Souchong is the world's original smoked tea, a distinctive Chinese black tea from the Wuyi Mountains of Fujian province. Its leaves are withered, rolled, oxidized, and then smoke-dried over smoldering pinewood fires, producing an intensely aromatic tea with bold notes of campfire, pine, whisky, and dried fruit. Love it or debate it, Lapsang Souchong is one of the most polarizing and memorable teas on earth — a tea with no neutral opinions. It also holds the distinction of being the very first black tea in history.

How to brew: 95°C, 4 min, 2.5 g per cup.

Caffeine

High

How to brew

95°C
4 min
2.5 g per cup

Flavor notes

smoky, intense, woody

Often associated with

Wake-up, Energy

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-morning

Tags

FocusSmokyWarm

Origin & Production

China — Wuyi Mountains, Tongmu Village, Fujian Province

Authentic Lapsang Souchong (正山小种, Zhèngshān Xiǎozhǒng) originates exclusively from the Tongmu village area in the Wuyi Mountains of northern Fujian, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. The area sits at 1,000–1,500 meters elevation, surrounded by bamboo forests and pine trees. The unique microclimate — cool temperatures, heavy mist, and mineral-rich soil — produces robust leaves ideal for smoking. Only tea from this specific protected area can carry the name Zhengshan ('correct mountain').

Production process

1

Withering over pine fire

Freshly plucked leaves are spread on bamboo trays in the upper floors of traditional wooden lofts (qinglou), where rising heat and smoke from pine fires below begin the initial wilting.

2

Rolling

Withered leaves are hand- or machine-rolled to rupture cell walls and release enzymes, beginning the oxidation process that develops the tea's dark color and robust body.

3

Full oxidation

Rolled leaves are spread in bamboo baskets and allowed to fully oxidize in the warm, humid environment of the loft, turning from green to deep coppery-brown.

4

Pine smoke drying (longan wood)

The signature step: oxidized leaves are placed on bamboo racks above smoldering Mawei pine (馬尾松) root fires. The slow smoking over 8–10 hours infuses the leaves with their characteristic smoky-sweet pine resin aroma.

Pine-smokedWuyi MountainsUNESCO originFirst black tea

History & Tradition

Lapsang Souchong is arguably the ancestor of all black teas — born from a legendary accident in the mountains of Fujian during a turbulent period of Chinese history.

1
~1640s

Accidental creation

According to legend, during the transition from the Ming to Qing dynasty, soldiers occupied a Tongmu tea factory. To rush their delayed tea to market, workers dried the leaves over pine fires — accidentally inventing the world's first fully oxidized, smoked tea.

2
1660s

Dutch and British trade

Dutch traders brought Lapsang Souchong to Europe, where it became one of the first Chinese teas widely traded in England and the Netherlands. Samuel Pepys mentions 'tee' in his 1660 diary.

3
1700s

Winston Churchill's favorite (later)

Lapsang Souchong became a staple of British upper-class tea culture. Centuries later, Winston Churchill famously favored it — its bold character suited his own.

4
1999

Wuyi UNESCO designation

The Wuyi Mountains were designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site, protecting the traditional tea-growing environment and acknowledging the region's irreplaceable role in tea history.

Health Benefits

Smoke-enhanced antioxidants

The smoking process creates unique phenolic compounds alongside standard theaflavins, giving Lapsang Souchong a distinctive antioxidant profile not found in other black teas.

Sensory awakening

The intense smoky aroma activates olfactory pathways powerfully, and its moderate caffeine content (40–60 mg per cup) combined with L-theanine supports alert, present-moment awareness.

Cardiovascular polyphenols

Like all fully oxidized black teas, Lapsang Souchong provides theaflavins and thearubigins associated with improved vascular function and healthy cholesterol metabolism.

Digestive warming

In Traditional Chinese Medicine, smoked teas are considered warming (温性), believed to support digestion and circulation — especially valued in cold weather or after heavy meals.

Moderate sustained energy

With moderate caffeine levels and the naturally calming effect of L-theanine, Lapsang provides a gentle but lasting energy lift — ideal for late morning or early afternoon.

Grades & Varieties

Zhengshan Xiaozhong (正山小种)

The authentic Tongmu-origin Lapsang. Subtly smoked with longan-like sweetness, dried fruit notes, and a smooth, almost sweet finish. Complex and refined — the smoke complements rather than dominates.

Best for

  • Drinking straight
  • Tea connoisseurs
  • Pairing with dark chocolate

Waishan (外山) — Smoked style

Produced outside the Tongmu protected area, typically with heavier, more aggressive smoke flavor. Bold, campfire-like, and assertive — the style most Westerners associate with Lapsang Souchong.

Best for

  • Cooking and smoking blends
  • Robust flavor seekers
  • With milk for a smoky latte

Jin Jun Mei (金骏眉) — Premium unsmoked

A modern, ultra-premium Tongmu tea made entirely from golden buds. Unsmoked, with honey, caramel, and floral notes — considered the luxury evolution of the Lapsang tradition. Extremely labor-intensive (80,000+ buds per kg).

Best for

  • Special occasions
  • Gongfu brewing
  • Gift-worthy luxury

Did you know?

Lapsang Souchong was created almost by accident when workers dried tea over pine fires to speed processing; true Lapsang comes only from Tongmu village in Fujian.

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Drinks with this tea