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Green Tea

Chinese Green Teas

Guide to Chinese green teas: Longjing, Bi Luo Chun, Mao Feng, Tai Ping Hou Kui, and more. Processing, flavor profiles, and how to brew each one.

5 min read

Introduction

China is the birthplace of green tea and remains its most prolific producer, with hundreds of named varieties cultivated across virtually every tea-growing province. Chinese green teas are pan-fired (chao qing) rather than steamed, giving them a distinctive toasty, nutty character that sets them apart from Japanese greens.

The Famous Ten

China's tea culture recognizes a rotating list of "Famous Teas," with several green teas consistently included:

Longjing (Dragon Well): Flat-pressed leaves from Hangzhou, Zhejiang. The gold standard of Chinese green tea, prized for its chestnut sweetness, clean vegetal finish, and elegant flat leaf shape. Pre-Qingming (harvested before April 5) lots command extreme premiums.

Bi Luo Chun (Green Snail Spring): Tiny, tightly rolled leaves from Dongting Mountain, Jiangsu. Known for its explosive floral aroma, fruity sweetness, and distinctive snail-shell spiral shape. Traditionally grown interplanted with fruit trees, absorbing their fragrance.

Huang Shan Mao Feng (Yellow Mountain Fur Peak): From Anhui province, featuring downy buds and a gentle, orchid-like sweetness with a clean, refreshing finish.

Tai Ping Hou Kui (Monkey King): Extraordinarily long, flat leaves (up to 15cm) from Anhui. Orchid fragrance, smooth body, and a subtle sweetness that builds across infusions.

Pan-Firing Techniques

Chinese tea masters use several pan-firing methods: hand-pressing against a hot wok (Longjing), tumble-roasting in a drum, or baking in bamboo baskets. Each method produces a different character. The temperature, duration, and pressure of firing are critical — too hot scorches the leaf, too cool fails to halt oxidation. Master processing is what separates a $50/kg Longjing from a $500/kg one.

Brewing Chinese Green Tea

Use 75-85 C water, 3-4 grams per 150ml, and steep for 1-2 minutes. Chinese green teas are excellent candidates for {{glossary:grandpa-style}} brewing in a tall glass, where the leaves settle and the tea is sipped directly throughout the morning.

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