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Phoenix Yā Shǐ Xiāng 2025

<em>Yā Shǐ Xiāng</em>

鸭屎香

A single-bush dancong from Wudong that confounds nose and palate — creamy, floral, and almond-sweet, with a mineral shimmer that lingers long after each sip.

$182USD · 50 g

Weight
50 g
Harvest
Spring 2025
Elevation
950 m
Cultivar
Yā Shǐ Xiāng
Processing
Plucked before Qingming, withered, shaken, pan-fired, and twisted into thin strips, then lightly roasted over lychee charcoal for a balanced, delicate fragrance.
Sourced by

From Wudong’s single bush to your cup

In late March 2025, Mei Yang, our Senior Tea Expert and a native of Guangdong’s Chao-Shan region, returned to her childhood haunts on Wudong Mountain. There, among the red-gravel slopes and ancient silver-bark trees, grows a unique cultivar that locals, with earthy humor, named Yā Shǐ Xiāng — ‘duck shit fragrance’ — for the singular aroma of its leaves. The name belies the tea’s elegance. Harvesting demands precision: only the top three leaves and a bud, picked before Qingming when night mists still cling to the terraces, can capture the full spectrum of aromatics. Once plucked, the leaves undergo a carefully choreographed dance: withered in thin bamboo trays under the mountain’s shifting cloud cover, shaken rhythmically to bruise the edges and initiate oxidation, then pan-fired to fix the green. The still-warm leaves are worked by hand into tight, curling strips — a hallmark of traditional dancong — that will unfurl into countless layers of fragrance during brewing. This single-bush lot, sourced from a 60-year-old grove at 950 meters, carries the deep mineral imprint of red soil and granite. Mei oversaw the final light roast over lychee charcoal, a delicate step that coaxes out creaminess without muffling the high notes. The result is a paradox: a tea that smells of jasmine, toasted almonds, and wild honey, yet tastes as soothing as warm milk. It’s a Phoenix Mountain treasure that Mei herself considers one of the year’s finest.

The leaf, brewed

Cream of the Wudong — floral, nutty, and inexplicably cooling.

dry leaf

Tightly twisted, olive-brown leaves with a subtle sheen; aroma of toasted almond, gardenia, and warm rock sugar.

wet leaf

Unfurling reveals fleshy, reddish-edged leaves that exhale bursts of lilac, honey, and white peach.

liquor

Golden-orange, brilliantly clear, with a syrupy viscosity that clings to the cup.

aroma

Headily floral, like a bouquet of magnolia and sweet osmanthus, buoyed by roasted cream and a hint of cacao.

taste

A creamy, milky entry gives way to layered almond and stone fruit, deftly balanced by a crisp minerality and gentle astringency.

finish

Long, cooling huigan that coats the throat, leaving a sweet, faintly spiced aftertaste reminiscent of vanilla orchid.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
1:20
Water temp
100
First infusion
10
Subsequent
6–8 infusions, increasing by 5 seconds each, keeping water at near-boiling.

Rinse the leaves for 2–3 seconds with boiling water to prime the aroma; use a small porcelain gaiwan or zisha pot for best texture.

Sourced by

Mei Yang

Senior Tea Expert (Oolong & Black Tea Varieties)

Full profile →