Regional Dark Tea Traditions
Dark tea (Hei Cha) is not a single style, but a family of regional traditions developed across different parts of China. Each region applies post-fermentation techniques in its own way, shaped by climate, trade history, and local consumption habits.
Hunan Dark Tea
Hunan is one of the most influential regions in dark tea history. Teas from this region are often compressed and carefully fermented, developed originally for long-distance trade and storage.
- Representative styles: Fu Zhuan, Anhua Hei Cha
- Common forms: Brick, compressed blocks
- Key traits: Structured fermentation, smooth depth
Guangxi Dark Tea
Guangxi dark tea is best represented by Liu Bao Tea. It is traditionally stored loose or in baskets and valued for gradual aging rather than heavy compression.
- Representative style: Liu Bao Tea
- Common forms: Loose leaf, basket-stored
- Key traits: Earthy smoothness, long aging potential
Sichuan Dark Tea
Sichuan dark tea developed largely to support historical border trade, especially for regions requiring durable, transportable tea. These teas are often robust and functional in character.
- Representative styles: Border teas, Tibetan trade teas
- Common forms: Compressed bricks
- Key traits: Strength, durability, practicality
How These Regions Relate
While all three regions produce dark tea, their differences lie in processing emphasis, storage approach, and intended use rather than in oxidation level.
Together, Hunan, Guangxi, and Sichuan form the core landscape of Chinese dark tea, distinct from but related to the Pu-erh tradition of Yunnan.