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Shou Pu-erh

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Pu-erh · Yunnan

Shou Pu-erh

shóu pǔ'ěr · 熟普洱

Ripe pu-erh — Yunnan broad-leaf tea fermented in warm, damp piles to taste decades old within weeks. Dark, smooth and earthy, with notes of wet wood, dates and a deep, comforting sweetness.

Region
Yunnan — pressed and aged
Harvest
Leaf picked spring; ripened in piles after
Oxidation
Post-fermented (ripe, fast-piled)
Cultivar
Yunnan broad-leaf (assamica)

In the cup

Damp earth, wet wood, dates and dark caramel — thick, smooth and round, with no bitterness and a soft sweet finish.

What it gives

The classic "comfort" tea — warming, gentle on the stomach, traditionally drunk to settle digestion after a rich meal.

Shou pu-erh — ripe pu-erh — is the modern half of Yunnan’s great aging tea. Where raw shēng pu-erh ages slowly over years and decades, ripe pu-erh was invented in the early 1970s to reach that deep, mellow character fast. The leaf is heaped into warm, damp piles and turned for weeks in a controlled microbial fermentation, wòduī, that does in a month what time does in a lifetime.

What comes out is dark, glossy and forgiving. The bitterness and brightness of young raw tea are gone, replaced by a thick, smooth body and flavours of damp earth, wet wood, dried dates and dark caramel. It is the easiest pu-erh to love and the one most people meet first.

In the cup

Always rinse it first — a quick pour of boiling water, discarded, to wake the leaf and rinse away pile dust. Then brew boiling and short, gongfu style, and it will give a long run of deep, smooth, sweet steeps. It is the tea to reach for after a heavy meal, or on a cold evening when you want comfort more than excitement.

How to brew

Shou Pu-erh

Water

100 °C — full boil

Leaf

8 g per 120 ml

Steep

Rinse, then 10–30 s, many steeps

Vessel

Gaiwan or clay pot

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