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Oolong · Fujian
Tieguanyin
tiěguānyīn · 铁观音
“Iron goddess of mercy” — the orchid-scented oolong of Anxi, rolled into tight emerald pellets that open into whole leaves. The modern green style is floral and creamy; older roasted styles run toasty and deep.
- Region
- Anxi county, Fujian
- Harvest
- Spring and autumn; autumn prized for aroma
- Oxidation
- Lightly oxidised (modern green style ~20%)
- Cultivar
- Tieguanyin
In the cup
Orchid and lilac on the nose, a creamy, buttery body and a long, sweet, faintly floral finish.
What it gives
A gentle, sustained lift — partly oxidised, so easier on an empty stomach than a green, with a calming aftertaste.
Tieguanyin — the iron goddess of mercy — is the most famous oolong of Anxi in southern Fujian, and the tea that most people picture when they picture a “green” oolong. Its leaves are rolled into tight, semi-ball pellets that look almost like green pebbles and unfurl, over several steeps, into whole intact leaves.
Two styles share the name. The dominant modern green style is only lightly oxidised and barely roasted, all orchid aroma and creamy sweetness. The older traditional roasted style takes the same leaf further — more oxidation, a real charcoal roast — into toasty, honeyed, longer-keeping territory. Both are correct; they are simply different readings of the cultivar.
In the cup
This is a tea for gongfu brewing: a lot of leaf, a small vessel, near-boiling water, and many short infusions that evolve from floral to creamy to mineral. The first proper steep blooms with that signature orchid note the Chinese call guānyīn yùn, the “goddess rhyme”.
How to brew
Tieguanyin
Water
95 °C — near boiling
Leaf
7 g per 120 ml
Steep
20–40 s, many steeps
Vessel
Gaiwan or small pot
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