2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)
2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)

2026 Spring Tie Guan Yin - Light and Dark Roasted 头采铁观音乌龙春茶 (清香型 / 浓香型)

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Tie Guan Yin varietal originates from Xi Ping Township of Anxi County, Quanzhou City, Fujian province of China (泉州市安溪县西坪镇), on the west of the county. Tie Guan Yin is harvested a total of 5 times in Anxi but recent years see only 4 harvests - spring, summer, early autumn, autumn and missing the winter tea. The farms we work with only harvest Tie Guan Yin twice a year - the 2 more valued harvests of spring and autumn. The farmer's adage rings loud: Spring water (i.e. a rounder tea body) and autumn aroma (春水秋香). After a long winter, the bush would have accumulated substantial nutrients to brew a thick tea. Through summer till autumn, the bush would have bathed in enough sunlight to create aromatic compounds to brew a tea of higher aroma with a longer aftertaste. The abundance of sunlight in the middle two harvests usually produce teas of lesser elegance and coarser mouthfeel, and are usually sold in the mass market to Chinese restaurants. In Tie Guan Yin making techniques, there are three styles - lightly roasted (清香型), heavily roasted (浓香型) and aged (陈香型). Ultimately, the tea drinker decides his preference.

Our spring tea is from the tea fields northeast of Anxi county, on the tea mountains about 45 min's drive from Anxi urban centre. This year, the tea fields are a different field adjacent to the fields of 2024 and 2025, on the same mountain range and separated by 20 minutes car distance on the mountain winding road. The tea farm is higher at around 600m, and the processing factory is right in the tea farm, allowing prompt processing and avoiding the uncontrolled oxidation experienced by leaves harvested a long distance away from factory. The farm does not use any chemical fertilizer but the tea shrubs benefit from the dung from cows which move through the farm. For speed to market, recent years see spring Tie Guan Yin being harvested before optimum maturity of the tea buds. Our tea avoids this commercial trend and is harvested on time. Depending on weather, at the end of April or start of May when the best Tie Guan Yin leaves are harvested, noon temperature is high at about 27°C and night temperature drops to 17°C. The diurnal range is beneficial to the development of quality Tie Guan Yin. 

2025 Spring tea was made by Parchmen & Co together with our tea master in the mountains of Anxi, Fujian. The leaves are harvested on 28th April 2026 and roasted at 1 am on 29th April 2026. In 2026, we made both light roasted and dark roasted. In this tea subscription, you are enjoying the light roasted tea, which took 48 hours from harvest to finish. Our journey is captured in our Instagram story here. The tea master who led us to make the tea is Xu Liang Hu (许良虎), who is the Chinese government appointed custodian of the intangible heritage of Tie Guan Yin making techniques (非物质文化遗产铁观音制作传承人). In 22nd May 2023, Tie Guan Yin technique was recognised by United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (UN FAO) as a globally important agricultural heritage system.


Brew Flavour

We are also brewing this tea in our Parchmen Glass Gaiwan, using 3g of leaves to 150ml of 95-100°C water, for 30-45 sec - same like how we brew an autumn Tie Guan Yin. We can also use the gongfu tea method, by brewing 6g of leaves to 120ml of 95-100°C water, for 15 sec. The latter method allows a more obvious changing profile for each brew. The good stamina of Tie Guan Yin allows it to be rebrewed multiple times, living up to another adage that there is residual aroma even after seven brews. 

For the light roasted tea, the dry leaves are in its classic dark green tone for both spring and autumn harvests. It can be simply said that the first impression of an spring tea is reversed to the spring tea. One first recognises the smooth and soft body in a spring tea. The strong magnolia aromas are what define the autumn harvest. Brew colour is cinnamon and it gets darker with more brews. There are slight vegetal notes, but this can be controlled with a longer brew as you like. Aftertaste is floral and sweet, turning sweeter as it cools. Its strong aroma lingers in the nose.

For the dark roasted tea, the dry leaves are slightly darker in shade. In a gongfu style of brewing, the caramelly note from the darker roast is the perfect base for the elegant magnolia and orchid notes, and these supposedly opposite notes are well harmonised in the brew. Bolder with a heavier and creamy mouthfeel, there are also notes of vanilla, chocolates and even a hint of umami and rambutan. For a moment, the tea tastes like sugar cane juice, which extends into the afterflavour - sweet and quenching, with a slight bump at the throat when one swallows the tea. With more brews, the aroma fades out but the sweetness remains.


Welcome onboard Parchmen & Co, and travel with us to savour our world in a cup!

Laman ini dilindungi oleh hCaptcha dan tertakluk pada Dasar Privasi dan Terma Perkhidmatan hCaptcha.


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