The Hunan hand behind the leaf
Zhou Xiang grew up in a small village not far from Junshan Island, where his grandmother cultivated a few dozen tea bushes on the family’s terrace. He remembers the scent of the pan-fired leaves drifting through the open courtyard — a wok-smoke and chestnut fragrance that became his first language. By fourteen, he was apprenticed to a retired master from the Junshan Silver Needle cooperative, learning the slow, humid craft of making yellow tea. The process — piling the still-warm leaves under cloth, letting them smoulder and yellow — demanded patience he didn’t know he had. His master, Old Chen, would rap his knuckles with a bamboo spoon if he lifted the cloth too soon. “The leaf swelters its own truth,” he’d say. It is a lesson Zhou Xiang still carries.
In his twenties, Zhou travelled east to Zhejiang, spending spring seasons in the Lóngjǐng villages around West Lake. There he absorbed the ten-hand-pressing movements that turn a flat, emerald leaf into the imperial tribute of green tea. He would later bring that Shennong reverence to the black teas of Anhui and Fujian, spending years in Qimen and Tongmuguan, mastering the full oxidation that turns a fresh leaf into a wine-dark broth without losing its floral soul. For Zhou, a Keemun Mao Feng should smell of rose and longan, not leather; a Lapsang Souchong should taste of pine-resin, not soot — a line he traces back to the thickness of the smokehouse floor and the exact species of wood.
At Teamotea, Zhou Xiang serves as Senior Tea Expert for green, black, and yellow varieties, writing the defining encyclopaedia entries for these categories on thetea.app and co-authoring the cupping standards used on tea.degree. He leads the green tea pathway at tea.school, where he insists that real understanding begins with water temperature and a plain white bowl — never ceremony, always science. His students learn to distinguish a Hunan Máofēng from a Anhui Máofēng by the way the downy tips radiate in the glass. When he curates for worldtea.shop, his approach is the same: each lot is blind-tasted three times, assessed for shape, aroma, liquor colour, and empty-cup fragrance. Only then does it earn a place on the shelf.
His home in Changsha still holds a terracotta jar of his grandmother’s 1992 Jūnshān Yínzhēn. He opens it only on the first rainy day of spring, when the leaves breathe and the past is steeped anew.
Where mist meets mineral: the Hunan terroir
Zhou Xiang’s sourcing headquarters lies in the rugged highlands of Hunan province, a region carved by the Xiang and Zi rivers and draped in year-round humidity. The tea gardens he champions occupy elevations between 600 and 1200 metres, where sandstone and granite soils force roots deep into mineral veins. This stress, combined with the heavy fog that rolls in off Dongting Lake, triggers the leaves to produce the high amino acid content that gives Hunan green and yellow teas their famed umami sweetness.
On Junshan Island, a tiny landmass floating in Dongting, the Jūnshān Yínzhēn bushes grow among ancient temples and wild orchids. Zhou works with a single-family cooperative that still hand-picks only the first flush of unopened buds — no leaves, just fat silver tips — and processes them in a tiny stone structure where the slow, 72-hour menhuang (yellowing) replicates the rhythms Old Chen taught him. The result is a tea that is ethereally soft, with a whisper of bamboo and a lingering honeydew finish.
For his green teas, Zhou draws on smallholders in the misty Tianmen Mountain area of western Hunan, where the tea gardens are interspersed with chestnut and persimmon trees. The processing facility uses a battery of small iron woks and bamboo trays, never a mechanical panning line. The pan-firing is timed by the colour shift of the leaf, not a clock, and the shaping is done entirely by hand — a dying art that Zhou believes is essential to the tea’s cellarability. His Huangshan Máofēng and Lóngjǐng selections, though not Hunan-born, follow the same rigorous small-batch principles, with Zhou spending weeks each spring in the villages to oversee picking standards and kill-green temperatures. Every black tea he offers, from the honeyed Jīn Jùn Méi to the pine-smoked Lapsang Souchong, is produced in Fujian and Anhui under the same direct supervision, because, as he puts it, “You cannot taste a mountain through a photograph — you must walk it.”