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Oolong · Wuyi rock tea
Ban Tian Yao
半天腰
“Halfway to heaven” — a rare Wuyi rock oolong from the protected Zheng Yan cliffs, heavily roasted over charcoal into a dense, buttery cup of dried fruit, caramel and stone. A connoisseur’s yancha.
- Region
- Wuyi mountains, Fujian — Zheng Yan core zone
- Harvest
- Late spring; charcoal-roasted over months
- Oxidation
- Heavily oxidised and roasted
- Cultivar
- Ban Tian Yao — a famed Wuyi cliff cultivar
In the cup
Roast, dried fruit and chocolate over a dense, buttery body — a noble bitterness turning quickly to a long sweet finish, all on a mineral “rock rhyme” base.
What it gives
Warming and powerfully tonic — the heavy roast makes it low in astringency, grounding and easy on the stomach after a meal.
Ban Tian Yao — halfway to heaven — is one of the storied named bushes of the Wuyi cliffs, its name from the legend of a seed dropped by a bird onto a ledge halfway up a sheer rock face, where it took root out of reach. Like all true yánchá it belongs to the protected Zheng Yan, the “true cliff” core zone, and is rare even there.
The making is the full Wuyi treatment: substantial oxidation, then a slow charcoal roast carried out in stages over months. The dry leaf is dark and dry-fragrant; the cup is dense and oily, roast-forward, with dried plum, apricot, chocolate and caramel, and a noble bitterness that resolves at once into a long sweetness — all carried on the wet-stone minerality, the yányùn, that marks a real rock tea.
In the cup
Brew it boiling and brief, gongfu. The first steeps lead with roast; as the leaf opens, fruit and minerality come through, and a good Ban Tian Yao gives steep after steep. A seasoned clay pot softens the fire — this is a tea to sit with, not to hurry.
How to brew
Ban Tian Yao
Water
100 °C — full boil
Leaf
6 g per 100 ml
Steep
Rinse, then 15–30 s, many steeps
Vessel
Gaiwan or seasoned clay pot
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