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Sample sets — Yellow-tea pair

Yellow-tea pair — Jūnshān + Méngdǐng

<i>Jūnshān Yínzhēn</i> + <i>Méngdǐng Huángyá</i>

君山银针 + 蒙顶黄芽

Two gateways into the rarest of China’s tea families — silver tips from a Hunan island and downy buds from a Sichuan peak, both shaped by thirty-hour menhuang mastery.

$168USD · 50 g

Weight
50 g
Harvest
Spring 2025
Processing
menhuang (yellowing) followed by gentle charcoal roasting
Sourced by

From island and peak: Zhou Xiang’s yellow-tea trail

I sourced Jūnshān Yínzhēn the way my Hunan grandfather taught — small boat before sunrise to the island in Dongting Lake. The garden sits on fog-wrapped slopes just metres above the water, where the microclimate softens the buds into downy silver needles. The farmer, a third-generation household, still hand-rolls each flush on bamboo trays, then guides the leaves through menhuang — a gentle yellowing under damp cloth — for nearly thirty hours. You taste that labour in the sweet corn silk and lingering huí gān.

For Méngdǐng Huángyá, I travelled to Sichuan’s Mengding Mountain, 1,000 metres up. The mist never quite lifts, and the old bushes send out plump, fuzzy bud-and-leaf shoots. The tea master there wraps small batches in paper and stacks them in a squat brick kiln, monitoring warmth by smell alone. The result is a yellow tea with a whisper of roasted chestnut and a deep, supple body — worlds apart from its Hunan cousin.

This pair is my attempt to map yellow tea’s quiet spectrum in two 25-gram chapters: an island and a peak, home for both is the same patient silence.

The leaf, brewed

Two classics of yellow tea — sweet corn, chestnut cream, and slow, warm aftertaste.

dry leaf

Jūnshān Yínzhēn: neat silver-tipped buds, faint hay aroma. Méngdǐng Huángyá: flat, downy yellowish buds, hint of roasted nuts.

wet leaf

After rinse: buds unfurl slowly, releasing steamed corn and sweet bean notes; leaves soft, pale jade.

liquor

Bright apricot-gold liquor with full clarity, slight velvety body.

aroma

Warm sweet corn, chestnut purée, and a whisper of meadow herbs.

taste

Soft and silky. Sweet corn soup and fresh-husked grain upfront, then a creamy chestnut smoothness; the huángyá adds a faint roasted edge. Barely there astringency.

finish

Long, honeyed finish with a returning coolness (huí gān) that lingers in the throat.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
1g : 20ml
Water temp
85
First infusion
20
Subsequent
5–6 infusions, extending 5 seconds each

Use a thin-walled gaiwan to avoid overheating the delicate buds — pour water along the edge to preserve tender leaves.

Sourced by

Zhou Xiang

Senior Tea Expert (Green, Black & Yellow Tea Varieties)

Full profile →