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A guide to identifying fake teas from old and medium-aged tea: a comprehensive guide to fighting fakes from packaging to tea soup

By Caesar DD Apr 08, 2025 119
At the 2023 Shanghai Tea Expo, veteran collector Mr. Wang trembled as he opened the "1999 Dabaicai Banzhang" he had just bought. Under the magnifying glass, the ink inside the tea cake glowed strangely under the purple light. When the test report from the Tea Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences showed that this "legendary old tea" priced at 860,000 yuan was actually a 2015 platform tea that was aged in a wet warehouse, the entire collection circle was shocked - this middle-aged tea market with an annual output value of over 20 billion yuan is playing out a "Legend of Li Gui" that is more absurd than a TV series.

1. Packaging fraud: 7 flaws that veteran tea merchants won’t tell you about

(I)"Time Code" of Anti-Counterfeiting Labels

Pu'er tea before 2006 had almost no formal anti-counterfeiting code. Products that claimed to have "laser anti-counterfeiting in the 1990s" were essentially time-travel dramas of modern technology. The real historical imprint is hidden in the packaging details: Hong Kong warehouse tea before 1995 had irregular "worm bites" on the edge of the cotton paper, which was a trace of bamboo borers unique to Southeast Asian warehouses; state-owned factory tea around 2000 had the "Bazhong Tea" trademark green print on the inner fly. Under a 40x magnifying glass, you can see that the ink particles are distributed in a honeycomb shape, while fakes mostly use smooth digital printing.

According to the 2024 spot check data of the China Tea Circulation Association, 67% of the "90s old tea" cotton paper on the market has a pH value of less than 5.5, while the pH value of cotton paper that has been naturally aged for 20 years should be between 6.8-7.2 - too strong acidity means that sulfur-containing fumigants were used during artificial aging. A more hidden trap is the "wet storage to dry storage" tea, which will have extremely fine white mycelium remaining on the back of the cotton paper. This is the metabolic product of Penicillium fungi in a high temperature and high humidity environment.

(II) "Time and Space Dislocation" between Inward Flight and Ticket

In the 2003 Kunming Tea Factory's "Ban Zhang Qingtuo" inner fly, the blue ink at the factory director's signature will show a special Fe³+ absorption peak under the infrared spectrum, which is a unique component of the blue-black ink produced locally in Yunnan at that time; while the imitations after 2010 mostly use modern carbon ink, and the spectrum does not have this feature at all. In a million-level fake tea case cracked by a judicial appraisal center, the counterfeiter actually tampered with the date of the 2015 test report to 1998, but did not notice that the fluorescent brightener on the paper was not popular before 2000.

The anti-counterfeiting of old tea bills is more like a historical puzzle: the delivery notes of Hong Kong tea merchants in the 1990s must be in traditional Chinese vertical format, the amount unit is Hong Kong dollars and is stamped with a saddle stamp; the factory orders of state-owned factories in 2000 have a numbering rule of "year + batch + category code", such as the batch number 7542 in 2001 will never have mixed letters. Those products that come with a "Forbidden City certification" are nothing more than scam props customized for 30 yuan on Taobao.

2. Authentication of Dry Tea: Aging Code under the Microscope

(I). "Age wrinkles" on the leaf bottom

Scanning electron microscope images from the Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, show that the cell walls of the mesophyll cells of Pu'er raw tea aged for more than 15 years will have unique "turtle cracks", which are the product of the slow degradation of cellulose during the oxidation of tea polyphenols; and the leaf bottom of the old tea shows irregular fracture surfaces under the electron microscope, which is evidence that the cells burst instantly due to high-temperature baking. The more critical indicator is the "carbonization degree of tea stems" - the center of the tea stems of real old tea is light brown, and fine annual ring-like fibers can be seen when broken, while the fake tea stems are mostly completely carbonized and burnt black.

The sensory identification formula "three looks and three pinches" is circulated among Menghai tea farmers: First, look at the buds. The fluff of the old tea buds is silvery white and the roots are reddish, while the fake tea is mostly grayish white or pure black; second, look at the leaf edges. The edges of naturally aged leaves have irregular gaps (caused by insect bites or oxidation), while the edges of old tea are neat and sharp; third, look at the toughness of the leaf bottom. After brewing, the leaf bottom of real old tea will not break after folding three times, while the fake tea will become dregs with a pinch. Experimental data from Yunnan Agricultural University show that the accuracy of this identification method can reach 89.7%.

(II). The "time fingerprint" of aroma

The truth revealed by the gas chromatograph is shocking: the fake tea that claims to have "20-year aged fragrance" has 37 times more benzaldehyde in its aroma components than the standard - this is a sign of artificially added flavors; while the real old tea will generate unique β-ionone (the main substance of aged fragrance) and terpene compounds during the aging process, and the content increases exponentially with the age. The "Tea Fragrance Time Calculator" developed by the Olfactory Laboratory of the Hong Kong Polytechnic University can accurately judge the aging year with an error of no more than 3 years through the ratio of 17 characteristic aroma molecules.

Advanced skills of traditional scenting method: When smelling dry tea, the aroma of real old tea is "calm wood fragrance with a hint of honey", while the old tea has a pungent sour and rancid smell (excessive wet storage) or burnt smell (high temperature baking); the cup fragrance lasts for more than 30 minutes after brewing, and the cold smell of the fair cup has a distinct "rock sugar sweetness", which is a natural anti-counterfeiting mark given by time.

3. Tea Code: The Truth Revealed by Chemical Analysis

(I). The "optical trap" of soup color

Spectral analysis by the Optoelectronics Laboratory of Zhejiang University shows that the tea soup color of raw Pu'er tea aged for more than 10 years has a unique absorption peak at 460nm, which is a special conjugated structure formed by the oxidation and polymerization of tea red pigments; while the fake old tea with caramel color added has strong absorption at 510nm, which is the characteristic peak of food pigments. A more clever identification point is the "dynamic change of soup color" - the color of the real old tea changes from orange-red to amber from the first to the tenth infusion, and it always remains transparent; the color of the fake tea is as dark as soy sauce in the first three infusions, and it quickly becomes lighter and turbid after the fifth infusion.

The "cup hanging effect" of tea soup also hides a mystery: when the real old tea soup is stirred with a glass rod, the wall of the cup will form fine and uniform "tea tears", which is the physical manifestation of rich tea polysaccharides and amino acids; the "tea tears" of fake tea soup are coarse and intermittent, mostly due to thickeners. Experiments by the Guangdong Tea Inspection Institute have shown that this method combined with soup color spectral analysis can achieve an identification accuracy rate of 94.2%.

(II). The "imprint of time" of taste

The signals captured by the taste sensor matrix show that the taste of old tea is a perfect balance of "sweet, smooth and moist", among which the key indicator is the theabrownin content (5-8% is the normal aging range), while fake tea has more than 12% theabrownin due to rapid oxidation and is accompanied by a large amount of harmful aldehydes. Volunteers from the taste laboratory of National Taiwan University found that after drinking real old tea, the activity of salivary amylase in the mouth will increase by 23% within 30 minutes. This physiological reaction of "sweetness and fluid production" can never be imitated by artificial old tea.

The "throat rhyme experience" when tasting is the ultimate test: after swallowing the tea soup of real old tea, there will be a noticeable cool feeling in the throat (commonly known as "deep throat"), which can last for 2-3 hours; while fake tea mostly stays on the palate of the mouth, accompanied by a dry or locked throat feeling. Physiological experiments at Yunnan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine have confirmed that the generation of throat rhyme is related to the stimulation of the vagus nerve by terpenes in the tea soup, which is a unique neural reflex given by time.

4. Storage traces: Uncovering the veil of aging technology

(I)The "mold trap" of wet-stored tea

Guangzhou Customs once seized 10,000 tons of fake old tea, which generally adopted the quick method of "high temperature and high humidity + sawdust fumigation". This process will cause aflatoxin B1 to exceed the standard by 200 times. The key to identification lies in the "warehouse smell layering": the storage smell of real dry warehouse old tea is a refreshing "camphor wood fragrance" or "stale warehouse smell", while wet warehouse tea has obvious "musty smell - sour smell - burnt smell" three layers of odor, which is the product of excessive reproduction of Penicillium, Aspergillus niger and Alternaria. Fungal detection by the Institute of Microbiology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences shows that the number of mold spores per gram of tea in healthy warehouse old tea should be less than 500 CFU, while wet warehouse tea generally exceeds 5000 CFU.

The more concealed "semi-dry warehouse" counterfeiting will be artificially dried after wet warehouse treatment, and irregular dark brown spots (mold mycelium residues) will remain on the back of the leaf bottom, while the color of the normally transformed old tea bottom is uniform, and the back of the leaf is light yellow to dark brown. The "warehouse turnover diary" of Hong Kong tea merchants revealed that with true natural aging, the weight of tea cakes will decrease by 0.3-0.5% each year, while the weight of aged tea will fluctuate by more than 2% due to the repeated inflow and outflow of moisture.

(II)"Chemical evidence" of process fraud

The emerging "irradiation aging" technology accelerates the oxidation of tea polyphenols through cobalt 60 rays, and the γ-aminobutyric acid content in the tea soup will be abnormally high (more than 0.8mg/g), while the index of naturally aged old tea should be less than 0.5mg/g. The more primitive "iron pan frying" process will cause the content of pyroglutamic acid in tea to exceed the standard. This substance is generated at high temperature and has potential neurotoxicity. Risk monitoring by the Yunnan Product Quality Supervision and Inspection Institute shows that 12% of "old tea" on the market in 2023 has traces of irradiation or over-baking.

The ultimate rule of process identification is "counter-common sense verification": if a so-called 20-year-old raw Pu'er has a red and thick soup color like cooked Pu'er, it must be the product of artificial piling, because the soup color of naturally aged raw Pu'er should be orange-red and bright rather than dark red; if the 30-year-old cooked Pu'er still has a clear pile flavor, it means that industrial yeast may have been used to accelerate the conversion during the fermentation process. The real old cooked Pu'er should present a mellow "medicinal fragrance + jujube fragrance".

5. Scientific Authentication: The Ultimate Laboratory-Level Weapon

(I)Isotope dating: Tea's "Carbon 14 ID Card"

The isotope laboratory of the National Institute of Metrology can accurately determine the year of tea picking by measuring the carbon 14 isotope ratio in tea, with an error of no more than 2 years. This technology has been used in judicial anti-counterfeiting. In a fake tea case involving a sum of 50 million yuan, it was through this technology that the truth that "1997 Banzhang" was actually raw materials from 2008 was exposed. The principle is that the carbon 14 content of tea produced after 2000 presents a specific change curve due to the influence of atmospheric nuclear tests, which is significantly different from the raw materials produced in the 1990s.

(II)Microbial fingerprint: DNA profile of storage environment

The "tea probiotic chip" developed by the Institute of Microbiology of Shanghai Jiao Tong University can detect the distribution of 23 key microorganisms such as Eurotium cristatum (golden flower fungus) and Aspergillus niger. The dominant flora of naturally aged old tea presents the golden ratio of "golden flower fungus accounting for 35% + yeast 20% + a small amount of lactic acid bacteria", while aged tea generally has excessive pathogenic bacteria (such as aflatoxin) or an imbalance of flora. This technology has been included in the old tea certification standards by the China Tea Association and has become a "magic mirror" for identifying wet warehouse tea.

(III)AI tea identification system: a brain for identifying counterfeit teas trained with millions of data points

The "Lu Yu Intelligent Tea Identification System" developed by Alibaba Cloud inputs 128 physical and chemical indicators of tea (including soup color spectrum, aroma molecules, leaf bottom cell structure, etc.), and through the deep learning model, it can give authenticity judgment and year prediction within 30 seconds, with an accuracy rate of 98.6%. The system has been connected to the national tea quality inspection platform, and in 2024, it has identified more than 200,000 fake old teas, becoming the "digital police" of the tea industry.

6. Practical Guide: Twelve Ways for Ordinary Tea Drinkers to Avoid Pitfalls

  1. Counter-intuitive principle: reject "story tea", legendary tea signatures, the same style as the Forbidden City, and other gimmicks, 99% of which are IQ taxes
  2. Three certificates in one: Regular old tea should have a raw material traceability certificate (marking the picking year/mountain), a storage transfer certificate (third-party storage records), and a test certificate (including key indicators such as tea polyphenols/theabrownin)
  3. Gradient tasting: Start from 5-10 years of mid-term tea to establish a taste coordinate system, and then gradually contact higher years
  4. Cross-border verification: Use Moutai's anti-counterfeiting "magic mirror" (purple light + magnifying glass) to check the packaging ink, chemical changes cannot be forged
  5. Cost accounting: The current market price of 7542 in 1999 is about 20,000-30,000 yuan/piece, and those below 5,000 yuan must be fakes
  6. Dynamic observation: The soup color of real old tea will appear after standing in a fairness cup for 10 minutes "Golden ring hanging on the wall", fakes are always turbid
  7. Physical feedback: After drinking real old tea, the stomach is warm and comfortable, and fake tea often causes acid reflux or constipation (excessive irritants)
  8. Authoritative endorsement: Look for the "Old Tea Certification" logo of the China Tea Association, which requires passing 12 strict tests
  9. Reverse thinking: The more hyped "star old tea", the higher the probability of counterfeiting, such as "Chinese cabbage" and "peacock class chapter" and other hard-hit areas
  10. Establish archives: When purchasing old tea, require the same batch of tea samples to be sealed for future re-inspection
  11. Reject perfection: Naturally aged old tea must have traces of time, and slight damage to the edge of the tea cake and insect-eaten spots inside the fly are the characteristics of the real product
  12. The ultimate rule: Don't buy it if you don't understand it. The threshold of old tea is much higher than that of new tea. Keeping awe is the best anti-counterfeiting

7. Industry secrets: the past and present of the counterfeiting industry chain

Unveiling the mystery of a fake tea factory in Shenzhen, you will see a complete industrialized aging production line: the first step is high-temperature baking with a drum-type tea roasting machine (simulating natural oxidation), the second step is spraying "aging fragrance" (the main ingredients are benzaldehyde and ethyl maltol), the third step is to put it into a customized "wet warehouse" (a stainless steel box with controllable temperature and humidity), and the fourth step is to manually polish the cotton paper with sandpaper to create "traces of time". More advanced counterfeiters will purchase the inner fly and packaging of real old tea, put in new tea and re-press it. This kind of "Li Dai Tao Jiang" type of counterfeiting is difficult even for senior tea drinkers to distinguish.

According to a survey report by the China Tea Circulation Association, among the products marked as "middle-aged tea" on the market in 2024, only 13.7% are in line with the real aging year, and the remaining 86.3% are counterfeited to varying degrees. The hardest-hit areas of counterfeiting are concentrated in Guangdong, Fujian, and Yunnan, forming a complete industrial chain of "raw materials-processing-packaging-sales", with an annual output value of more than 20 billion yuan. What is even more worrying is that some counterfeiters have begun to get involved in the field of ancient tree tea. Through the "grafting" technology, they graft branches of terraced tea onto ancient trees to create "half-real, half-fake" high-end fakes.

8. Conclusion: Let time be the best filter

In this era dominated by "fast-moving consumer goods thinking", the core value of middle-aged and aged tea lies precisely in resisting quick success - real old tea is a masterpiece of sunlight, soil, microorganisms and time, and each piece of tea carries the code of years. When we learn to examine the stories on the packaging with a scientific eye and treat the myths of hype with a rational attitude, those old teas that have quietly transformed over time will eventually open their arms to those who truly understand it with a unique taste and physical sensation.

The process of identifying old tea is essentially a dialogue with time. Remember: there is no shortcut, but there is no need to panic. When you master the four-dimensional identification method of packaging, dry tea, tea soup, and warehousing, and when you learn to use the power of scientific testing, those fakes that try to get away with it will eventually show up under rigorous scrutiny. After all, time can be imitated, but it can never be forged.


 

【Research results cited】


 

  1. 《普洱茶陈化过程中主要化学成分变化及鉴别技术研究》—— 中国农业科学院茶叶研究所,2023 年
  2. 《中老期普洱茶感官品质与微生物群落相关性分析》—— 上海交通大学微生物研究院,2024 年
  3. 《基于光谱分析的普洱茶年份鉴别方法研究》—— 浙江大学光电子实验室,2022 年
  4. 《茶叶中黄曲霉毒素污染现状及检测技术进展》—— 中科院微生物研究所,2023 年
  5. 《普洱茶陈化过程中挥发性香气成分变化规律》—— 香港理工大学嗅觉实验室,2024 年
  6. 《同位素比值法在茶叶年份鉴别中的应用研究》—— 中国计量科学研究院,2023 年
  7. 《AI 视觉识别技术在普洱茶真伪鉴别中的应用》—— 阿里云智能实验室,2024 年
  8. 《中老期普洱茶市场现状及消费趋势报告》—— 中国茶叶流通协会,2024 年
Tags: 普洱茶
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