雪芽古樹白茶 2018 | 鳳慶銀針ケーキ
雪芽古樹白茶 2018 | 鳳慶銀針ケーキ
300年 древних деревьев | Чистые одиночные почки | 8 лет сухого хранения и трансформации
<translation>
300年の古木 | 純粋な一芽 | 8年間の乾燥保存と変化
- 単価
- / あたり
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雲南省の伝説的な香竹箐(シャンジューチン)林から、300年以上前の古樹から2018年に採取された希少な銀針。8年間の丁寧な乾燥保存により、これらの完璧な一芽は液体の絹へと変わり、魅惑的な蜂蜜や森の香りが特徴です。
何がそれをユニークにしているのか
- 300年ものの古樹由来 香竹箐の保護された3,200本の古樹林に生育する3世紀以上の茶樹のみから収穫され、プランテーション茶では得られない深みとミネラルの複雑さを提供します。
- 100%ピュアな一芽 すべてのグラムは、清明節前に手摘みされる最も労力がかかり貴重な白茶の等級である春の一芽(芽頭)で構成されています。
- 8年間のプレミアムな乾燥保存による変化 昆明の理想的な気候でプロフェッショナルに保管されており、この茶はゆっくりとした酸化を経て、豊かな蜂蜜のような風味を持ちながらも絶対的な純度を保っています。異臭や妥協はありません。
- 清明節前の初摘み収穫 2018年4月4日から6日の短い期間中に摘まれたもので、冬眠から目覚めた古樹はその年の最も濃縮された栄養と繊細な香りを生み出しました。
- 替えのきかない時間の投資 それぞれのお茶の餅は、ほぼ10年にわたる熟成と数世紀にわたる木の成長の融合を表しており、自然遺産と人間の管理の成果であり、再現や急ぐことはできません。
このお茶に隠された物語
雲南省鳳慶県の僻地にある高地には生きている宝物があります:香竹箐の古代茶樹林です。ここには3,200本以上の茶樹があり、その多くは300年以上の歴史を持つもので、王朝の興亡を見守ってきました。これらは通常の意味での栽培植物ではなく、生存者であり、その根はミネラル豊富な山の土壌深くまで伸び、枝は近代農業に触れない清浄な山の空気を目指しています。
2018年4月初旬、清明節(約4月4日〜6日)が近づく頃、これらの敬虔な古樹は冬の眠りから目覚めました。数ヶ月の休眠後、それらは蓄積されたエネルギーをすべて使ってその年の最初の新芽を生み出しました。地元の茶職人は、清明節前の貴重な朝の澄んだ空気の中で、300年以上の樹齢を持つことが確認された木から、茎や葉ではなく一芽だけを慎重に手摘みしました。結果として、数千もの個々の芽を集めてようやく一つの357gの茶餅が作られるほどの選りすぐりの収穫となりました。
「雪芽」(Xue Ya)という名前には二重の意味があります。芽自体は密に覆われた銀白色の毛(ペコー)によって雪のように見え、また冬が山から解放されるまさにその時に現れることから、自然界の再生の最初の息吹を象徴しています。これは最も本質的な形の白茶であり、伝統的な萎凋(ウェイディアオ)と乾燥工程によって定義されるカテゴリーです。殺青(シャーチン)や揉捻(ロウニエン)は行われず、最小限の人間の介入のみで製造されます。その哲学は単純です—葉自身に語らせるのです。
このお茶は過去8年間、昆明の適度な温度と低い湿度の理想的な条件下でプロフェッショナルな乾燥保存庫に保管されていました。この間に、微妙な酸化によってフレッシュな草のような香りは蜂蜜のような深みに変わり、お茶の天然フラボノイドは徐々に進化し続けています。今あなたが手にしているものは、ただの古茶ではありません—それは具現化された時間であり、忍耐、技術、そして替えのきかない自然遺産を飲み込むことができるものです。
白茶の旅を始めましょうか?
コレクターがこのセレクションを信頼する理由:
- 検証済みの古樹由来 記録されている香竹箐の300年以上の古樹の中でも確立された3,200本の古樹林から直接供給され、原産地への完全なトレーサビリティがあります。
- プロフェッショナルな乾燥保存保証 昆明の最適な気候における8年間の制御された保存により、カビ臭さや湿気、汚染のないクリーンな熟成が保証され、古白茶保存のゴールドスタンダードとなっています。
- 投資グレードの熟成ポテンシャル 検証済みの古樹からの白茶は、時間が経つにつれて風味の複雑さと市場価値が増すため、茶の世界で最も魅力的な保存対象の一つです。
この2018年の雪芽は、300年ものの古樹素材、最も純粋な一芽グレード、そして8年間のプレミアムな変化が交わる稀な存在です。古樹は需要に応じて速く育つことはありません。時間は作り出すことができません。このヴィンテージがなくなれば、もう戻ることはありません。
今日、あなたの茶餅を確保し、3世紀の成長と8年間の忍耐がどのような味わいになるのかを体験してください。
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- Tea Type: White Tea — Silver Needle Grade (Bai Hao Yin Zhen Style)
- Raw Material: 100% Single Buds (Ya Tou) from Yunnan Large-Leaf Varietal (Da Ye Zhong)
- Tree Age: 300+ Years Old Ancient Trees (Gu Shu)
- Harvest Year: 2018, Early Spring (Pre-Qingming, approximately April 4-6)
- Harvest Season: First Flush Spring Picking
- Production Region: Xiangzhuqing Village, Fengqing County, Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China
- Terroir: High-altitude ancient tea forest with 3,200+ documented ancient trees
- Processing: Traditional White Tea Method — Withering (Wei Diao) and Low-Temperature Drying; No Kill-Green, No Rolling
- Form: Compressed Cake (Bing Cha)
- Available Sizes: 357g Full Cake / 30g Sample Size
- Storage History: 8 Years Professional Dry Storage (Gan Cang) in Kunming, Yunnan
- Storage Conditions: Temperature-controlled, humidity-regulated warehouse environment; verified clean, odor-free, and mold-free
- Current Maturity Stage: Mid-Aged White Tea — Past initial transformation, entering optimal drinking window with continued aging potential
- Pressing Year: 2018
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Appearance and Aroma (Dry Leaf)
The 357g cake presents a distinguished silver-grey surface with visible white down (Pekoe) covering plump, intact single buds. The compression is moderately firm—tight enough for stable aging, loose enough for easy separation without damaging the delicate buds. Dry aroma reveals immediate complexity: a foundation of sun-dried hay and clean grain evolves into distinct honey sweetness with subtle dried apricot undertone. Eight years of aging have added a gentle woody depth reminiscent of aged cedar, while the signature Pekoe Aroma (Hao Xiang) remains clear and pronounced—like walking through a meadow after light rain.
Wet Leaf (After Brewing)
Spent leaves reveal the quality of material: plump, intact single buds with remarkable uniformity in size. The leaf color has transformed from silver-white to a warm olive-gold, indicating proper aging. Wet leaf aroma intensifies the honey character while introducing notes of osmanthus flower and a whisper of sweet rice. The buds remain supple and fleshy, demonstrating excellent raw material quality and proper storage.
Liquor Color
The tea soup presents a luminous Pale Gold to Warm Amber hue—distinctly deeper than fresh silver needle yet brilliantly clear with no cloudiness. By mid-session, the color deepens to Rich Honey Gold, with remarkable transparency and a subtle oily sheen on the surface indicating high concentration of dissolved compounds. The brightness and clarity confirm clean dry storage with no off-fermentation.
Mouthfeel and Texture
- Texture: Remarkably Silky and Viscous—the liquor coats the palate with an almost oily richness unexpected in white tea. This is the signature of ancient tree material: deep root systems accessing minerals that translate to substance in the cup.
- Body: Medium-Full, with noticeable weight and density that builds through subsequent infusions
- Huigan (Returning Sweetness): Exceptional Duration — A wave of clean sweetness rises from the throat 10-15 seconds after swallowing, persisting for several minutes
- Sheng Jin (Salivation): Pronounced and immediate, particularly along the sides of the tongue, indicating high amino acid content from ancient tree material
- Throat Feel (Hou Yun): Deep and penetrating; the sensation reaches well into the throat, a hallmark of aged ancient tree teas
Core Flavor Notes
Primary Notes:
- Wild Honey (not cloying, but clean and floral-tinged)
- Sweet Grain / Malted Barley
- Dried Apricot and Stone Fruit
Secondary Notes:
- Osmanthus Flower
- Light Sandalwood
- Toasted Almond
- Subtle Jujube (emerging after 5th infusion)
Tertiary Notes (Later Infusions):
- Gentle Medicinal Herb (in the background, not dominant)
- Clean Aged Wood
- Sweet Hay
Flavor Comparison: The profile sits between a well-aged Riesling Spatlese (for its honey-stone fruit character with balancing freshness) and a light Sauternes (for its concentrated nectar quality without excessive heaviness). Coffee enthusiasts may find parallels to a single-origin Ethiopian natural process at light roast—fruited sweetness with floral lift.
Empty Cup and Finish
The emptied cup retains remarkable aromatic persistence: warm honey and osmanthus linger for several minutes, transitioning gradually to a clean woody-sweet base note. The finish in the mouth is exceptionally long—sweetness continues to pulse in the throat for 3-5 minutes after the final sip. There is no astringency, no bitterness, just clean sustained sweetness that invites the next infusion.
Body Sensation (Chaqi / Tea Energy)
- Intensity: 4/5
- Character: This tea produces a pronounced calming warmth that begins in the chest and spreads gradually through the body. Many drinkers report gentle perspiration along the back and a distinctive "settling" sensation—a release of tension in the shoulders and jaw. The effect is grounding rather than stimulating: ideal for meditation, focused work, or unwinding after a demanding day.
- Mindfulness Quality: Ancient tree white tea of this age and quality encourages present-moment awareness. The complexity rewards slow, attentive drinking—each infusion reveals new dimensions, training the palate and focusing the mind.
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What does this tea taste like, and how has 8 years of aging changed its flavor?
Fresh silver needle white tea typically offers light, delicate flavors—fresh grass, cucumber, and subtle sweetness. After eight years of professional dry storage, this Snow Bud has undergone significant transformation while retaining its essential character. The initial green notes have mellowed into rich honey and dried stone fruit, while new dimensions of toasted grain, osmanthus flower, and gentle wood have emerged. The mouthfeel has thickened considerably, developing an almost oily viscosity rare in white tea. What remains unchanged is the fundamental purity and the distinctive Pekoe Aroma (Hao Xiang) that defines quality silver needle. The overall experience now resembles a fine aged Riesling or light dessert wine—complex, honeyed, and deeply satisfying—rather than the simple freshness of young white tea. Importantly, because this tea was dry-stored in Kunming's ideal climate, there are no musty or damp off-notes that can plague improperly aged teas. Each infusion unfolds differently, with early steeps emphasizing floral honey, middle infusions bringing grain and subtle fruit, and later infusions revealing gentle medicinal-wood depths.
Why is ancient tree (Gu Shu) material so different from regular white tea, and is it worth the premium?
The difference between 300-year-old ancient tree material and standard plantation tea is not subtle—it is fundamental. Ancient tea trees develop root systems that can extend 10-20 meters deep into the earth, accessing mineral deposits and water sources completely unavailable to young plantation bushes with shallow roots. This translates directly into the cup: ancient tree teas possess significantly more body, more complex mineral undertones, and longer-lasting huigan (returning sweetness). The trees in Xiangzhuqing's grove have never been treated with pesticides or chemical fertilizers—they predate modern agriculture entirely. They grow slowly, producing fewer leaves with higher concentrations of beneficial compounds including L-theanine, flavonoids, and polyphenols. Standard silver needle offers pleasant delicacy; ancient tree silver needle offers that delicacy plus depth, structure, and a pronounced "throat feel" (Hou Yun) that lingers for minutes. For collectors and serious tea drinkers, ancient tree material also represents sound investment: these trees cannot be planted and grown to maturity quickly. A 300-year-old tree is genuinely irreplaceable, making teas sourced from them increasingly valuable over time.
What makes Xiangzhuqing special as a white tea origin?
Xiangzhuqing in Fengqing County, Lincang Prefecture, is legendary in the tea world for possessing one of the most significant concentrations of ancient tea trees anywhere in Yunnan. The grove contains over 3,200 documented ancient trees, many exceeding several centuries in age, growing in a protected high-altitude forest environment. Fengqing sits in the western part of Yunnan's tea-producing region, with a climate characterized by significant day-night temperature variation, abundant rainfall during growing season, and dry sunny periods during harvest—ideal conditions for concentrating flavor compounds in tea leaves. The soil composition includes decomposed granite and ancient forest organic matter, providing exceptional mineral nutrition. Unlike more famous regions that have experienced intensive commercial development, Xiangzhuqing remains relatively remote, and its ancient trees exist within a functioning forest ecosystem complete with other native vegetation. This biodiversity contributes to the complexity and "wild" character found in teas from this origin. The region has particular renown for producing raw materials that age exceptionally well, making it a prized source for collectors seeking long-term storage candidates.
How should I approach this tea if I am new to aged white tea?
Aged white tea rewards patient, attentive brewing, but it is also forgiving enough for newcomers to enjoy immediately. Start with gongfu style brewing using 5 grams per 100ml in a porcelain gaiwan, which will give you full control over each infusion. Use water just off the boil (95-100 degrees Celsius) and keep your first three infusions quite short—just 5-10 seconds—to experience the tea's elegant top notes before the deeper flavors emerge in subsequent steeps. Pay attention to how the character evolves: early infusions tend toward floral honey, while later infusions reveal more grain, wood, and subtle medicinal notes. This tea easily yields 10-15 quality infusions, so approach it as a journey rather than a destination. The most common mistake newcomers make is using too much leaf and steeping too long, which can overwhelm the palate with concentration. Start lighter than you think necessary—you can always steep longer or add more leaf, but you cannot undo over-extraction. If you are purchasing the 30g sample size, this gives you roughly six sessions to experiment with parameters before committing to the full cake.
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Brewing Guide
Gongfu Method (Recommended for Optimal Experience)
This traditional Chinese approach maximizes the tea's complexity across multiple infusions, revealing different flavor dimensions with each steep.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 5-7 grams per 100ml vessel capacity
- Water Temperature: 95-100 degrees Celsius (just off boil; very hot water best extracts aged white tea's developed compounds)
- Vessel: Porcelain Gaiwan (preferred for neutrality and heat retention) or Yixing clay teapot dedicated to white tea
Steps:
- Rinse your gaiwan with boiling water to preheat; discard water
- Add dry leaf; close lid for 10 seconds to appreciate dry leaf aroma in warmed vessel
- Pour hot water in circular motion to evenly wet all leaves
- First rinse: steep 3-5 seconds, discard (this "awakens" the compressed tea)
- First drinkable infusion: 8-10 seconds; pour completely into fairness pitcher
- Second and third infusions: 5-8 seconds each
- Fourth through seventh infusions: 10-15 seconds each
- Eighth infusion onward: add 5-10 seconds per steep as leaves tire
- Continue until flavor fades (typically 12-18 infusions with quality ancient tree material)
Tips:
- Pour decisively and drain completely; do not leave water sitting on leaves between infusions
- The leaves expand significantly; account for this when dosing
- Save spent leaves to observe quality—plump intact buds indicate authentic ancient tree single-bud material
Grandpa Style (Simple Daily Drinking)
A casual approach suitable for office or travel, sacrificing some precision for convenience.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 3-4 grams per 300-400ml tall glass or large mug
- Water Temperature: 90-95 degrees Celsius
- Vessel: Heat-resistant glass or ceramic mug
Steps:
- Place dry leaf directly in drinking vessel
- Add hot water, filling vessel approximately 70%
- Allow to steep 3-4 minutes for first drink
- Drink down to approximately one-third remaining
- Refill with hot water; repeat throughout day
- Aged white tea tolerates extended contact with water better than green or fresh white teas
Western Style (Larger Portions, Fewer Infusions)
Familiar method for those transitioning from Western tea traditions.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 3-4 grams per 200ml teapot
- Water Temperature: 95 degrees Celsius
- Vessel: Ceramic or glass teapot with removable infuser
Steps:
- Preheat teapot with hot water; discard
- Add measured tea to infuser basket
- Pour water over leaves; steep 2-3 minutes for first pot
- Remove infuser completely after target time
- Second infusion: 3-4 minutes
- Third infusion: 5-6 minutes
- Expect 3-4 quality infusions with this method
Simmering Method (For Deep, Medicinal Extraction)
Traditional method especially suited to older white tea, extracting maximum body and therapeutic character.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 5-7 grams per 500ml water
- Water Temperature: Bring to boil, then maintain gentle simmer
- Vessel: Glass, ceramic, or stainless steel pot (avoid iron which affects flavor)
Steps:
- Bring water to rolling boil
- Add dry leaf directly to pot
- Return to boil, then immediately reduce to lowest heat
- Maintain gentle simmer for 5-10 minutes
- Turn off heat; let rest 2 minutes
- Strain into serving vessel
- Leaves may be simmered again with fresh water for second extraction
- This method produces a deeply warming, soup-like liquor ideal for cold weather or evening relaxation
Storage Guide
Proper storage is essential for preserving quality and enabling continued positive transformation.
Essential Storage Principles
Do:
- Store in a cool, dry location with stable temperature (ideally 15-28 degrees Celsius)
- Maintain moderate humidity (50-70% relative humidity)
- Keep in darkness or low-light conditions
- Allow minimal air exchange for continued aging (avoid completely airtight containers for long-term storage)
- Store away from strong odors (tea absorbs surrounding scents readily)
- Use dedicated storage—a clean cardboard box, ceramic jar, or purpose-made tea storage vessel
- Keep original wrapper intact if storing the full cake
- Check periodically (every few months) for any signs of mold or off-odors
Do Not:
- Never store in refrigerator or freezer — The humidity fluctuations, temperature shock, and odor contamination in refrigerators are catastrophic for aged white tea. This is perhaps the most common storage mistake among Western consumers.
- Never expose to direct sunlight
- Never store near spices, coffee, cleaning products, or anything aromatic
- Never use plastic bags for long-term storage (plastic can impart flavor and does not breathe)
- Never store in excessively humid environments (above 80% RH) without monitoring
Common Storage Mistakes to Avoid
Many tea enthusiasts unknowingly damage valuable aged tea through well-intentioned but incorrect storage:
- Refrigerator Storage: Frequently recommended for green teas, this advice does not apply to white tea intended for aging. Cold temperatures halt beneficial transformation, and refrigerator environment introduces moisture damage and odor contamination.
- Completely Sealed Containers: While protecting from external odors is important, white tea needs minimal oxygen exchange to continue aging. Vacuum sealing or completely airtight containers stop transformation.
- Inconsistent Conditions: Moving tea frequently between environments causes condensation and inconsistent aging. Choose one appropriate location and leave the tea undisturbed.
- Storage With Other Tea Types: Different tea categories (especially Puerh with its active microbial processes) should not share storage space with white tea to avoid cross-contamination of aromas and potential unwanted microbial transfer.
Ideal Setup: A dedicated wooden shelf or cabinet in a climate-controlled room, away from windows and kitchen activities. The original paper wrapper and bamboo packaging (if provided) can remain in place. For larger collections, food-grade cardboard boxes lined with clean paper provide excellent economical storage.
Aging Potential: This tea is currently at an excellent drinking stage with significant remaining potential. Under proper conditions, ancient tree white tea of this quality will continue developing complexity for another 10-20+ years, with flavonoid compounds slowly oxidizing into increasingly mellow, honeyed character.
雲南省の伝説的な香竹箐(シャンジューチン)林から、300年以上前の古樹から2018年に採取された希少な銀針。8年間の丁寧な乾燥保存により、これらの完璧な一芽は液体の絹へと変わり、魅惑的な蜂蜜や森の香りが特徴です。
何がそれをユニークにしているのか
- 300年ものの古樹由来 香竹箐の保護された3,200本の古樹林に生育する3世紀以上の茶樹のみから収穫され、プランテーション茶では得られない深みとミネラルの複雑さを提供します。
- 100%ピュアな一芽 すべてのグラムは、清明節前に手摘みされる最も労力がかかり貴重な白茶の等級である春の一芽(芽頭)で構成されています。
- 8年間のプレミアムな乾燥保存による変化 昆明の理想的な気候でプロフェッショナルに保管されており、この茶はゆっくりとした酸化を経て、豊かな蜂蜜のような風味を持ちながらも絶対的な純度を保っています。異臭や妥協はありません。
- 清明節前の初摘み収穫 2018年4月4日から6日の短い期間中に摘まれたもので、冬眠から目覚めた古樹はその年の最も濃縮された栄養と繊細な香りを生み出しました。
- 替えのきかない時間の投資 それぞれのお茶の餅は、ほぼ10年にわたる熟成と数世紀にわたる木の成長の融合を表しており、自然遺産と人間の管理の成果であり、再現や急ぐことはできません。
このお茶に隠された物語
雲南省鳳慶県の僻地にある高地には生きている宝物があります:香竹箐の古代茶樹林です。ここには3,200本以上の茶樹があり、その多くは300年以上の歴史を持つもので、王朝の興亡を見守ってきました。これらは通常の意味での栽培植物ではなく、生存者であり、その根はミネラル豊富な山の土壌深くまで伸び、枝は近代農業に触れない清浄な山の空気を目指しています。
2018年4月初旬、清明節(約4月4日〜6日)が近づく頃、これらの敬虔な古樹は冬の眠りから目覚めました。数ヶ月の休眠後、それらは蓄積されたエネルギーをすべて使ってその年の最初の新芽を生み出しました。地元の茶職人は、清明節前の貴重な朝の澄んだ空気の中で、300年以上の樹齢を持つことが確認された木から、茎や葉ではなく一芽だけを慎重に手摘みしました。結果として、数千もの個々の芽を集めてようやく一つの357gの茶餅が作られるほどの選りすぐりの収穫となりました。
「雪芽」(Xue Ya)という名前には二重の意味があります。芽自体は密に覆われた銀白色の毛(ペコー)によって雪のように見え、また冬が山から解放されるまさにその時に現れることから、自然界の再生の最初の息吹を象徴しています。これは最も本質的な形の白茶であり、伝統的な萎凋(ウェイディアオ)と乾燥工程によって定義されるカテゴリーです。殺青(シャーチン)や揉捻(ロウニエン)は行われず、最小限の人間の介入のみで製造されます。その哲学は単純です—葉自身に語らせるのです。
このお茶は過去8年間、昆明の適度な温度と低い湿度の理想的な条件下でプロフェッショナルな乾燥保存庫に保管されていました。この間に、微妙な酸化によってフレッシュな草のような香りは蜂蜜のような深みに変わり、お茶の天然フラボノイドは徐々に進化し続けています。今あなたが手にしているものは、ただの古茶ではありません—それは具現化された時間であり、忍耐、技術、そして替えのきかない自然遺産を飲み込むことができるものです。
白茶の旅を始めましょうか?
コレクターがこのセレクションを信頼する理由:
- 検証済みの古樹由来 記録されている香竹箐の300年以上の古樹の中でも確立された3,200本の古樹林から直接供給され、原産地への完全なトレーサビリティがあります。
- プロフェッショナルな乾燥保存保証 昆明の最適な気候における8年間の制御された保存により、カビ臭さや湿気、汚染のないクリーンな熟成が保証され、古白茶保存のゴールドスタンダードとなっています。
- 投資グレードの熟成ポテンシャル 検証済みの古樹からの白茶は、時間が経つにつれて風味の複雑さと市場価値が増すため、茶の世界で最も魅力的な保存対象の一つです。
この2018年の雪芽は、300年ものの古樹素材、最も純粋な一芽グレード、そして8年間のプレミアムな変化が交わる稀な存在です。古樹は需要に応じて速く育つことはありません。時間は作り出すことができません。このヴィンテージがなくなれば、もう戻ることはありません。
今日、あなたの茶餅を確保し、3世紀の成長と8年間の忍耐がどのような味わいになるのかを体験してください。
- Tea Type: White Tea — Silver Needle Grade (Bai Hao Yin Zhen Style)
- Raw Material: 100% Single Buds (Ya Tou) from Yunnan Large-Leaf Varietal (Da Ye Zhong)
- Tree Age: 300+ Years Old Ancient Trees (Gu Shu)
- Harvest Year: 2018, Early Spring (Pre-Qingming, approximately April 4-6)
- Harvest Season: First Flush Spring Picking
- Production Region: Xiangzhuqing Village, Fengqing County, Lincang Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China
- Terroir: High-altitude ancient tea forest with 3,200+ documented ancient trees
- Processing: Traditional White Tea Method — Withering (Wei Diao) and Low-Temperature Drying; No Kill-Green, No Rolling
- Form: Compressed Cake (Bing Cha)
- Available Sizes: 357g Full Cake / 30g Sample Size
- Storage History: 8 Years Professional Dry Storage (Gan Cang) in Kunming, Yunnan
- Storage Conditions: Temperature-controlled, humidity-regulated warehouse environment; verified clean, odor-free, and mold-free
- Current Maturity Stage: Mid-Aged White Tea — Past initial transformation, entering optimal drinking window with continued aging potential
- Pressing Year: 2018
Appearance and Aroma (Dry Leaf)
The 357g cake presents a distinguished silver-grey surface with visible white down (Pekoe) covering plump, intact single buds. The compression is moderately firm—tight enough for stable aging, loose enough for easy separation without damaging the delicate buds. Dry aroma reveals immediate complexity: a foundation of sun-dried hay and clean grain evolves into distinct honey sweetness with subtle dried apricot undertone. Eight years of aging have added a gentle woody depth reminiscent of aged cedar, while the signature Pekoe Aroma (Hao Xiang) remains clear and pronounced—like walking through a meadow after light rain.
Wet Leaf (After Brewing)
Spent leaves reveal the quality of material: plump, intact single buds with remarkable uniformity in size. The leaf color has transformed from silver-white to a warm olive-gold, indicating proper aging. Wet leaf aroma intensifies the honey character while introducing notes of osmanthus flower and a whisper of sweet rice. The buds remain supple and fleshy, demonstrating excellent raw material quality and proper storage.
Liquor Color
The tea soup presents a luminous Pale Gold to Warm Amber hue—distinctly deeper than fresh silver needle yet brilliantly clear with no cloudiness. By mid-session, the color deepens to Rich Honey Gold, with remarkable transparency and a subtle oily sheen on the surface indicating high concentration of dissolved compounds. The brightness and clarity confirm clean dry storage with no off-fermentation.
Mouthfeel and Texture
- Texture: Remarkably Silky and Viscous—the liquor coats the palate with an almost oily richness unexpected in white tea. This is the signature of ancient tree material: deep root systems accessing minerals that translate to substance in the cup.
- Body: Medium-Full, with noticeable weight and density that builds through subsequent infusions
- Huigan (Returning Sweetness): Exceptional Duration — A wave of clean sweetness rises from the throat 10-15 seconds after swallowing, persisting for several minutes
- Sheng Jin (Salivation): Pronounced and immediate, particularly along the sides of the tongue, indicating high amino acid content from ancient tree material
- Throat Feel (Hou Yun): Deep and penetrating; the sensation reaches well into the throat, a hallmark of aged ancient tree teas
Core Flavor Notes
Primary Notes:
- Wild Honey (not cloying, but clean and floral-tinged)
- Sweet Grain / Malted Barley
- Dried Apricot and Stone Fruit
Secondary Notes:
- Osmanthus Flower
- Light Sandalwood
- Toasted Almond
- Subtle Jujube (emerging after 5th infusion)
Tertiary Notes (Later Infusions):
- Gentle Medicinal Herb (in the background, not dominant)
- Clean Aged Wood
- Sweet Hay
Flavor Comparison: The profile sits between a well-aged Riesling Spatlese (for its honey-stone fruit character with balancing freshness) and a light Sauternes (for its concentrated nectar quality without excessive heaviness). Coffee enthusiasts may find parallels to a single-origin Ethiopian natural process at light roast—fruited sweetness with floral lift.
Empty Cup and Finish
The emptied cup retains remarkable aromatic persistence: warm honey and osmanthus linger for several minutes, transitioning gradually to a clean woody-sweet base note. The finish in the mouth is exceptionally long—sweetness continues to pulse in the throat for 3-5 minutes after the final sip. There is no astringency, no bitterness, just clean sustained sweetness that invites the next infusion.
Body Sensation (Chaqi / Tea Energy)
- Intensity: 4/5
- Character: This tea produces a pronounced calming warmth that begins in the chest and spreads gradually through the body. Many drinkers report gentle perspiration along the back and a distinctive "settling" sensation—a release of tension in the shoulders and jaw. The effect is grounding rather than stimulating: ideal for meditation, focused work, or unwinding after a demanding day.
- Mindfulness Quality: Ancient tree white tea of this age and quality encourages present-moment awareness. The complexity rewards slow, attentive drinking—each infusion reveals new dimensions, training the palate and focusing the mind.
What does this tea taste like, and how has 8 years of aging changed its flavor?
Fresh silver needle white tea typically offers light, delicate flavors—fresh grass, cucumber, and subtle sweetness. After eight years of professional dry storage, this Snow Bud has undergone significant transformation while retaining its essential character. The initial green notes have mellowed into rich honey and dried stone fruit, while new dimensions of toasted grain, osmanthus flower, and gentle wood have emerged. The mouthfeel has thickened considerably, developing an almost oily viscosity rare in white tea. What remains unchanged is the fundamental purity and the distinctive Pekoe Aroma (Hao Xiang) that defines quality silver needle. The overall experience now resembles a fine aged Riesling or light dessert wine—complex, honeyed, and deeply satisfying—rather than the simple freshness of young white tea. Importantly, because this tea was dry-stored in Kunming's ideal climate, there are no musty or damp off-notes that can plague improperly aged teas. Each infusion unfolds differently, with early steeps emphasizing floral honey, middle infusions bringing grain and subtle fruit, and later infusions revealing gentle medicinal-wood depths.
Why is ancient tree (Gu Shu) material so different from regular white tea, and is it worth the premium?
The difference between 300-year-old ancient tree material and standard plantation tea is not subtle—it is fundamental. Ancient tea trees develop root systems that can extend 10-20 meters deep into the earth, accessing mineral deposits and water sources completely unavailable to young plantation bushes with shallow roots. This translates directly into the cup: ancient tree teas possess significantly more body, more complex mineral undertones, and longer-lasting huigan (returning sweetness). The trees in Xiangzhuqing's grove have never been treated with pesticides or chemical fertilizers—they predate modern agriculture entirely. They grow slowly, producing fewer leaves with higher concentrations of beneficial compounds including L-theanine, flavonoids, and polyphenols. Standard silver needle offers pleasant delicacy; ancient tree silver needle offers that delicacy plus depth, structure, and a pronounced "throat feel" (Hou Yun) that lingers for minutes. For collectors and serious tea drinkers, ancient tree material also represents sound investment: these trees cannot be planted and grown to maturity quickly. A 300-year-old tree is genuinely irreplaceable, making teas sourced from them increasingly valuable over time.
What makes Xiangzhuqing special as a white tea origin?
Xiangzhuqing in Fengqing County, Lincang Prefecture, is legendary in the tea world for possessing one of the most significant concentrations of ancient tea trees anywhere in Yunnan. The grove contains over 3,200 documented ancient trees, many exceeding several centuries in age, growing in a protected high-altitude forest environment. Fengqing sits in the western part of Yunnan's tea-producing region, with a climate characterized by significant day-night temperature variation, abundant rainfall during growing season, and dry sunny periods during harvest—ideal conditions for concentrating flavor compounds in tea leaves. The soil composition includes decomposed granite and ancient forest organic matter, providing exceptional mineral nutrition. Unlike more famous regions that have experienced intensive commercial development, Xiangzhuqing remains relatively remote, and its ancient trees exist within a functioning forest ecosystem complete with other native vegetation. This biodiversity contributes to the complexity and "wild" character found in teas from this origin. The region has particular renown for producing raw materials that age exceptionally well, making it a prized source for collectors seeking long-term storage candidates.
How should I approach this tea if I am new to aged white tea?
Aged white tea rewards patient, attentive brewing, but it is also forgiving enough for newcomers to enjoy immediately. Start with gongfu style brewing using 5 grams per 100ml in a porcelain gaiwan, which will give you full control over each infusion. Use water just off the boil (95-100 degrees Celsius) and keep your first three infusions quite short—just 5-10 seconds—to experience the tea's elegant top notes before the deeper flavors emerge in subsequent steeps. Pay attention to how the character evolves: early infusions tend toward floral honey, while later infusions reveal more grain, wood, and subtle medicinal notes. This tea easily yields 10-15 quality infusions, so approach it as a journey rather than a destination. The most common mistake newcomers make is using too much leaf and steeping too long, which can overwhelm the palate with concentration. Start lighter than you think necessary—you can always steep longer or add more leaf, but you cannot undo over-extraction. If you are purchasing the 30g sample size, this gives you roughly six sessions to experiment with parameters before committing to the full cake.
Brewing Guide
Gongfu Method (Recommended for Optimal Experience)
This traditional Chinese approach maximizes the tea's complexity across multiple infusions, revealing different flavor dimensions with each steep.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 5-7 grams per 100ml vessel capacity
- Water Temperature: 95-100 degrees Celsius (just off boil; very hot water best extracts aged white tea's developed compounds)
- Vessel: Porcelain Gaiwan (preferred for neutrality and heat retention) or Yixing clay teapot dedicated to white tea
Steps:
- Rinse your gaiwan with boiling water to preheat; discard water
- Add dry leaf; close lid for 10 seconds to appreciate dry leaf aroma in warmed vessel
- Pour hot water in circular motion to evenly wet all leaves
- First rinse: steep 3-5 seconds, discard (this "awakens" the compressed tea)
- First drinkable infusion: 8-10 seconds; pour completely into fairness pitcher
- Second and third infusions: 5-8 seconds each
- Fourth through seventh infusions: 10-15 seconds each
- Eighth infusion onward: add 5-10 seconds per steep as leaves tire
- Continue until flavor fades (typically 12-18 infusions with quality ancient tree material)
Tips:
- Pour decisively and drain completely; do not leave water sitting on leaves between infusions
- The leaves expand significantly; account for this when dosing
- Save spent leaves to observe quality—plump intact buds indicate authentic ancient tree single-bud material
Grandpa Style (Simple Daily Drinking)
A casual approach suitable for office or travel, sacrificing some precision for convenience.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 3-4 grams per 300-400ml tall glass or large mug
- Water Temperature: 90-95 degrees Celsius
- Vessel: Heat-resistant glass or ceramic mug
Steps:
- Place dry leaf directly in drinking vessel
- Add hot water, filling vessel approximately 70%
- Allow to steep 3-4 minutes for first drink
- Drink down to approximately one-third remaining
- Refill with hot water; repeat throughout day
- Aged white tea tolerates extended contact with water better than green or fresh white teas
Western Style (Larger Portions, Fewer Infusions)
Familiar method for those transitioning from Western tea traditions.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 3-4 grams per 200ml teapot
- Water Temperature: 95 degrees Celsius
- Vessel: Ceramic or glass teapot with removable infuser
Steps:
- Preheat teapot with hot water; discard
- Add measured tea to infuser basket
- Pour water over leaves; steep 2-3 minutes for first pot
- Remove infuser completely after target time
- Second infusion: 3-4 minutes
- Third infusion: 5-6 minutes
- Expect 3-4 quality infusions with this method
Simmering Method (For Deep, Medicinal Extraction)
Traditional method especially suited to older white tea, extracting maximum body and therapeutic character.
Parameters:
- Tea Amount: 5-7 grams per 500ml water
- Water Temperature: Bring to boil, then maintain gentle simmer
- Vessel: Glass, ceramic, or stainless steel pot (avoid iron which affects flavor)
Steps:
- Bring water to rolling boil
- Add dry leaf directly to pot
- Return to boil, then immediately reduce to lowest heat
- Maintain gentle simmer for 5-10 minutes
- Turn off heat; let rest 2 minutes
- Strain into serving vessel
- Leaves may be simmered again with fresh water for second extraction
- This method produces a deeply warming, soup-like liquor ideal for cold weather or evening relaxation
Storage Guide
Proper storage is essential for preserving quality and enabling continued positive transformation.
Essential Storage Principles
Do:
- Store in a cool, dry location with stable temperature (ideally 15-28 degrees Celsius)
- Maintain moderate humidity (50-70% relative humidity)
- Keep in darkness or low-light conditions
- Allow minimal air exchange for continued aging (avoid completely airtight containers for long-term storage)
- Store away from strong odors (tea absorbs surrounding scents readily)
- Use dedicated storage—a clean cardboard box, ceramic jar, or purpose-made tea storage vessel
- Keep original wrapper intact if storing the full cake
- Check periodically (every few months) for any signs of mold or off-odors
Do Not:
- Never store in refrigerator or freezer — The humidity fluctuations, temperature shock, and odor contamination in refrigerators are catastrophic for aged white tea. This is perhaps the most common storage mistake among Western consumers.
- Never expose to direct sunlight
- Never store near spices, coffee, cleaning products, or anything aromatic
- Never use plastic bags for long-term storage (plastic can impart flavor and does not breathe)
- Never store in excessively humid environments (above 80% RH) without monitoring
Common Storage Mistakes to Avoid
Many tea enthusiasts unknowingly damage valuable aged tea through well-intentioned but incorrect storage:
- Refrigerator Storage: Frequently recommended for green teas, this advice does not apply to white tea intended for aging. Cold temperatures halt beneficial transformation, and refrigerator environment introduces moisture damage and odor contamination.
- Completely Sealed Containers: While protecting from external odors is important, white tea needs minimal oxygen exchange to continue aging. Vacuum sealing or completely airtight containers stop transformation.
- Inconsistent Conditions: Moving tea frequently between environments causes condensation and inconsistent aging. Choose one appropriate location and leave the tea undisturbed.
- Storage With Other Tea Types: Different tea categories (especially Puerh with its active microbial processes) should not share storage space with white tea to avoid cross-contamination of aromas and potential unwanted microbial transfer.
Ideal Setup: A dedicated wooden shelf or cabinet in a climate-controlled room, away from windows and kitchen activities. The original paper wrapper and bamboo packaging (if provided) can remain in place. For larger collections, food-grade cardboard boxes lined with clean paper provide excellent economical storage.
Aging Potential: This tea is currently at an excellent drinking stage with significant remaining potential. Under proper conditions, ancient tree white tea of this quality will continue developing complexity for another 10-20+ years, with flavonoid compounds slowly oxidizing into increasingly mellow, honeyed character.