Xiaguan Tea Factory (下关茶厂), officially Yunnan Xiaguan Tuocha Group Co., Ltd. and known by its Bao Yan (宝焰, “precious flame”) trademark, is one of the oldest state-established puerh producers in Yunnan and the factory most closely associated with tuo cha — the bowl- or nest-shaped compressed puerh format that bears the name of Yunnan’s ancient tea trade town. Founded in 1941 in Xiaguan (now part of Dali City), the factory produced puerh destined for Tibet, Southeast Asia, and domestic Chinese markets through the communist era. Its distinctive productions — including heavily pressed tuo cha, flat beeng cha cakes, and the famously dense “iron cake” (tie bing) format — are known for their strong, smoke-tinged raw character that mellows dramatically with age.
In-Depth Explanation
Location and sourcing:
Xiaguan is located in Dali Prefecture, which historically functioned as a central trading post on the Ancient Tea Horse Road (Chamadao). Tea from across Xishuangbanna, Pu’er, and Lincang passed through trading routes running through the Dali/Xiaguan area. The factory drew on this geographic position to source leaf from multiple producing areas.
Tuo cha — the signature format:
While tuo cha (沱茶) as a compressed tea shape pre-dates the factory, Xiaguan became its modern standardiser. The factory’s tuo cha are heavily compressed — denser than the tuo produced by many other factories — which affects flavour:
- Higher density slows aging and air contact, making aged Xiaguan tuos slower to open than loosely-pressed productions
- The compression also contributed to the distinctive “factory smoke” note associated with Xiaguan raw sheng — a roasty, camphor-like character from the high-heat compression process
- Long-aged Xiaguan tuo cha from the 1970s–1980s are among the most valued aged puerh on the collector market
The “Xiaguan smoke” character:
A defining sensory signature of Xiaguan raw puerh is its characteristic smoke note — often described as camphor, dried wood, or light smoke — which results from both the high-temperature compression and the geographic character of some Dali-area sourcing. This fades significantly with adequate aging, often transforming into complex fruit, wood, and aged aromatics in well-stored older productions.
Major production lines:
| Product | Description |
|---|---|
| T8653 tuo cha | Their benchmark raw tuo; 100g; heavily collected |
| FT (Fang Zhuan) | Brick-format raw puerh |
| Beeng cha (7663) | Flat cake production |
| Iron cake (Tie Bing) | Extra-dense flat disk; very slow-aging format |
| Special Grade tuo | Premium loose-leaf selection; less compressed; smoother character |
The Bao Yan trademark:
The fire-related trademark “precious flame” (宝焰) appears on authentic Xiaguan productions. As with Menghai/Dayi, counterfeiting of vintage Xiaguan productions is common and buyers of older teas should verify wrapper details carefully.
History
| Year | Event |
|---|---|
| 1941 | Xiaguan Tea Factory established; production oriented toward Tibet trade |
| 1950s | Incorporated into PRC state-enterprise system |
| 1970s–80s | Production of tuo cha intensifies; classic numbered productions created |
| 1990s | Restructuring; some production quality fluctuations |
| 2004 | Reorganised as Yunnan Xiaguan Tuocha Group Co., Ltd. |
| 2010s–present | Continued production; older vintage tuos gain major collector value |
Common Misconceptions
“Xiaguan only makes tuo cha.” The factory is most famous for tuo cha, but has produced flat beeng cha, bricks, iron cakes, and loose tea throughout its history.
“Xiaguan smoke means lower quality.” The smoky character of some Xiaguan raw puerh is a factory signature, not a defect. With aging, this smoky note transforms — many serious collectors actively seek it as a marker of authentic Xiaguan productions that will mellow into complex aged tea.
“Xiaguan and Menghai are rivals.” While both are major state-founded Yunnan puerh factories, they have distinct geographic positions (Dali vs. Xishuangbanna), distinct leaf sourcing regions, and distinct flavour profiles. They serve overlapping but partially different collector audiences.
Related Terms
See Also
Research
- Zhao, Z.J. & Chen, J.H. (2013). History and development of pu-erh tea in Yunnan province. Journal of Tea Science, 33(3), 189–197.
[Historical survey of Yunnan’s major state tea enterprises including Xiaguan, covering the development of tuo cha production and factory-code productions through the 20th century.]
- Lv, H.P. et al. (2014). Evaluation of chemical components and sensory quality of tuo cha-type pu-erh tea. Food Chemistry, 145, 72–78.
[Studies the chemical profile of tuo cha — the primary format associated with Xiaguan Tea Factory — and analyses changes with aging.]
Last updated: 2026-04