shop.puerh.app · sampling channel Encyclopedia · School · Atlas · Pu-erh · Equipment EN · RU · · · FR · ES · AR
shop.puerh.app Cart (0)

home · catalog

*Shú* (熟) — cooked pu'er

Wet-pile mastery — from Menghai classics to small-batch experiments

*Shú* (熟), cooked pu'er, was invented in 1973 to accelerate aging through *wò duī* (wet-piling). Today it's prized for deep, earthy sweetness and velvety body. Explore our curated shu cakes, from benchmark recipes like Menghai 7572 to experimental small-batch bricks from Xiaguan.

The wò duī revolution: how modern shu captured aged complexity in weeks

Shu (cooked) pu’er owes its existence to a desire for speed. In 1973, state-owned tea factories sought to replicate the deep, mellow character of aged sheng without decades of storage. The solution was wò duī (wet-piling) — a carefully controlled fermentation that compresses years of microbial transformation into 45–60 days. Tea leaves are piled, moistened, and turned under heat to accelerate enzymatic and microbial activity, darkening the leaf and mellowing astringency. The result is a tea with immediate drinkability: dark coppery liquor, a smooth, earthy-sweet palate, and notes of wood, leather, camphor, and dried fruit.

Shu is produced almost exclusively in Yunnan from the large-leaf assamica variety. While spring and autumn harvests are prized for sheng, shu often uses summer and early autumn leaves, whose greater polyphenol content helps fuel the fermentation. After killing-green, rolling, and sun-drying, the raw máochá is piled in a dedicated workshop, kept at 40–65°C, and turned every few days. When the pile reaches the desired degree — judged by smell and leaf color — the tea is graded, blended, and compressed into cakes, bricks, or tuo.

Classic recipes like Menghai 7572 (first produced in 1975) showcase the benchmark shu profile: deep, earthy sweetness, a creamy mouthfeel, and a hint of aged camphor. Xiaguan’s bricks often have a more robust, slightly smoky character from firmer pressing and different storage. In recent years, small-batch experiments have yielded cleaner, more nuanced shu — some with floral or honey notes — thanks to improved hygiene and controlled fermentation. The notorious ‘fishy’ note is largely a thing of the past. On the palate, shu offers velvety texture, low astringency, and a sweet, lingering húigān (returning sweetness). Its qi is grounding, making it a popular after-meal digestif.

For a deeper dive into the history and science of wet-piling, visit our companion encyclopedia at puerh.app, or sign up for a tea.school course on pu’er brewing.

This season’s shu — two classic expressions

From the benchmark 7572 recipe to a robust Xiaguan brick, our shu selection delivers deep, earthy satisfaction. Choose your format.

This season's offer

Inside this category

Dayi 7592 — 2023 shu cake

<i>Dà Yì 7592</i> · 大益7592

Haiwan wǒ duī mini-batch shu — 2024

*Hǎiwān wǒ duī* mini-batch *shú* — 2024 · 海湾渥堆小批次熟茶 — 2024

Menghai 7572 — 2023 release

<em>Měnghǎi 7572 — 2023 Shú Chá</em> · 勐海7572 — 2023年熟茶

Menghai V93

<i>Ménghǎi V93 — 2024 shú bǐng</i> · 勐海V93熟饼

Xiaguan shu — 200g brick 2024

*Xiàguān shú* · 下关熟砖

Dayi 7592 — блин шу пуэра 2023 года

<i>Dà Yì 7592</i> · 大益7592

Haiwan wǒ duī мини-партия shu — 2024

*Hǎiwān wǒ duī* mini-batch *shú* — 2024 · 海湾渥堆小批次熟茶 — 2024

Menghai 7572 — выпуск 2023

<em>Měnghǎi 7572 — 2023 Shú Chá</em> · 勐海7572 — 2023年熟茶

Menghai V93

<i>Ménghǎi V93 — 2024 shú bǐng</i> · 勐海V93熟饼

Сягуань шу — кирпич 200 г 2024

*Xiàguān shú* · 下关熟砖

大益 7592 — 2023 熟茶饼

<i>Dà Yì 7592</i> · 大益7592

海湾 *wǒ duī* 小批量 *shu* — 2024

*Hǎiwān wǒ duī* mini-batch *shú* — 2024 · 海湾渥堆小批量熟茶 — 2024

Menghai 7572 — 2023 年款

<em>Měnghǎi 7572 — 2023 Shú Chá</em> · 勐海7572 — 2023年熟茶

勐海 V93

<i>Ménghǎi V93 — 2024 shú bǐng</i> · 勐海V93熟饼

下关熟茶 — 200克砖 2024

*Xiàguān shú* · 下关熟砖

大益 7592 — 2023 熟茶餅

<i>Dà Yì 7592</i> · 大益7592

海灣 *wǒ duī* 小批次 *shu* — 2024

*Hǎiwān wǒ duī* mini-batch *shú* — 2024 · 海湾渥堆小批次熟茶 — 2024

Menghai 7572 — 2023 年款

<em>Měnghǎi 7572 — 2023 Shú Chá</em> · 勐海7572 — 2023年熟茶

勐海 V93

<i>Ménghǎi V93 — 2024 shú bǐng</i> · 勐海V93熟饼

下關熟茶 — 200克磚 2024

*Xiàguān shú* · 下关熟砖

A buyer's note

How to choose and enjoy shu

Freshness and age: finding your sweet spot

Shu is immediately drinkable, but 1–3 years of rest can soften any residual fermentation bite. Young shu (under 1 year) tastes vibrant and earthy; older shu gains depth and silkiness.

Dry storage vs. wet storage

Dry-stored shu preserves clean, camphor-like notes. If you detect mildew or a musty basement note, the tea may have been stored too moist. Look for vendors who control their warehousing.

Brew with hot water and patience

Use full-boiling water. Rinse the leaves twice — a 5-second rinse, then a 15–20 second first steep. Shu can handle many infusions; increase time gradually.

Dosage: gongfu or western

For gongfu: 5–7g per 100ml gaiwan. For western brewing: 3–4g per 250ml mug. Adjust to the tea's strength — shu is forgiving and rarely turns astringent.

Avoiding off flavors

Quality shu smells like damp forest floor, aged wood, or sweet earth, never fishy or sour. A clean *wò duī* is a sign of skilled processing.

Sample before stocking up

Vendor sample sizes (25–50g) let you explore before committing to a full cake. Many shu fans discover their favorites this way.

Common questions

Asked, answered.

What's the difference between shu and sheng pu'er?

Shu is wet-piled to accelerate aging, yielding a dark, smooth, earthy tea. Sheng is sun-dried and ages naturally, starting green and astringent, deepening over decades.

Is shu pu'er fermented, not cooked?

Yes. ‘Cooked’ is a translation of *shú*; the process is microbial fermentation (*wò duī*), not heat cooking. The tea undergoes controlled composting, transforming its character.

Does shu pu'er continue to age?

It does, though more slowly than sheng. With clean, dry storage, shu can become silkier and sweeter over 5–15 years. Some collectors seek aged shu for added depth.

Why does some shu smell fishy?

A fishy note usually indicates poor fermentation control or inadequate resting after *wò duī*. Quality shu should smell earthy, woody, with a hint of camphor or dried fruit.

How do I break a shu brick or cake?

Use a pu'er pick or small knife. Insert it sideways along the compression layers, not straight down, to avoid crushing leaves. Flake off about 5–7g for a session.

Can I brew shu in a regular teapot or mug?

Absolutely. Use 3–4g per 250ml mug, boiling water, and steep 3–5 minutes. Shu is forgiving — it rarely oversteeps into bitterness.