Finding the smoke at source, with Zhou Xiang
I drove eight hours from Changsha into the Wuyi Mountains, heading for Tongmu village — the birthplace of Lapsang Souchong. The road narrowed to a dirt track, then disappeared. I walked the last stretch with Mr. Lin, a fourth-generation farmer whose family has smoked tea the same way for over a century. His wooden smoking loft, built into the hillside, still uses pine branches from the surrounding forest. No liquid smoke, no shortcuts.
We picked Xiao Zhong leaves just before Qingming: one bud, two leaves, slightly coarser than what you’d pluck for an unsmoked version. They withered in bamboo baskets, then went into a blazing wok for the kill-green. After rolling, the leaves were spread on bamboo trays above a smouldering pine fire. I stayed overnight. The loft was thick with fragrant smoke — it clung to my jacket for days. In the morning, the tea had turned glossy black, its surface slightly oily to the touch.
I cupped the first batch right there in the loft: the smoke was deep but never harsh, cradled by a sweetness that reminded me of the longan drying in the village courtyard. This 2026 lot captures that moment. It isn’t the unsmoked Lapsang that has become trendy — it’s the real thing, a piece of tea history. Zhou Xiang selected it for worldtea because it speaks with a voice you can’t imitate.