tea.style · sampling channel Encyclopedia · School · Atlas · Pu-erh · Equipment EN · RU · · · FR · ES · AR
tea.style Cart (0)
dry
wet
liquor
plantation

home · tees-and-sweats

Tees & sweats

Tour 2026 autumn tee — Phoenix Mountain run

*Fèng Huáng Shān Qiū Jì 2026*

凤凰山秋季2026

A fleeting dancong pressed from the quiet stone slopes of Wudong, captured on the autumn sourcing run — 80 cakes only, each box printed with the cultivar map of Phoenix Mountain.

$46USD · 180 g

Weight
180 g
Harvest
Autumn 2026
Elevation
1050 m
Cultivar
*Yā Shī Xiāng* (鸭屎香)
Processing
Traditional Fenghuang dancong: medium oxidation, charcoal baking over lychee-wood ash, rolled and rested for six months before release.
Sourced by

Pressed on the mountain, signed by the street

This cake holds the dust of an October afternoon on Wudong. Sandry Law, our Head of Procurement for China, walked the old stone paths above Pingkeng Village with Master Lin Bao, a fifth-generation dancong maker who still refuses mechanical rollers. Together they tasted through 23 lots of 2026 autumn flush — the season when the mountain’s character turns from brilliant florals into something rounder, earthier, more private. The chosen leaves are all Yā Shī Xiāng, grown on a single southwest-facing slope at 1050 m, shaded by wild persimmons and eroded by the nightly fog that rolls up from the ravine. Processing happened that night in the Lin family’s half‑open factory. Sandry stayed until 3 a.m., hand‑rolling alongside Master Lin and two of his nephews, keeping the oxidation just short of the usual 30 percent to preserve the almost‑green clarity he wanted. Then, the charcoal bake — three months on slow, fragrant lychee‑wood ash, turning the leaves twice a week. Only 80 cakes were pressed, each wrapped in thick cotton paper and stamped with a hand‑drawn map of the twelve main dancong cultivars. The map is a quiet gift: wear it on your shelf, hang it on your wall, or let it yellow with age — this is the tea of the 2026 autumn run, the one the mountain sent back with us.

The leaf, brewed

Butter orchid, warm stonefruit, and a whisper of baked honey — autumn clarity on the mountain.

dry leaf

Long, tightly twisted leaves of deep emerald and brown; aroma of nectarines, toasted hazelnut, and a distant floral high note.

wet leaf

Leaves unfurl to show glossy, olive-green edges with russet centers; the rinse releases a cloud of orchid and roasted almond.

liquor

Pale golden, bright, and transparent. The liquor clings to the glass in slow, oily legs.

aroma

A velvety bouquet of gardenia, browned butter, and ripe persimmon, lifted by a mineral edge of wet granite.

taste

Silky up front with a burst of osmanthus honey, then white peach and a soft, woody spice. Minerality builds in the mid-palate, balancing the sweetness.

finish

Long and cooling, with a faint huigan of melon rind and a lingering aftertaste of roasted barley — clean, never dry.

Brewing

A method, not a recipe.

Method
gongfu
Ratio
5 g : 100 ml
Water temp
95
First infusion
20
Subsequent
8–10 infusions; add 5 seconds each steep after the third. Flash rinse at the 7th to revive aromatics.

Rinse leaves quickly to wake them; pour from a height into a flat-bottomed gaiwan to encourage the leaves to spin and open fully.

Sourced by

Sandry Law

Head of Procurement (China)

Full profile →