Crimson Dianhong Black Tea | Deep-Fermented Single Buds
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Worldwide shipping for just $9.5 on every order. Shipping Policy
14-Day Money-Back Guarantee
Need help? Contact us
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When the same Fengqing single bud is taken further into fermentation — past theaflavins, past thearubigins, into deep crimson — the result is a black tea so smooth and warm that it drinks more like a quiet evening than a morning cup.
There are black teas built for brightness and impact. This one is built for the opposite: a liquor so smooth it offers no resistance, a warmth that settles in the chest and stays, and a flavor that never once grabs for your attention — it simply holds it.
What Makes It Unique
- Zero bitterness, zero astringency — by design, not by accident: Extended deep fermentation (深度发酵, Shēn Dù Fā Jiào) converts virtually all residual tannin-driven astringency into smooth, mellow body — making this the most gentle, approachable black tea in the Orientaleaf range.
- A crimson liquor that looks as different as it tastes: The deep conversion of theaflavins (茶黄素, Chá Huáng Sù) into thearubigins (茶红素, Chá Hóng Sù) and theabrownins (茶褐素, Chá Hè Sù) produces a ruby-red, jewel-toned liquor that is visually and chemically distinct from standard Dianhong — not a variation, a different category.
- The black tea for people who thought they couldn't drink black tea: Caffeine-sensitive drinkers, those who find standard black tea too harsh, and anyone who needs a genuinely calming afternoon or evening tea will find in this cup exactly what they were looking for.
- Same premium Fengqing single-bud origin, entirely different sensory experience: The raw material is identical in source and grade to a top-tier bud Dianhong — the differentiation is entirely in the craft, making the comparison between this tea and a standard Dianhong one of the most instructive side-by-side tastings in the entire black tea category.
-
A warming body experience unlike any other black tea: The mellow warmth (醇软暖感, Chún Ruǎn Nuǎn Gǎn) produced by deep fermentation is a body sensation — not just a flavor note — that experienced tea drinkers compare to the settling comfort of a well-aged ripe pu-erh, at a fraction of the complexity barrier.
The Story Behind This Tea
Every tea in the Orientaleaf Dianhong range starts from the same place: the single-bud, large-leaf cultivar harvest from Fengqing County, Lincang — the birthplace of Dianhong, where tea has been grown and processed at the highest level since 1938. But what happens after harvest determines everything. And with this tea, the decision was deliberate and specific: take the fermentation (发酵, Fā Jiào) further than anyone would for a standard golden-bud Dianhong, and see what emerges on the other side.
In orthodox Dianhong production, the oxidation process — what Chinese tea terminology calls 发酵 (Fā Jiào, fermentation/oxidation) — is timed to a precise window, typically stopped at medium depth to preserve the bright golden theaflavins (茶黄素, Chá Huáng Sù) that give standard Dianhong its characteristic brightness, briskness, and honey-gold color. Theaflavins are the compounds responsible for that fresh, slightly sharp quality in a high-grade bud Dianhong — the quality that makes the first sip feel alert and vivid.
This tea does not stop there. By extending the fermentation time and carefully controlling fermentation temperature, the tea maker drives a deeper biochemical conversion: the bright theaflavins continue oxidizing and polymerizing, progressively converting into thearubigins (茶红素, Chá Hóng Sù) and, with further extension, into theabrownins (茶褐素, Chá Hè Sù). These larger, heavier polyphenol compounds are responsible for three changes that define this tea's entire identity. First, the liquor color shifts from amber-gold to a deep, jewel-like ruby red — the same chemical process that gives a long-steeped Assam its deep garnet tone, but here controlled and intentional rather than a consequence of over-brewing. Second, the tannin-driven astringency that can be felt as a slight dryness or grip in a standard black tea is almost entirely eliminated — the molecular structures that produce that sensation have been converted into something rounder and heavier. Third, the body sensation shifts: where a standard Dianhong feels alert and forward, this one feels grounding and warm.
The result is a tea that experienced Chinese drinkers describe using the phrase 醇软 (Chún Ruǎn) — which translates roughly as "mellow-soft," a compound quality meaning smooth, round, yielding, and warm simultaneously. It is not a term commonly used for fresh, light-oxidized teas. It is the term used for aged teas, for mature pu-erh, for teas that have had time and process applied to them in a way that softens their edges without diminishing their substance. The Crimson Dianhong achieves that quality through process rather than time — and the resulting cup is one that is genuinely suited to afternoons, evenings, cold weather, and anyone who wants the warmth of a black tea without any of its sharpness.
Ready to Experience a Different Kind of Dianhong?
- Process-differentiated, not grade-differentiated: The Crimson Dianhong and the Golden Buds Classic Dianhong come from the same Fengqing single-bud origin. The difference between them is entirely a matter of how far the fermentation was taken — making this one of the most instructive product pairs for anyone who wants to understand what processing actually does to tea flavor.
- Xi'an dry storage from production: Every batch is transferred directly from Fengqing to Orientaleaf's Xi'an dry-storage facility upon completion — a low-humidity, clean northern inland environment that maintains the tea's mellow character from production through delivery, with no risk of secondary fermentation or humidity damage.
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Available in four sizes: The 50g sample is an ideal entry point for drinkers who are new to deep-fermented Dianhong. Most customers who try it alongside the Golden Buds Classic report returning for a larger size within the same session.
If you have been searching for a black tea that is genuinely smooth, genuinely warming, and genuinely suited to quiet afternoon or evening drinking without caffeine anxiety — this is it. The Crimson Dianhong is available now.
Add to Cart and discover what deep fermentation does to a great Fengqing bud.
Crimson Dianhong is part of the Orientaleaf Dianhong Series — sourced from Fengqing County, Lincang, Yunnan, and transferred to Xi'an dry-storage conditions immediately upon production completion. For full details on our storage philosophy and facility standards, visit Xi'an Dry Storage page.
For drinkers who want to experience the full range of what Fengqing single-bud Dianhong can express across different oxidation depths, we recommend trying the Crimson Dianhong alongside the Golden Buds Classic Dianhong. The two teas represent opposite ends of the oxidation spectrum applied to identical raw material — and the comparison between them is one of the most informative and enjoyable side-by-side tastings in the entire Chinese black tea category.
When the same Fengqing single bud is taken further into fermentation — past theaflavins, past thearubigins, into deep crimson — the result is a black tea so smooth and warm that it drinks more like a quiet evening than a morning cup.
There are black teas built for brightness and impact. This one is built for the opposite: a liquor so smooth it offers no resistance, a warmth that settles in the chest and stays, and a flavor that never once grabs for your attention — it simply holds it.
What Makes It Unique
- Zero bitterness, zero astringency — by design, not by accident: Extended deep fermentation (深度发酵, Shēn Dù Fā Jiào) converts virtually all residual tannin-driven astringency into smooth, mellow body — making this the most gentle, approachable black tea in the Orientaleaf range.
- A crimson liquor that looks as different as it tastes: The deep conversion of theaflavins (茶黄素, Chá Huáng Sù) into thearubigins (茶红素, Chá Hóng Sù) and theabrownins (茶褐素, Chá Hè Sù) produces a ruby-red, jewel-toned liquor that is visually and chemically distinct from standard Dianhong — not a variation, a different category.
- The black tea for people who thought they couldn't drink black tea: Caffeine-sensitive drinkers, those who find standard black tea too harsh, and anyone who needs a genuinely calming afternoon or evening tea will find in this cup exactly what they were looking for.
- Same premium Fengqing single-bud origin, entirely different sensory experience: The raw material is identical in source and grade to a top-tier bud Dianhong — the differentiation is entirely in the craft, making the comparison between this tea and a standard Dianhong one of the most instructive side-by-side tastings in the entire black tea category.
-
A warming body experience unlike any other black tea: The mellow warmth (醇软暖感, Chún Ruǎn Nuǎn Gǎn) produced by deep fermentation is a body sensation — not just a flavor note — that experienced tea drinkers compare to the settling comfort of a well-aged ripe pu-erh, at a fraction of the complexity barrier.
The Story Behind This Tea
Every tea in the Orientaleaf Dianhong range starts from the same place: the single-bud, large-leaf cultivar harvest from Fengqing County, Lincang — the birthplace of Dianhong, where tea has been grown and processed at the highest level since 1938. But what happens after harvest determines everything. And with this tea, the decision was deliberate and specific: take the fermentation (发酵, Fā Jiào) further than anyone would for a standard golden-bud Dianhong, and see what emerges on the other side.
In orthodox Dianhong production, the oxidation process — what Chinese tea terminology calls 发酵 (Fā Jiào, fermentation/oxidation) — is timed to a precise window, typically stopped at medium depth to preserve the bright golden theaflavins (茶黄素, Chá Huáng Sù) that give standard Dianhong its characteristic brightness, briskness, and honey-gold color. Theaflavins are the compounds responsible for that fresh, slightly sharp quality in a high-grade bud Dianhong — the quality that makes the first sip feel alert and vivid.
This tea does not stop there. By extending the fermentation time and carefully controlling fermentation temperature, the tea maker drives a deeper biochemical conversion: the bright theaflavins continue oxidizing and polymerizing, progressively converting into thearubigins (茶红素, Chá Hóng Sù) and, with further extension, into theabrownins (茶褐素, Chá Hè Sù). These larger, heavier polyphenol compounds are responsible for three changes that define this tea's entire identity. First, the liquor color shifts from amber-gold to a deep, jewel-like ruby red — the same chemical process that gives a long-steeped Assam its deep garnet tone, but here controlled and intentional rather than a consequence of over-brewing. Second, the tannin-driven astringency that can be felt as a slight dryness or grip in a standard black tea is almost entirely eliminated — the molecular structures that produce that sensation have been converted into something rounder and heavier. Third, the body sensation shifts: where a standard Dianhong feels alert and forward, this one feels grounding and warm.
The result is a tea that experienced Chinese drinkers describe using the phrase 醇软 (Chún Ruǎn) — which translates roughly as "mellow-soft," a compound quality meaning smooth, round, yielding, and warm simultaneously. It is not a term commonly used for fresh, light-oxidized teas. It is the term used for aged teas, for mature pu-erh, for teas that have had time and process applied to them in a way that softens their edges without diminishing their substance. The Crimson Dianhong achieves that quality through process rather than time — and the resulting cup is one that is genuinely suited to afternoons, evenings, cold weather, and anyone who wants the warmth of a black tea without any of its sharpness.
Ready to Experience a Different Kind of Dianhong?
- Process-differentiated, not grade-differentiated: The Crimson Dianhong and the Golden Buds Classic Dianhong come from the same Fengqing single-bud origin. The difference between them is entirely a matter of how far the fermentation was taken — making this one of the most instructive product pairs for anyone who wants to understand what processing actually does to tea flavor.
- Xi'an dry storage from production: Every batch is transferred directly from Fengqing to Orientaleaf's Xi'an dry-storage facility upon completion — a low-humidity, clean northern inland environment that maintains the tea's mellow character from production through delivery, with no risk of secondary fermentation or humidity damage.
-
Available in four sizes: The 50g sample is an ideal entry point for drinkers who are new to deep-fermented Dianhong. Most customers who try it alongside the Golden Buds Classic report returning for a larger size within the same session.
If you have been searching for a black tea that is genuinely smooth, genuinely warming, and genuinely suited to quiet afternoon or evening drinking without caffeine anxiety — this is it. The Crimson Dianhong is available now.
Add to Cart and discover what deep fermentation does to a great Fengqing bud.
Crimson Dianhong is part of the Orientaleaf Dianhong Series — sourced from Fengqing County, Lincang, Yunnan, and transferred to Xi'an dry-storage conditions immediately upon production completion. For full details on our storage philosophy and facility standards, visit Xi'an Dry Storage page.
For drinkers who want to experience the full range of what Fengqing single-bud Dianhong can express across different oxidation depths, we recommend trying the Crimson Dianhong alongside the Golden Buds Classic Dianhong. The two teas represent opposite ends of the oxidation spectrum applied to identical raw material — and the comparison between them is one of the most informative and enjoyable side-by-side tastings in the entire Chinese black tea category.