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Starter sample set — six categories

*Rù mén liù dà chá lèi yàng pǐn zǔ*

入门六大茶类样品组

One tea from each of the six categories, 15g per portion, for new drinkers calibrating their palate across the full spectrum from delicate white to deep shou pu-erh.

$95USD · 90 g

Weight
90 g
Harvest
Spring 2026
Processing
Six teas across categories: white (withering & drying), green (fixation, rolling, drying), yellow (slow yellowing step), oolong (partial oxidation & bruising), black (full oxidation), pu-erh (ripe, wet-piling fermentation)
Sourced by

Six teas, six regions, one buyer’s notebook

From a tasting table in Kunming, Sandry Law pulled together this set over months of sampling. The white tea comes from a Fuding family workshop where buds are withered on bamboo trays under filtered light. The green is a early-spring Long Jing, sourced through a generations-old cooperative in Hangzhou. For yellow tea, Sandry called on Chen Hui Yi’s contacts in Hunan to secure a small batch of Jun Shan Yin Zhen that still shows the traditional smothering step. The oolong is a Mí Lán Xiāng dancong from Phoenix Mountain, hand-picked and roasted by a grower introduced by Mei Yang, while the black tea hails from a Jin Jun Mei maker in Wuyi whose leaves carry the signature honey-sweetness. The shou pu-erh, pressed in Menghai, was selected after a marathon cupping of dozens of cakes, balancing earth and smoothness without off-notes. Sandry’s procurement philosophy — small-lot sourcing, direct relationships, and ruthless sensory checks — ensures each category is represented by a clear and honest example. The result is a set that teaches as much as it satisfies, a first sip into the language of tea.

The leaf, brewed

A curated journey across the tea rainbow — each tiny packet unlocks a distinct world of aroma, taste, and texture.

dry leaf

A visual feast: downy silver needles, jade-green curls, twisted oolong with hints of roast, wiry black tea, and dark, compressed pu-erh nuggets.

wet leaf

After a rinse, leaves unfurl whole, releasing fresh meadow, roasted grain, and deep earth notes — proof of careful processing and proper storage.

liquor

The collection pours a spectrum: champagne-silver from white, pale jade from green and yellow, golden amber from oolong, coppery red from black, and dark walnut from shou pu-erh.

aroma

A blanket of scents: fresh-cut grass and steamed greens from white/green, honey and orchid from oolong, malt and cocoa from black, wet stone and camphor from pu-erh.

taste

From delicate sweetness to robust earthiness — white tea's cucumber cool, green's nutty vegetal, yellow's mellow cream, dancong's honeyed florals, black's malty fruit, and pu-erh's deep, damp forest floor.

finish

Finishes vary: white leaves a cool, crisp sweetness; oolong carries a lingering floral-aftertaste with *huigan*; pu-erh leaves a long, grounding warmth.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
1:20–1:25 (3g per 60–75ml)
Water temp
85–95
First infusion
5–10s for white/green/yellow, 10–15s for oolong/black, 15–20s for pu-erh
Subsequent
5–8 steeps per tea; add 5–10s each steep. Pu-erh can go 10+.

Start with cooler water for delicate teas; rinse pu-erh twice. Best in a gaiwan or small pot to compare side by side.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

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