Yes...shu was devised as a shortcut to traditional storage sheng. 20-30 years of intense HK traditional storage will turn sheng into something a lot like traditional storage shu. When I first had sheng like that I had to go back to ask the guy what the heck he sold me. LOL. I didn't believe it was sheng and I was very confused, since the store had such a great reputation. Shu made drinking 'aged' pu erh a lot more accessible, even when pu erh was cheap here.Drax wrote:Heh, so is shu much more popular in general in Hong Kong, then? Is there any reason why?jayinhk wrote:My sheng/shu ratio is about 1:1...it's the Hong Kong in me.Until I got on TeaChat, pu erh was simply shu. I had never even heard of sheng pu erh!
Once shu was invented, it became the dominant form of pu erh here, and traditionally stored sheng became much less common on the market. There's still a lot around, however, and I'm going to offer different types and levels of storage since not much of the good stuff is sold outside HK. Couple that with the price of old sheng today and not many people are going to pony up big bucks to drink 30 year old sheng with their meals, although back in the day, before shu, that was par for course! People simply drink what their parents did, and often buy from exactly the same stores their parents went to, too. Shu is the flavor that people here are familiar with--most have never tried a dry storage sheng.
Without HK's penchant for bo lei, there would probably be no shu pu erh, and there would probably never have been a pu erh boom, which occurred when dry storage became a thing here.