The living leaf — why green tea is a season, not just a category
Green tea is China’s oldest and most direct expression of the tea plant. Unlike oolong or black tea, it undergoes no oxidation: the moment the leaf is picked, the clock starts ticking toward wilting. To halt this, artisans apply heat — traditionally pan-firing in a wok or steaming — in a step called ‘kill-green’. This locks in the bright, grassy notes and the deep verdant colour that define the category.
Most celebrated green teas hail from the early spring harvest, often before the Qingming Festival (4th–5th April). Teas labelled míng qián (明前) are made from these first buds, which are richer in amino acids and sweeter on the palate. Lóngjǐng (Dragon Well) from Zhejiang, with its flat, emerald blades and chestnut warmth, is arguably the most famous. Huángshān Máofēng from Anhui, by contrast, is a twisted leaf covered in silver down that yields a lighter, more floral liquor. Then there is Bì Luó Chūn from Jiangsu, rolled into tiny spirals with a fruit-laden intensity. Each region’s terroir — soil, mist, altitude — shapes the leaf’s personality, a story we explore in detail on thetea.app.
Processing is minimal but masterful. After killing-green, leaves are shaped — either by pressing into the flat sword shape of Lóngjǐng, rolling, or twisting — then dried. The entire process from plucking to finished tea can take less than a day. This brevity is a promise: the tea tastes of the fleeting moment it was made. With age, green tea fades. Its vibrant chlorophyll dims, and the fresh, sappy notes turn papery. That’s why we ship our greens within weeks of processing, and why they’re best consumed within a year. As you’ll learn in tea.school’s course on seasonal teas, respecting that timeline is the key to unlocking green tea’s full spectrum.
Two pinnacles of spring — our 2025–2026 selection
This year we travel from the terraced gardens of Hangzhou’s Longjing village to the cloud-wreathed peaks of Huangshan, bringing back two of China’s most iconic green teas. Each is a single-origin, early-harvest lot, hand-picked and traditionally finished.