China youth flock to TCM bars for ‘prescription cocktails’ amid rise of ‘punk wellness’ lifestyle
Young Chinese adults are increasingly visiting TCM bars in major cities, a trend that began in late 2023, as part of a "punk wellness" lifestyle. These bars offer herbal-infused cocktails tailored to individual needs, with bartenders often being certified TCM practitioners who assess customers' health before creating personalized drinks.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedYoung Chinese adults are increasingly visiting TCM bars in major cities, a trend that began in late 2023, as part of a "punk wellness" lifestyle. These bars offer herbal-infused cocktails tailored to individual needs, with bartenders often being certified TCM practitioners who assess customers' health before creating personalized drinks. The bars blend traditional Chinese medicine with a modern nightlife atmosphere, featuring music and dimly lit settings. Examples include bars in Nanjing offering "Meng Po Soup" to help with heartbreak and Guangzhou establishments providing personalized TCM experiences. This fusion of TCM and nightlife is rapidly expanding from first-tier cities to other urban centers in China.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
5 extractedMeng Po Soup blends bitter herbs such as wormwood, violet, and wild ginger flowers, priced at 98 yuan a glass.
Joychic Bar serves a gin-based concoction called “Meng Po Soup” that claims to help patrons forget past relationships.
Some young Chinese are swapping traditional cocktails for TCM bars.
The fusion of TCM and nightlife has surged across China’s first-tier cities since late last year.
TCM bars offer herbal-infused spirits promising heartbreak cures and wellness boosts.