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Good Teas From Beautiful Villages --- Wuyuan Mingmei Green Tea

Updated: Jul 2, 2020

Wuyuan mingmei is a type of green tea native to Wuyuan County in Jiangxi Province. The village is widely hailed as the most scenic of China’s countryside. The name mingmei literally means “eyebrow tea”. It describes the shape of the tea, which resembles a beautiful woman’s eyebrow, long and thin with a perfect arch.


Quality characteristics of Wuyuan Ming Mei tea:

Shape: curved like eyebrow

Color: green jade and bloom

Soup color: clear and bright

Aroma: fragrance and clean aroma lasting

Taste: fresh and brisk

Tea leafs: tender and even


Wuyuan green tea is historically famous. According to the record in Chajing, the only professional and culture-based book created by Lu Yu who was respectably called Saint of Tea, it was ranked top-level green tea in Tang Dynasty of China. Wuyuan tea was acclaimed to be the treasured in Song Dynasty, and in dynasties of Ming and Qing, Wuyuan green tea was ranked the list of royal tribute. In 1915, Wuyuan got the gold medal of Panama-Pacific Intenational Exposition. In 1935, in an authoritative book named All About Tea ,Wuyuan green tea was praised to be the best green tea in China. In 1999, Wuyuan green tea won the gold medal of Kunming International Horticultural Exhibition.


Wu Yuan is the hometown of Chinese green tea, where ridges and peaks rise one after another, ravine stream billow, rains come suitable and winds breeze gentle, and is a region abounds with famous tea in history due to its special climate and soil. WuYuan MingMei tea grows only in the WuYuan mountains and is harvested in small quantities in the early spring. The rich soil and abundant rainfall make the perfect growing environment for this delicious and fresh tea.


The Story of Wuyuan Green Tea


It is processed in 6 steps: 1) Plucked & air-dried in shade, 2) then it’s Sun-dried, 3) hand-rolled, 4) baked, 5) stir-fried, and, finally, 6) baked again. Wuyuan mingmei has a very thin layer of white hair on the surface.


Once brewed, the liquid is a light green with a tinge of golden sheen. The taste is fresh and somewhat intense, but not bitter. The finish is refreshing and crisp.


Brewing Brew two or three 2-minute infusions at 80C. The recommended steeping time is 1 tbsp for 3 minutes in Celsius water. steeped for 3 minutes as recommended for the first infusion and 5 minutes for the second infusion.


The most beautiful village in China : Wuyuan County


Pure and Lofty, Not Known to Common People –

Refined Scholar Tea文士茶

Since the ancient times, tea has indissoluble bond with refined scholars. The aura of tea drinking is related to refined scholars’ lifestyle of appreciating natural landscapes and a tranquil life indifferent to fame and wealth. Refining inclination and cultivating virtue with tea shows an internal moral practice of Chinese scholars. This set of Refined Scholar Tea originates from the hometown of Zhu Xi, the greatest Chinese scholar in the 12th century China – Wuyuan County, Jiangxi Province and what it reflects is the general style and features of refined scholars’ tea drinking in regions at the lower reaches of the Yangtze River in the late 19th century and early 20th century.







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