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White tea · Fujian

Gong Mei

gòngméi

贡眉

The "tribute eyebrow" — a white tea between White Peony and Shou Mei, with more buds than the latter and a soft honeyed-floral sweetness. Accessible, well-mannered and a fine candidate for ageing.

Region
Fujian — traditionally from the Cai Cha bush
Harvest
Spring and autumn — bud-and-leaf plucking
Oxidation
Lightly oxidised (withered and dried)
Cultivar
Cai Cha (small-leaf) and Da Bai bushes
Gong Mei

In the cup

Honeyed and floral with a soft sweetness — fuller than White Peony, more refined than a leafy Shou Mei.

What it gives

A gentle, mellow white — soft and low in astringency, soothing fresh and warming with age.

Gong Mei — tribute eyebrow — sits in the middle of the Fujian white-tea family. It carries more bud and tip than the leaf-heavy Shou Mei, which gives it a finer, sweeter cup, but it is more abundant and approachable than the prized White Peony. Traditionally it was made from the small-leaf Cai Cha bush, and the name nods to tea once sent as tribute.

Like all whites, it is made the simplest way — withered and dried, nothing more — which leaves the leaf open to slow change in storage. Fresh, Gong Mei is soft, honeyed and lightly floral; given years, it sweetens and deepens like its leafier cousin.

In the cup

Brew off the boil, around 85–95 °C, with short steeps that you can extend as the leaf opens. The cup is gentle and honey-sweet with a floral edge, generous over several rounds. Well-stored cakes age gracefully and take happily to a hotter, longer brew.

How to brew

Gong Mei

Water

85–95 °C

Leaf

5 g per 100 ml

Steep

Short steeps, several rounds

Vessel

Gaiwan; aged leaf takes boiling