Tea Egg — The Marbled Snack
Quick Info
- Flavor
- Savory, lightly smoky, and subtly spiced. Like a soy sauce-infused hard-boiled egg with gentle tea and star anise aromatics — simple but deeply satisfying.
- Texture
- Firm, smooth hard-boiled egg white with a creamy yolk, both infused with a savory, tea-stained flavor throughout
- Spice Level
- Not spicy
- Temperature
- Room Temperature
Ingredients
Allergens
Confirmed
The Story
Tea eggs are one of China’s most ubiquitous snacks — you’ll find them simmering in a pot at every convenience store, train station, and street corner across the country. The preparation is clever: hard-boiled eggs are gently cracked (but not peeled), then simmered for hours in a brew of black tea, soy sauce, and aromatic spices. The liquid seeps through the cracks in the shell, creating beautiful marble-like patterns on the egg white and infusing the entire egg with savory, tea-stained flavor. They’re cheap, portable, protein-rich, and available around the clock.
What to Expect
When you peel the shell away, the egg beneath is a work of art — the white is stained with a delicate web of brown lines where the simmering liquid crept through the cracked shell, creating a natural marble pattern. The color of the white ranges from light amber to deep brown depending on how long it’s been simmering.
The taste is a subtle upgrade on a regular hard-boiled egg. The white has absorbed a gentle savory-sweet flavor from the soy sauce and tea, with faint aromatics from star anise and cinnamon. The yolk is rich, creamy, and slightly more intense than a plain egg. It’s not a flavor explosion — it’s a modest, satisfying, honest snack that does exactly what it promises.
Tips
Tea eggs are available at virtually every convenience store in China (7-Eleven, FamilyMart, etc.) — look for the pot of dark liquid with eggs sitting on the counter. They’re room temperature or warm, pre-made, and ready to eat. They make a perfect portable protein snack for long train rides or busy sightseeing days. At about 2-3 yuan each, they’re one of the cheapest and most reliable snacks you can find anywhere in China.