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Oolong · Taiwan high mountain

Li Shan Wulong

líshān wūlóng

梨山烏龍

The benchmark of Taiwanese high-mountain oolong, from gardens at 1600–2600 m where cold, mist and mountain soil make a tea of exceptional tenderness. Orchid, pear and cream over a buttery, silky body.

Region
Li Shan range, Taichung, Taiwan — 1600–2600 m
Harvest
Spring and winter; bushes rest under snow
Oxidation
Lightly oxidised, rolled
Cultivar
Qing Xin oolong
Li Shan Wulong

In the cup

Orchid and gardenia over cream, pear, peach and lychee — silky and buttery, with the faintest acidity and a long, cool returning sweetness.

What it gives

A relaxing, refreshing oolong — light in caffeine and very gentle on the stomach, the kind of cup to slow down with.

Li Shan — pear mountain — is the high benchmark of Taiwanese gaoshan, high-mountain oolong. Its gardens climb from sixteen hundred to twenty-six hundred metres in the central range above Taichung, among the highest tea on earth; only a handful of gardens in Nepal, Bolivia and Kenya sit higher. Up there the cold, the mist and the mineral soil slow the bush and concentrate the leaf.

The result is tenderness above all. Made lightly oxidised and rolled into tight pellets from the Qing Xin cultivar, the cup is silky and buttery — orchid and gardenia over cream, pear, peach and lychee, with the faintest acidity and a long, cool sweetness that keeps returning. The higher the garden, the softer and sweeter the tea; the famous Fushou Shan estate gives an almost velvet texture.

In the cup

Brew it gongfu, just off the boil, and give the tight pellets a little time to open across the early steeps. A white gaiwan keeps the high fragrance true. Winter and spring pickings are the prize, after the bushes have rested — sometimes under snow — for three or four months.

How to brew

Li Shan Wulong

Water

92 °C

Leaf

6 g per 100 ml

Steep

Rinse, then 30–50 s, many steeps

Vessel

White-porcelain gaiwan