From Anhua’s golden flower cellars to the tea routes of Mongolia
I first encountered fu zhuan on a frost‑lined morning in Ulaanbaatar, where a Mongolian friend offered me a cup that tasted like a warm cellar and toffee. That memory pulled me to Anhua county in early spring 2024, to trace the tea where it’s born. I visited a small family workshop in the fog‑coated hills: the maocha was just coming out of pile fermentation, its dark, damp leaves waiting to be pressed. What fascinated me most was the room where the bricks rest afterwards — temperature and humidity held just so, allowing tiny golden flowers (Eurotium cristatum) to bloom across the compressed surface. The family’s grandfather, who had worked the border trade routes in the 1950s, supervised the pressing. His hands knew the pressure needed so the tea would neither crumble in a camel’s saddle nor be too tight to breathe. This 2024 brick is from that batch. I selected the leaves myself, asking for a slightly longer flowering period to bring out the signature mellow sweetness. The result is a dark tea that holds the whisper of old trade winds — earthen, smooth, and slowly unfolding, just as it would have on a caravan trek from Hunan to the grasslands.