Anxi Tieguanyin Strong Flavor 浓香铁观音 Ti Kwan Yin Oolong Tea
Delight in the complexity and smoothness of Anxi Tieguanyin Strong Flavor 浓香铁观音 Oolong Tea. Enjoy its rich and robust flavor, the result of a unique terroir and hand-crafted roasting process. The tea's complex aroma and lasting aftertaste will leave you wanting more.
Tea Name:Anxi Tieguanyin Tea 安溪铁观音茶
Other names:铁观音,Ti Kwan Yin, Anxi Tie Guan Yin, Iron Goddess of Mercy
Taste:This Tea has a very sweet, appetizing honey-life fragrance, taste and finishing. The sweet aftertaste will linger on in your mouth after a few sips. Good for multiple infusions.
Appearance: Curled jade green leaves. The infusion is yellowish in color.
Origin:An Xi, Fujian Province
Harvest Period: Spring
Storage: Keep in cool, dry and no light place
Brewing Guide:We recommend using Chinese Yixing (purple clay) or porcelain Tea ware. Rinse Tea cup and Teapot with hot water. Fill the Teapot 1/4 to 1/3 full with Tea leaves, or 2 grams of Tea leaves for every 150ml of water if you are not using Yixing Teapot. Steep Tea leaves in hot water at 100°c (212°F) for 1 minute for the first and second brewing. Gradually increase steeping time for subsequent brewing.
This is probably the most famous of all Chinese Oolong Teas. The name Tie Guan Yin means "Iron Goddess of Mercy" and the Tea is as magnificent as its name implies. There are many legends surrounding the origin of its name and one of it tells the story of a kind-hearted but poor farmer named Wei Yin. Despite working hard every day to make a living, Wei Yin would spend his free time tending an abandoned Guan Yin (Goddess of Mercy) temple he found near his place. One day, he fell asleep in the temple and dreamed about the Goddess telling him to look for a cave behind the temple. There, he found a single Tea shoot where he took home and planted it in an iron pot. Slowly, it grew into a Tea bush with exceptional quality Tea leaves. Wei then gave cuttings to his neighbors and friends to grow. The County soon prospered due to the popularity of the Tea. Tie Guan Yin can now be found in the menu of most Chinese restaurants throughout the world.