Xiaguan tea factory
Encyclopedia
Xiaguan Tea Factory is a tea
factory producing pu'erh tea. Xiaguan Tea Factory was founded in 1941 and is located in Dali, Yunnan
, China
.
Xiaguan produces both raw (生茶 shēngchá) and cooked (熟茶, shúchá) varieties of pu'erh.
Cooked: 8663
Tea
Tea is an aromatic beverage prepared by adding cured leaves of the Camellia sinensis plant to hot water. The term also refers to the plant itself. After water, tea is the most widely consumed beverage in the world...
factory producing pu'erh tea. Xiaguan Tea Factory was founded in 1941 and is located in Dali, Yunnan
Yunnan
Yunnan is a province of the People's Republic of China, located in the far southwest of the country spanning approximately and with a population of 45.7 million . The capital of the province is Kunming. The province borders Burma, Laos, and Vietnam.Yunnan is situated in a mountainous area, with...
, China
China
Chinese civilization may refer to:* China for more general discussion of the country.* Chinese culture* Greater China, the transnational community of ethnic Chinese.* History of China* Sinosphere, the area historically affected by Chinese culture...
.
Products
Xiaguan Tea Factory is a major producer of compressed pu'erh tea, most notably túochá (沱茶, "Bowl-shaped Tea"(?)) and bĭngchá (饼茶, "Disc Tea"). Aged túochá and bĭngchá, particularly those produced in the 1970s and 1980s, are highly valued by collectors. However, while Xiaguan Tea Factory's productions enjoy popularity today, higher production temperatures for their túochá are prompting some concern over the "ageability" of new Xiaguan tuocha.Xiaguan produces both raw (生茶 shēngchá) and cooked (熟茶, shúchá) varieties of pu'erh.
Recipes
Like many other pu'erh factories, the factory produces a series of cakes by recipe number. While these cakes have been produced since 1986, numbers began to be included on cake wrappers in 2005. Recipe numbers are usually in the form of four digits, sometimes with an optional initial letter. The first two digits represent the year the recipe was first produced, the third digit the grade of leaves used in the recipe, and the last digit represents the factory ("3" for the Xiaguan Tea Factory). The optional initial letter, usually T, marks the use of tight machine compression. T8613, then would be a recipe from 1986 using first-grade tea made by Xiaguan Factory, compressed by machine.Bĭngchá grades
Raw: 8603, 8613, 8633, 8653, 8673, and "T" series of these same teas (T8613, etc.)Cooked: 8663
Túochá grades
Both raw and cooked varieties of túochá are graded thus, except other Xiaguan brand-specific labels such as ("Horseback", "Nan Zhao", etc.):- Jin Si - "Gold Ribbon", highest grade túochá produced by Xiaguan. However, it was only produced in 2004.
- Te Ji (特级) - "Superior Grade"
- Jia Ji (甲级) - "A-Grade"
- Yi Ji (一级) - "First Grade"
- Cang Er (沧洱) - a special grade of túochá first produced in 2001.
"FT" (Fei Tai) Productions
Fei Tai company of Taiwan orders a special batch of higher grade Xiaguan products to their specifications. These products are marked with an FT seal, and are regarded as more highly collectable, because their production is limited and of higher quality than normal Xiaguan Tea Factory offerings.Brands
Xiaguan Tea Factory produces pu'er tea under a number of brands:- Song He (English - White Crane) label (松鹤) : domestic products including túochá and bĭngchá. Most bĭngchá is produced under this label.
- Bao Yan (Holy Flame) label (宝焰) : products aimed at the Tibetan market, often used in tsampaTsampaTsampa is a Tibetan staple foodstuff, particularly prominent in the central part of the region. It is roasted flour, usually barley flour and sometimes also wheat flour or rice flour...
. Xiaguan "mushroom-shaped" (紧茶, jĭnchá) and mini-Bĭngchá are produced under this brand. - Nan Zhao (Southern Edict) label (南诏) : high end products including túochá and bĭngchá, perhaps aimed toward Taiwan. Xiaguan's fúlùshòuxĭ (福禄寿禧) four-brick set is produced under this label.
- Big G (Factory) label : A large letter "G", used on some smaller, often "collector's series" type productions. The first cake to bear this logo was a limited production of the 8653 cake. This "G" symbol is also stamped into some productions.
- Măbéi (Horseback) label (马背) : A new Xiaguan brand in 2005, currently only túochá are produced with this label.
Reference sources
- Jing Tea Shop information on brands and logos of this factory
- Hou De Asian Art information on brands and Fei Tai productions
- Pu-Erh.net information on the factory, including brands, recipe numbers, and help with Chinese translations.