My first ever visit to Maliandao tea market in Beijing was in 2006, when I first arrived there as a young PhD student doing research for my dissertation. This was the heyday of the puerh boom, when prices of teas could literally double every week or two. As a budding tea addict, I spent quite a few weekends visiting the tea markets since the archives and libraries were closed on Saturdays and Sundays (well, they still do, mostly). I wrote my first physical description of the street here, with an update four years later here – and photos here. You can see how the street changed in the four years between those two posts. Some older malls died, others sprung up. Things, as they do in China, changed very quickly.
A couple weeks ago I had the opportunity to go visit again after a day of meetings. This was getting late by tea market standards – most malls/shops closed by 6pm, so me arriving right around then meant that most of the malls were shut. There are two important things to note though. The first is that now you can take the subway to Maliandao – a huge improvement over the previous arrangement, where only a bus or a cab would do. If you get off at the Wanzi station on line 7, you’ll be right at the entrance to Maliandao. Back in the old days there was a gate with a horse on top marking this entrance (as you can see in my first post on the street). Alas, that gate has been demolished.
The stores lining the two sides of the street are still there, many of them the same stores as before. I am actually rather amazed that given the high turnover of the tea stores in general, that these ones have such staying power. Maybe that street-front location is actually more valuable than I think.
I don’t really see many new developments this time – I think there’s one on the right hand side that’s new, but otherwise things have stayed more or less the same as before. When I first came here, you felt like you were on the outskirts of the city – there were some highrises, but most of the buildings were low and old. The tea malls were mostly either glorified sheds or, in many cases, open air rows of stores. Nowadays, those have mostly been replaced by highrises and especially residential developments. There’s also a fancy mall now right across the street from Chayuan at the end of the street. Back then when I visited eating was always a bit of a problem – the restaurants were pretty dodgy. Now the options are quite varied.
I did visit Xiaomei’s store. As I mentioned last time I saw her, she’s now the mother of three and has actually returned to her hometown to help take care of her kids, with her brother now manning the store (and soon to be father himself). Business, he said, is slow, especially after the anti-corruption crackdown so that people are buying less gifts than before. So he’s taken to selling stuff, including tea and teaware, on WeChat through an auction service. I notice that many of the stores around him look dead – maybe not quite literally, but tired, old, and not doing a lot of business, it seems. Their store is basically no longer selling any newer puerh – they still have some old stock from years ago, but nothing new since about 2011. Instead, they mostly sell white teas, focusing on the lower end stuff that sell for less than 100 RMB per 500g. He also mentioned how a lot of stores that borrowed money a few years ago are now having trouble repaying the banks – they take a pretty high interest rate and if you have most of your capital tied up in overpriced tea, you’re in trouble.
I walked around a bit more, peering into some fancy looking stores that were still open but not going into any. I know that most of these places would have exorbitant price tags, with new cakes selling for 1000 or more a cake. I honestly don’t have any interest in stuff like this – I can find teas like that anywhere, and I’m not that confident in finding stuff that is actually worth buying. Whereas in my younger days I probably would’ve happily sat down at any and all stores, asking to try some of their teas, I no longer really feel the need to bother tasting. The prices of new teas are so out of whack that I often find cheaper stuff that are a few years older. Since that’s the case, why do I need to chase new teas?
I did sit down at one store that looked interesting in Chayuan, at least among the stores that are still open (used to be that all the stores would be open pretty late – not anymore). I tried a couple things there – unimpressive 2007 teas that don’t have anything special over any other tea I can find easily, for the same kind of price.
As the market sorted itself out, I think the tea market is increasingly similar to other consumable goods – there’s the high end, the mid end, and the low end, and the lines are quite clear. A store like Xiaomei’s is very much in the low end – cheap tea, sold at a small profit, and going for volume. There are lots of high end stores in China too – teas that are supposed to be rare, exquisite, etc, selling for ridiculous sums. There’s also the vast middle – most of which is mediocre, but offered at mediocre prices. Thing is, back in 2006, when the market was probably best described as frenetic, there was a lot of mixing going on – and in a way, there were a lot more opportunities to find hidden gems. Now there are not going to be many hidden gems anymore – if you want good quality, expect to pay for it. Except, of course, you’re in China, so even if you pay you’re never sure if you’re getting what you were promised. That’s true of the food in front of you, and certainly true of the tea you’re buying. If someone sells you a tea and tells you it’s from ancient trees in Guafengzhai, for example, and wants 5000 RMB for that cake, could you really tell if the story checks out just by drinking the tea?
So in some ways I left Maliandao this trip a little sad – I felt a strong sense of nostalgia for the old, crazy tea market that was always abuzz with price changes and people hunting for good tea. That energy has gone, and is probably never coming back. I miss it.
12 responses so far ↓
michael // April 25, 2016 at 11:10 am |
as they say in my country: you can’t ever go back home. this has to be true for tea as well. i like reading your stories of your experience and reminiscence about tea drinking – past, present and i look forward to your latest delights.
i recently ordered a pu-erh from taobao. i don’t read or speak the language, but picked a popular selling tea. what a wonderful surprise, i broke of some small pieces and brewed the way i have brewed pu-erh in my small collection. it turned out delicious, and i am very happy to have found a small way to order tea. sometimes, though blindfolded, i am lucky in this case.
thank you,
michael
Tiago // May 6, 2016 at 5:40 am |
Can I ask you the name of the Taobao shop? Marshaln thanks for all. I always await eagerly for yours and Hobbs posts.
michael // May 6, 2016 at 8:05 am |
taobao focus/tea/pu-erh…
Tiago // May 6, 2016 at 2:34 pm |
Thx for that. I-m starting my taobao lottery journey 🙂
Michael Geiger // May 6, 2016 at 2:39 pm
best of luck…
remember the shipping costs likely more than the tea…
yk // April 25, 2016 at 10:37 pm |
You are such a good writer. Love reading your blog and learning from you!
Knut Jacobsen // May 1, 2016 at 4:47 am |
Thank’s for the update. I’m going to spend a few days in Beijing come June and had thought about paying a visit to Maliandao (it would have been my first). After reading this I probably won’t.
MarshalN // May 4, 2016 at 9:23 am |
Depending on your access to tea – if you’ve say, never been to a Chinese tea market, then it’s still very much worth it to go. Just go during daytime and not too late. There will be literally hundreds of shops and many of them will offer stuff you don’t see very much. It’s only “bad” for someone who’s seen it in more interesting times.
Marcie // May 10, 2016 at 12:40 pm |
I was recently given a tea called “Korean Specialty Tannosam Tea” – I am not familiar with this tea – it comes in a pouch with tiny grain-like substance which is dissolved in hot water. you familiar with this tea and what the ingredient/s are derived from?
MarshalN // May 30, 2016 at 11:06 pm |
I don’t think I know anything more than google would
Adrian Loder // January 25, 2021 at 7:18 pm |
Sorry for necroposting again, but ironically, when I Google Tannosam the first hit is in fact this very blog entry. So, it may be literally true that you don’t know more than Google would, but not necessarily in a way that reflects well on Google, lol.
Marcie // May 10, 2016 at 12:41 pm |
So sorry for the typo in my previous reply. I meant to say “Are you familiar with this tea and what the ingredient/s are derived from? Thank you!!