Pek Sin Choon vs Modern Teaware Shops: Two Tea Traditions in Singapore

A person’s hand rests on the lid of a small white ceramic teapot nested within several matching bowls. The minimalist tea set is arranged on a dark wooden surface alongside a side-handled teapot and a small cup.

Walking through Chinatown’s Mosque Street, you encounter two distinct tea traditions that embody Singapore’s rich heritage and evolving culture. Pek Sin Choon, one of the oldest tea merchants in Singapore, stands as a living root of Chinese tea culture, while modern teaware shops offer a fresh perspective on tea appreciation through design and brewing systems. Together, they reveal the wide array of ways tea leaves and premium tea are experienced in this vibrant city.

Pek Sin Choon: The Heart of Chinese Tea Tradition

Several white ceramic bowls filled with an amber-colored tea are arranged on a rustic wooden tray, each containing a small porcelain spoon. In the background, multiple traditional lidded tea cups and small dishes of dark, loose-leaf tea complete the set.

Established in 1925, Pek Sin Choon is a historic tea shop deeply rooted in Singapore’s tea culture. Known for its signature Nanyang tea blends, Pek Sin Choon supplies over 80% of bak kut teh shops, defining the taste of this iconic local food and beverage. The shop’s identity is tied to traditional methods: tea leaves are imported from China, roasted, blended, and packed manually, preserving a heritage that honors the senses and passion of generations.

At Pek Sin Choon, tea appreciation centers on the leaf itself. Customers purchase loose tea leaves, such as pu erh, oolong, and tie guanyin, selected by type, roast, and harvest grade. The tea is packed in simple, traditional packaging, often gifted as a small gift to friends or family, symbolizing respect and connection. The store’s atmosphere, thick with the roasted aroma of premium tea, invites visitors to sip and savor tea the same way their mothers and grandfathers did.

Read more about Chinese tea traditions here.

Modern Tea Shops: Curated Tea Appreciation and Brewing Systems

In contrast, modern tea shops in Singapore present tea appreciation as a curated experience centered on brewing tools and aesthetics. These shops showcase premium tea alongside a wide array of teaware like gaiwans, clay teapots, glass pitchers, and textured cups, each selected to enhance the flavour and aroma of specific tea leaves.

Here, tea is introduced as a structured system. Customers learn multi-step brewing techniques and the importance of temperature, steeping time, and vessel material. This approach transforms drinking tea into a mindful ritual that engages all senses, with the teaware often becoming a statement of personal taste and lifestyle.

Modern tea shops also offer educational experiences, guiding visitors through the nuances of tea types like tie guanyin or pu erh, and the subtle flavour notes that distinguish each harvest. This method appeals to a new generation eager to explore tea beyond mere consumption, turning each sip into a moment of discovery and appreciation.

Pek Sin Choon and Nanyang Tea: A Unique Blend

This image captures an overhead view of a delicate porcelain teacup and saucer filled with golden tea, resting on a rustic wooden table. Beside the cup sits a glass carafe featuring a unique wooden flower-shaped tea strainer.

Pek Sin Choon’s Nanyang tea is a blend uniquely crafted in Singapore, reflecting the city’s multicultural palate. These blends are roasted and mixed locally to complement bak kut teh, a beloved food that pairs perfectly with the slightly bitter, roasted notes of the tea. This blend’s popularity underscores Pek Sin Choon’s role not just as a supplier but as a cultural custodian, preserving and promoting a traditional flavour profile that is distinctly Singaporean.

Tea Leaves and Premium Tea: The Common Ground

Despite their differences, both Pek Sin Choon and modern tea shops share a commitment to premium tea quality. Whether it’s the carefully sourced pu erh from China or the fragrant tie guanyin, the emphasis remains on the tea leaves’ origin, grade, and processing. Both traditions invite consumers to taste and decide for themselves, fostering a deeper understanding of tea’s complexity.

Tea Appreciation: Tradition Meets Modernity

A blue ceramic gaiwan and a matching teacup sit on a light wooden table, illuminated by sharp afternoon sunlight. A glass pitcher with a bamboo sleeve stands behind them, casting a long shadow across the surface.

Tea appreciation in Singapore is undoubtedly enriched by the coexistence of these two tea cultures. Pek Sin Choon offers an authentic, tradition-rooted experience where tea is a daily beverage connected to family and history. Modern tea shops provide an interactive, design-focused exploration that elevates tea drinking to an art form. For those starting their tea journey, it can be helpful to check out guides about tea shops and tea ware shops.

Visitors to Chinatown can enjoy this duality: from sitting in Pek Sin Choon’s historic shop, watching tea packed and sold much like in decades past, to visiting contemporary tea shops where tea appreciation is taught through curated sets and brewing workshops.

Small Gifts and Cultural Connection

Tea from Pek Sin Choon often serves as a meaningful small gift, packed with cultural significance. Presenting premium tea leaves or a blend like Nanyang tea to friends or family is a gesture that transcends the beverage itself, symbolizing care and shared moments. This tradition continues to thrive alongside modern gifting trends that favor stylish teaware sets and curated tea blends.

Conclusion: Two Paths to the Same Cup

A collection of colorful ceramic teapots, including vibrant red, soft blue, and earthy clay versions, rests on a dark shelf. In the background, additional teaware is displayed within wooden frames, creating a cozy and artisanal atmosphere.

Pek Sin Choon and modern tea shops represent two complementary ways to engage with tea in Singapore. One honors the root of Chinese tea culture through simplicity and heritage; the other invites exploration through premium tea and the art of brewing. Together, they enrich Singapore’s tea landscape, offering every tea lover, whether beginner or connoisseur, a chance to sip, taste, and appreciate tea in their own way.

By embracing both traditions, Singapore continues to celebrate tea as a timeless beverage and a living culture, where every cup tells a story of passion, history, and community.

  • Why Tea Can Teach Us About Mindful Consumption

    I’ve been thinking a lot about waste lately. Not just the kind we notice-the piles of packaging, leftover food, discarded cups-but the quiet, everyday kind: the tea leaves left unused, the leaves steeped once and thrown away, the water poured down because the cup is “not perfect.” Tea has a way of making you notice…

  • Why We Secretly Judge Tea Shops by Their Music

    I never thought much about music in tea shops, until I started noticing patterns. The tea is brewed, the cups are warm, and the aroma drifts through the room. But then the music starts, and suddenly, the entire experience changes. Some shops play classical or soft jazz. Conversations linger. Sips are slow. Even the tea…

  • The Best Everyday and Gift-Worthy Blends from Gryphon Tea Singapore

    I have a small confession. For the longest time, I treated tea like a background character in my day. It was just the thing I gulped between meetings, barely tasting it. Then a friend handed me a proper cup one quiet afternoon, and I finally slowed down enough to notice the aroma, the warmth, the…

  • We Talk Too Much About Tea and Not Enough About Drinking It

    Tea culture has become remarkably good at talking about tea. We discuss origins. Elevation. Harvest seasons. Processing methods. Water temperatures. Brewing vessels. There are endless conversations about tea. And yet I sometimes wonder whether we spend enough time simply drinking it. This may sound like an odd criticism coming from someone who enjoys learning about…

  • High Tea St Regis: A Grand Afternoon Ritual at Regis Singapore

    The light in the late afternoon does something quiet to a room. It softens. It lingers on the rim of a porcelain cup in the elegant Tea Room, slides along the curve of a silver pot, and settles into the folds of a linen napkin without asking for attention. There is a stillness here, the…

  • Why We Keep Looking for the Perfect Tea

    I used to think there would be a moment when my tea journey felt complete. A tea so good that I would stop searching. A tea that would make every other tea feel unnecessary. Years later, I can confidently say that moment has never arrived. And I’m starting to think that’s the point. Tea drinkers…

  • Darjeeling First Flush: Capturing the Himalayan Spring in a Teacup

    I still remember the first time someone handed me a cup of Darjeeling First Flush, a prized form of black tea, and asked me, quite seriously, not to add milk. I almost laughed. Tea without milk felt like toast without butter. But I humored my friend, took a sip, and paused. The liquid was pale…

  • What Kopi and Tea Say About Singapore

    One of the things I love most about Singapore is that we never really chose between kopi and tea. We kept both. Walk into almost any hawker centre or coffee shop and you’ll see it immediately. One person orders kopi-o. Another asks for teh-c. Someone else is drinking Chinese tea from a flask they brought…

  • The Tea We Keep Saving for Later

    Many tea drinkers have a tea they are saving. A special oolong purchased during a memorable trip. A rare tea gifted by a friend. A tea that feels too valuable, too limited, or too meaningful to drink casually. So it waits. Days become weeks. Weeks become months. The tea remains carefully stored while more ordinary…

  • Earl Grey Tea Benefits: What Is Earl Grey Tea and Why Has It Endured for Centuries?

    Introduction Few teas are as instantly recognisable as Earl Grey tea. Even among people who do not regularly drink tea, the distinctive citrus aroma of Earl Grey often feels familiar. It appears in tea shops, cafés, afternoon tea menus, and kitchen cupboards around the world, yet many people still ask the same question: what is…