I stand correctedkyarazen wrote:hmm.. top grade dancong is abt same price as top grade yancha..that is to exclude the bubbled examples.
expect 1 jin 500g to be about 8k-15k usd for either![]()

I stand correctedkyarazen wrote:hmm.. top grade dancong is abt same price as top grade yancha..that is to exclude the bubbled examples.
expect 1 jin 500g to be about 8k-15k usd for either![]()
yancha's more bubbled. more publicity.. different volume toojayinhk wrote:I stand correctedkyarazen wrote:hmm.. top grade dancong is abt same price as top grade yancha..that is to exclude the bubbled examples.
expect 1 jin 500g to be about 8k-15k usd for either![]()
I've never seen dancong at those prices!
Wow, you are definitely in a different league from everyone else on here with tea sessions like that! By "pk" session do you mean "pk" as in HK slang?kyarazen wrote:yancha's more bubbled. more publicity.. different volume toojayinhk wrote:I stand correctedkyarazen wrote:hmm.. top grade dancong is abt same price as top grade yancha..that is to exclude the bubbled examples.
expect 1 jin 500g to be about 8k-15k usd for either![]()
I've never seen dancong at those prices!
and more regions involved. you can see lots of talk about yancha so the prices of these teas are more encountered.
dancong gets lesser "heat" in the media, except that good dancong is really really hard to come by. i've had a dancong from a 300 year old tree, zi lan, was approx 50k rmb/jin. it was a "pk" session between this tea and hojo's osmanthus laocong guihua (approx 6-7k/kg?). both were extremely enjoyable, when we had that tea session we were up in the wuyi mountains and the mist of the night was blowing into our faces![]()
with regards to dancong, i used to speak well of a local dancong merchant, but these days, their inconsistencies and lesser storage methods have left me sorely disappointed to the point of not being a returning customer anymore.. many of the mail ordered ones or free samples from insta/fb marketing are always doped with added aromatics.. tough to get decent good tea~
I think when bitterness hits you depends on the tea--I have a jin of 2016 dancong right now that is acceptably bitter in the first infusion, but this passes and then you get lovely huigan. It has the strongest osmanthus aroma I've had from dancong yet, and that flavor persists for a good, long while.ethan wrote:? about dancing: Does bitterness usually present itself sooner or later?
Comment/?: In Taiwan a jin is 600 grams, not 500 as mentioned in this thread. Is a jin 600 grams someplaces & less grams other places?
I think this sounds right for the Wu Yi Shui Xian varietal. But my sources insist that Dankyarazen wrote:chong an county's publication record : shuixian mother trees are located at shui ji county (in modern day jian yang town), da hu peach hillock's zhu xian dong, during the daoguang era, it was discoverd by a farmer with surname Su, was highly propagated and this tea was called Zhu xian tea, due to the local dialect, zhu xian eventually evolved to shuixian as the words "zhu" in dialect sounds the same as "water" in that dialect. towards end of qing dynasty was more largely propagated over wuyi.
祝仙洞, 祝仙茶。
water in that dialect was like "zhui"..
benm3 wrote:I think this sounds right for the Wu Yi Shui Xian varietal. But my sources insist that Dankyarazen wrote:chong an county's publication record : shuixian mother trees are located at shui ji county (in modern day jian yang town), da hu peach hillock's zhu xian dong, during the daoguang era, it was discoverd by a farmer with surname Su, was highly propagated and this tea was called Zhu xian tea, due to the local dialect, zhu xian eventually evolved to shuixian as the words "zhu" in dialect sounds the same as "water" in that dialect. towards end of qing dynasty was more largely propagated over wuyi.
祝仙洞, 祝仙茶。
water in that dialect was like "zhui"..
Cong Shui Xian is not a single varietal, and that it's specifically not the Wu Yi Shui Xian varietal. Rather it is a broad term for many varietals from the Phoenix region. You could, for instance, say that most Phoenix tea is Shui Xian, but that just doesn't mean that it's related to Yan Cha. It is actually related to Yan Cha, but for other reasons. I concede that I might be wrong, but I trust my sources here.
kyarazen wrote:benm3 wrote:I think this sounds right for the Wu Yi Shui Xian varietal. But my sources insist that Dankyarazen wrote:chong an county's publication record : shuixian mother trees are located at shui ji county (in modern day jian yang town), da hu peach hillock's zhu xian dong, during the daoguang era, it was discoverd by a farmer with surname Su, was highly propagated and this tea was called Zhu xian tea, due to the local dialect, zhu xian eventually evolved to shuixian as the words "zhu" in dialect sounds the same as "water" in that dialect. towards end of qing dynasty was more largely propagated over wuyi.
祝仙洞, 祝仙茶。
water in that dialect was like "zhui"..
Cong Shui Xian is not a single varietal, and that it's specifically not the Wu Yi Shui Xian varietal. Rather it is a broad term for many varietals from the Phoenix region. You could, for instance, say that most Phoenix tea is Shui Xian, but that just doesn't mean that it's related to Yan Cha. It is actually related to Yan Cha, but for other reasons. I concede that I might be wrong, but I trust my sources here.
if you look in the 1980s "canonized" 茶经that was used by tea farmers etc and all the tea educators.. then feng huang shuixian is a grade. top grade from fenghuang is dancong, 2nd grade lang cai, third grade shuixian.
thats when subjectivity comes into play.. and also the hand of merchants and middlemen. nothing wrong with fenghuang shuixian being $4 per gram, although many dancongs and related teas are a small fraction of such a price due to large scale farming, industrial methods and fragrance dopings.benm3 wrote:Yes, Kyarazen, I have read that too. And it is also conforms with my basic poitn that we're not talking about the same thing as Wu Yi Shui Xian. But I want to push back against this view a little bit. If it's always low grade Phonenix tea, then why have I spent $4 per gram on Phoenix Shui Xian?
Wow. If my math is right, 15k for 500g is nearly $900/oz, $30US/g.kyarazen wrote:hmm.. top grade dancong is abt same price as top grade yancha..that is to exclude the bubbled examples.
expect 1 jin 500g to be about 8k-15k usd for either![]()