From misty peaks to the rarest cup
Yellow tea sits at the quiet heart of Chinese tea history. Born in the Tang dynasty, it is neither green nor white, but a deliberate middle way. After the kill-green step, the still-warm leaves are piled and wrapped in damp cloth or paper — the men huang technique — where they rest for hours or even days. This gentle, controlled oxidation deepens the leaf’s golden hue and removes the raw vegetal bite.
The picking window is brief: only the earliest spring buds and single-leaf sets, often before Qingming. Jūnshān Yínzhēn from Hunan’s Jūnshān Island is plucked as a set of fat, downy buds, each one carefully handled to avoid bruising. Méngdǐng Huángyá from Sichuan’s Meng Mountain uses a bud-and-one-leaf standard, with a similarly careful men huang that develops a honeyed, nutty sweetness.
The two most famous yellow teas embody their terroirs: Jūnshān’s needle-like buds steep into a liquor of apricot, hay, and faint chestnut, while Méngdǐng’s buds and leaves give a warmer, more vegetal sweetness reminiscent of toasted corn and bamboo shoot. Because the men huang step demands precision and patience — and because demand is low — many producers have abandoned it. That scarcity makes each encounter with a true yellow tea a quiet luxury. You can explore the science behind this processing on thetea.app’s encyclopedia entry Huáng Chá or join a guided tasting workshop at tea.school to deepen your palate.
This season’s yellow rarities
Two authentic yellow teas, sourced directly from masters who still practice the full men huang method. Spring 2025 harvest, vacuum-sealed at origin.