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Lǐngtóu Qí Lán
Lǐngtóu qí lán · 岭头奇兰
During the development of Raoping tea cultivation, a separate line was selected from the Qi Lan population through breeding — Lǐngtóu Dāncóng (岭头单丛, Lǐngtóu Dāncóng), also known as Bái Yè Dāncóng (白叶单丛, «white-leaf dancong»), which was approved as a provincial variety in 1988 and as a national tea bush variety in…
Lǐngtóu Qí Lán (岭头奇兰, Lǐngtóu qí lán) — a Guangdong oolong with pronounced orchid aroma and characteristic ginseng notes, originating from Lingtou Village in Raoping County, Guangdong Province. Folk nicknames include «Qiao Wulong» (俏乌龙, Qiào Wūlóng, «elegant oolong») and «Hongjun Cha» (红军茶, Hóngjūn Chá, «Red Army tea»). The tea is distinguished by elegant orchid aromatics, clean sweet taste, and deep aftertaste with ginseng undertones, setting it apart among other Guangdong oolongs.
1. Classification and Origin:
- Type: Oolong (semi-oxidized tea, oxidation degree 30–50%). According to the Chinese six-color classification, it belongs to qingcha (青茶, qīngchá).
- Category: Guǎngdōng oolongs (广东乌龙, Guǎngdōng Wūlóng). Lǐngtóu Qí Lán belongs to the Guǎngdōng school of oolongs alongside Fènghuáng Dāncóng (凤凰单丛) and Fènghuáng Shuǐxiān (凤凰水仙), however it differs from them in both cultivar and processing style. In some sources it is erroneously classified as Minnan oolongs due to the Fujian origin of the planting material — this is incorrect: both the growing territory and production technology definitively place this tea in the Guangdong group.
- Origin: China, Guǎngdōng Province (广东省, Guǎngdōng Shěng), Cháozhōu City (潮州市, Cháozhōu Shì), Ráopíng County (饶平县, Ráopíng Xiàn), Fúbīn Town (浮滨镇, Fúbīn Zhèn, formerly Píngxī Town (坪溪镇, Píngxī Zhèn) before administrative reform), Lǐngtóu Village (岭头村, Lǐngtóu Cūn). Main plantations are located on the slopes of Shuangjiniang Mountain (双髻娘山, Shuāngjìniáng Shān, elevation about 400 m) and Xīyán Mountain (西岩山, Xīyán Shān, elevation up to 1100 m). Production has also spread to neighboring towns Jianrao (建饶) and Xinfeng (新丰) and generally throughout Raoping County territory.
- Geographic coordinates: Approximately 23°51′ N, 116°45′ E (Lingtou Village area, Fenghuang mountain range).
2. History and Cultural Significance:
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History: Tea culture in Raoping County spans about three hundred years. According to the local chronicle «Raoping Chaye Sanbainian» (饶平茶叶三百年, «Three Hundred Years of Raoping Tea»), in the 1930s tea seedlings were brought from Xiùzhuàn Village (秀篆村) in Zhao’an County (诏安县), Fujian Province, and planted on the northern slopes of hills in Lingtou Village. From these plantings came the line of large-leaf cultivar Dà Yè Qí Lán (大叶奇兰), which subsequently became the foundation of local tea cultivation.
During the development of Raoping tea cultivation, a separate line was selected from the Qi Lan population through breeding — Lǐngtóu Dāncóng (岭头单丛, Lǐngtóu Dāncóng), also known as Bái Yè Dāncóng (白叶单丛, «white-leaf dancong»), which was approved as a provincial variety in 1988 and as a national tea bush variety in 2002. However, Lingtou Qi Lan proper remains an independent product made from the original Da Ye Qi Lan cultivar.
The tea quickly gained recognition at the regional level: in 1974 it received the highest rating at the Shantou district tea competition; in 1978 it took first place among oolongs at the Guangdong provincial competition; in 1987 it was awarded the title «Excellent Product of Guangdong Province». In the 2010s production volumes decreased due to shifting consumer preferences, however premium positions (particularly high-mountain Xiyan Qi Lan) again reached price levels exceeding 1000 yuan per jin.
There exists a local legend connecting the tea with revolutionary history: during the stay of Red Army units in the Raoping area, commanders drank this tea to restore strength, hence it received the folk nickname «Hongjun Cha» (红军茶, «Red Army tea»). The historicity of this episode is not documented, however it has firmly entered local tea culture.
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Name: «Lingtou» (岭头) — literally «ridge peak», a toponym of the village of origin, located on the crest of a hilly ridge. «Qi» (奇) — «amazing, unusual». «Lan» (兰) — «orchid». Thus, the full name translates as «amazing orchid from Lingtou ridge peak», reflecting the tea’s main organoleptic characteristic — pronounced orchid aroma.
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Cultural significance: Lǐngtóu Qǐ Làn occupies ān important place in the tea tradition of eastern Guǎngdōng (粤东, Yuèdōng). Lingtou Village became a kind of cradle of Raoping oolong cultivation: it was here that a unique style was formed, combining orchid aromatics with ginseng notes — the so-called «shenyun» (参韵, shēnyùn, «ginseng resonance»). The tea is closely connected with the gōngfū tea culture (工夫茶, gōngfū chá) of the Chaoshan region, where highly aromatic oolongs with long aftertaste are valued. The folk nickname «Qiao Wulong» (俏乌龙, «elegant oolong») emphasizes the refined, elegant character of the beverage.
3. Botanical Description and Raw Material:
- Variety / Cultivar: Dà Yè Qí Lán (大叶奇兰, Dà Yè Qí Lán, «large-leaf orchid»), Camellia sinensis var. sinensis. Morphological type — bush or small tree (灌木/小乔木型), medium-leaf class. Leaves are elongated-elliptical, average leaf length about 9.0 cm, width about 3.5 cm, 7–9 pairs of veins. Leaf color is yellow-green with pronounced luster. Flowers have 7 petals, corolla diameter 3.0–4.0 cm, pistil three-parted. The variety is characterized by high shoot formation vigor and early awakening: vegetation begins in February, the «one bud — three leaves» period falls in mid to late March. The productive season lasts until the end of November. Resistant to cutting propagation.
- Harvest: Main seasons — spring (March — April) and autumn (September — October). Spring leaf possesses longer tenderness and richer aroma; autumn is valued for depth of flavor. Summer harvest is also practiced but yields less aromatic product.
- Harvest standard: One bud and two-three leaves (一芽二三叶). Weight of one hundred shoots in the «one bud — three leaves» standard is about 121.0 g. For highest grades the «one bud — two leaves» standard is used; for mass-market production more mature shoots are acceptable.
- Raw material requirements: Harvest is conducted in clear weather in the afternoon when morning dew has completely evaporated. Gentle handling is required: shoots are laid one by one in bamboo baskets, avoiding compression and overheating. Leaves must be whole, evenly mature, without mechanical damage and foreign odors.
4. Terroir and Cultivation:
- Region and topography: Tea gardens are located on hilly slopes of the Fènghuáng mountain range (凤凰山脉, Fènghuáng Shānmài), in whose foothills Lingtou Village is situated. Topography consists of steep hills and narrow valleys covered with subtropical evergreen forest. The production core is concentrated in two zones: Shuangjiniang Mountain (双髻娘山, about 400 m above sea level) with plots in pristine forest massif, and Xīyán Mountain (西岩山, up to 1100 m), where trees are covered with moss and conditions create a denser, «ginseng» tea profile.
- Growing elevation: From 300 to 1100 m above sea level. Tea from Xiyan Mountain (above 800 m) is considered premium and distinguished by deeper «shenyun».
- Climate: Humid subtropical. Average annual temperature about 21°C, annual precipitation exceeds 1500 mm, number of foggy days — more than 200 per year. Significant diurnal temperature variation stimulates accumulation of aromatic substances in leaves. Abundant fog reduces direct sunlight intensity, increasing amino acid content and softening astringency.
- Soils: Red-yellow soils formed by weathering of granitic rocks (花岗岩风化红黄壤). Acidity pH 5.0–6.0, high organic matter content. In the core production zone chemical fertilizer use is prohibited; traditional fertilization uses peanut cake (花生麸). Soils of the productive Xiyan area are enriched with selenium (0.15–0.35 mg/kg), which is a distinctive feature of the local terroir.
5. Production Technology:
Lingtou Qi Lan is produced using classic Guangdong oolong technology with characteristic multi-stage «shaking» system (碰青/摇青) and drying. The principal feature is orientation toward the principle «look at tea — make tea» (看茶做茶, kàn chá zuò chá): the master adjusts regimes at each stage depending on leaf condition. At all stages bamboo and wooden utensils are used to exclude contact with metal and associated undesirable oxidation.
- Harvest / 采摘 — cǎizhāi: Shoots are hand-picked in clear weather in the afternoon. Each shoot is carefully separated and immediately placed in a bamboo basket, not allowing compression of the mass.
- Solar withering / 晒青 — shàiqīng: Harvested leaves are spread in a thin layer on bamboo sieves (竹筛, zhúshāi) and kept in open air for about 4 hours. Leaves lose part of their moisture, become pliable; aromatic base formation begins.
- Shaking / 碰青 — pèngqīng (摇青 — yáoqīng): Key stage determining aroma character. 7–9 shaking cycles are conducted, predominantly at night, alternating active shaking with rest periods (分段促香, fēnduàn cùxiāng — «staged aroma stimulation»). Mechanical damage to leaf edges triggers enzymatic oxidation of cellular juice; characteristic red-brown borders form in contact zones, while essential oils with orchid profile are released from the central part of leaves.
- Fixation / 杀青 — shāqīng: Heating in rotary drum at about 220°C. High temperature inactivates enzymes and fixes the oxidation and aroma balance achieved at the previous stage.
- Rolling / 揉捻 — róuniǎn: Leaves are rolled into longitudinal strips (条索形, tiáosuǒ xíng). Rolling destroys cell walls and ensures even extraction during brewing. Unlike the spherical rolling (球形) of Minnan oolongs, the Guangdong style preserves elongated, strip-like form.
- Drying / 烘干 — hōnggān: Final drying brings leaf moisture to ≤ 6%, ensuring stability during storage. Finished tea undergoes additional «fire correction» (足火, zúhuǒ) if necessary to enhance nutty and caramel notes.
6. Organoleptic Characteristics:
- Dry leaf appearance: Tight, elongated strips (条索, tiáosuǒ), dense and weighty. Leaf plates are narrow-shouldered, calibration is even. Color — yellow-green with dark olive tint and characteristic «sand-green» luster (砂绿, shālǜ). Surface is oily.
- Dry leaf aroma: Clean orchid aroma (兰花香, lánhuā xiāng) — leading note, complemented by delicate sweetness and cool green undertone. In aged and high-mountain samples ginseng tone (参香, shēnxiāng) appears. In versions with full roasting (足火) roasted rice notes (炒米香, chǎomǐ xiāng) are perceptible.
- Liquor aroma: Multi-layered floral-sweet spectrum. In first steeps bright orchid predominates; as leaves unfold honey, fruity and light spicy notes appear. Aroma persistently holds on cup walls (附杯香, fùbēi xiāng). In high-mountain samples from Xiyan-shan ginseng «resonance» (参韵, shēnyùn) builds from steep to steep.
- Taste: Clean and mellow (清醇, qīngchún), with medium body density. Sweetness is pronounced and appears early (甘鲜, gānxiān). Light astringency quickly dissolves (微涩速化, wēisè sùhuà), leaving powerful returning aftertaste (回甘, huígān). Taste is balanced: orchid delicacy at the beginning, creamy fullness in the middle and lasting sweetness at the finish. Tea withstands multiple brewings well — up to 7–9 steeps without significant character loss.
- Liquor color: Clear yellow or golden-yellow (清黄或金黄, qīnghuáng huò jīnhuáng), transparent and bright. With enhanced roasting the shade shifts toward orange-amber.
- Spent leaves (wet leaves): Leaves unfold into diamond-shaped, elegant plates (棱形清秀, léngxíng qīngxiù) with clearly visible whitish central vein (主脉浮白, zhǔmài fúbái). Leaf edges have pronounced red border (红边, hóngbiān), center is green-olive. Texture is soft and resilient.
7. Chemical Composition:
- Polyphenols: Tea polyphenol content in fresh leaves is about 20–25%. During partial oxidation, part of catechins transforms into theaflavins and thearubigins, providing balance between freshness and depth of flavor. According to analysis of spring shoots of Lingtou Dancong cultivar (related line), polyphenol content in dry raw material reaches 37.2%.
- Amino acids: Free amino acid content about 1.5% (spring harvest). L-theanine — the leading amino acid — is responsible for gentle sweetness and «silky» liquor texture, as well as synergistic effect with caffeine, providing calm concentration without excessive stimulation.
- Alkaloids: Caffeine — about 4.4% in dry matter, which is relatively high among oolongs. Theobromine and theophylline are present in trace amounts and complement caffeine’s tonic action.
- Vitamins: Vitamin C (in insignificant amounts, partially destroyed during fixation), B-group vitamins (B₁, B₂), vitamin E (tocopherols).
- Minerals: Potassium, calcium, magnesium, manganese, zinc, iron, sodium, copper. Tea from Xiyan Mountain contains elevated selenium (Se) levels: productive zone soils are enriched with this element (0.15–0.35 mg/kg), which transfers to leaves and makes this tea one of the few naturally selenium-containing oolongs.
- Essential oils: Rich volatile complex including linalool, nerol, geraniol and their derivatives, forming the characteristic orchid profile. Aromatic substance content is elevated due to significant temperature variation, fogginess and multiple nighttime shakings.
8. Health Properties:
- Tonic and cognitive support: High caffeine content combined with L-theanine provides gentle, sustained energy boost without the sharp peak and crash characteristic of coffee. Improves concentration and reaction speed.
- Antioxidant action: Tea polyphenols neutralize free radicals, contributing to cell protection from oxidative stress. Selenium content in Xiyan tea additionally enhances antioxidant potential.
- Digestive support: Processing technology with multiple shakings and heating promotes enzyme formation that favorably affects digestive processes. Traditionally recommended for consumption one hour after meals.
- Lipid metabolism regulation: Tea polyphenols in oolongs accelerate fat breakdown and reduce lipid absorption from food, which with regular consumption may contribute to maintaining healthy weight.
- Cardiovascular system: Potassium and magnesium contained in tea contribute to maintaining normal blood pressure; polyphenols promote vascular elasticity.
- Skin condition: Antioxidant properties of polyphenols and selenium provide indirect skin health support, slowing photoaging processes.
- Mindful tea practice: Multiple brewing in gongfu format encourages meditative rhythm, reducing subjective stress levels.
9. Brewing:
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Water temperature: 95°C for standard versions; 90–95°C for young spring leaf of light style (清香型); 95–100°C (rolling boil) for well-roasted versions (足火).
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Tea amount: 7 g per 150 ml (gongfu); 3–4 g per 250–300 ml (European style). For cold brewing — 5 g per 500 ml.
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Teaware: For full aromatic spectrum development, preferred are: Yíxīng purple clay teapot (紫砂壶, zǐshā hú) or red clay teapot (红陶壶, hóngtáo hú) — especially for roasted versions; white porcelain gaiwan (盖碗, gàiwǎn) — universal option suitable for any style.
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Process:
- Warm teaware with boiling water, drain.
- Add tea and let dry leaves warm in hot vessel for 10–15 seconds, inhale aroma.
- Rinse brewing (润茶, rùnchá): pour boiling water, drain after 3 seconds. This liquor is not consumed — it «awakens» the leaves.
- First steep: pour water, hold for 10 seconds, pour into cups.
- Subsequent steeps: increase time by 5 seconds with each steep.
- Tea withstands 7–9 full steeps; high-mountain samples — up to 10–12.
Cold brewing: place 5 g tea in 500 ml mineral water, keep in refrigerator for 4 hours. Result — refreshing liquor with clean orchid aroma and gentle sweetness.
10. Storage:
- Conditions: Airtight packaging (vacuum foil bag or tin with tight lid), dry and cool place, away from direct sunlight. Optimal temperature — 15–25°C, humidity — below 60%.
- Features: Light style versions (清香型) are more sensitive to storage conditions and better preserved in refrigerator at 0–5°C. Roasted versions (足火) are significantly more stable and can be stored at room temperature for 2–3 years.
- Fresh tea: Newly produced tea is recommended to rest unopened for about one week in a dark place for «resting» and removal of residual «fire character» (退火, tuìhuǒ), after which aroma unfolds more fully.
- Tea enemies: Moisture, high temperature, foreign odors and direct sunlight — four main factors leading to quality degradation.
11. Market and Price Range:
- Price category: Price is determined by grade, plantation elevation, harvest season, degree of hand processing and producer reputation. Approximate ranges (prices in yuan per jin / 500 g): special grade (特级, tèjí) — from 1000 yuan and above; first grade (一级) — 300–800 yuan; second grade (二级) — 100–300 yuan. High-mountain Xīyán Qí Lán (西岩奇兰) is positioned in the upper segment and may significantly exceed indicated ranges.
- Authenticity Identification:
- Purchase tea from sellers with transparent origin chain, preferably directly from producers in Raoping County.
- Evaluate appearance: authentic Lingtou Qi Lan has thin, dense, weighty strips with «sand-green» luster and narrow leaf «shoulders». Coarse, loose or uneven leaf is a sign of substitution.
- Check aroma: genuine Qi Lan possesses clean, unfading orchid without sharp «perfumery» or «chemical» notes. Artificial flavoring betrays itself through obtrusiveness and rapid scent fading.
- Test liquor: authentic tea gives transparent golden-yellow liquor with sweet aftertaste and «ginseng resonance». Cloudy liquor, sour or empty taste — signs of low-quality product.
- Correlate price with claimed level: suspiciously low price for «special grade» or «high-mountain Xiyan» — signal of probable fake.
12. Recommended Sources:
- Direct purchase from Raoping County producers through established tea merchants with transparent supply chains.
- Reputable tea shops specializing in Guangdong oolongs with proper storage conditions and knowledgeable staff.
- Tea exhibitions and festivals in the Chaoshan region where authentic producers present their products.
- Online platforms with verified seller ratings and detailed product descriptions including harvest date, elevation, and processing details.
Interesting Facts:
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Lingtou Village became the birthplace of two recognized tea products simultaneously: Lingtou Qi Lan (from Da Ye Qi Lan cultivar) and Lingtou Dancong (from selected Bai Ye Dancong line). Both teas originate from the same 1930s plantings but represent different breeding lines and yield products with different flavor profiles.
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The name «俏乌龙» (Qiao Wulong, «elegant oolong»), current among local tea growers, reflects perception of the tea as a more refined, «feminine» alternative to powerful dancongs from Fenghuang-shan. If Fènghuáng dancongs are often described through metaphors of mountain power (山韵, «mountain resonance»), then Qi Lan — through metaphors of orchid tenderness and elegance.
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Xiyan Mountain soils enriched with selenium make local tea one of the few naturally selenium-containing oolongs of Guangdong. Selenium — an essential microelement important for body’s antioxidant protection — enters leaves through the root system, not added externally.
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The characteristic «ginseng note» (参韵, shēnyùn) of Lingtou Qi Lan is not related to ginseng addition — it forms exclusively through combination of terroir, cultivar and processing technology. This fundamentally distinguishes Lingtou Qi Lan from «ginseng oolong» (人参乌龙, rénsēn wūlóng), in which tea is physically mixed with ginseng powder.
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The technological principle «look at tea — make tea» (看茶做茶) means that two absolutely identical batches of Lingtou Qi Lan never exist: the master each time adjusts shaking, fixation and drying regimes depending on weather, leaf moisture and season stage.
Comparison with other Guangdong and «orchid» oolongs:
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Fènghuáng Zhī Lán Xiāng Dāncóng (凤凰芝兰香单丛, Fènghuáng Zhī Lán Xiāng Dāncóng): Closest stylistic analog from the Fenghuang dancong school. Both teas have orchid aromatics, however Fenghuang Zhi Lan Xiang is produced from Fenghuang dancong cultivars and possesses more pronounced «mountain note» (山韵, shānyùn). Lingtou Qi Lan is softer, sweeter and has unique «ginseng resonance» absent in Fenghuang analogs.
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Lingtou Dancong / Bái Yè Dāncóng (岭头单丛 / 白叶单丛, Lǐngtóu Dāncóng / Bái Yè Dāncóng): Originates from the same village but from different breeding clone. Lingtou Dancong is distinguished by honey-floral aroma (蜜兰香, mìlán xiāng) and orange-yellow liquor, while Qi Lan tends toward pure orchid and lighter liquor. Dancong is officially recognized as national variety; Qi Lan remains a more niche product.
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Bái Yá Qí Lán (白芽奇兰, Bái Yá Qí Lán): Fújiàn oolong from Pínghé County (平和县), also bearing «Qi Lan» in the name and possessing orchid aroma. However this is a separate cultivar (灌木型, medium-leaf, early-medium), growing in southern Fujian mountains. Bai Ya Qi Lan liquor is usually lighter and fresher, with pronounced green-floral notes and without ginseng undertone. Leaf form is also strip-like but less weighty.
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Wǔyí Qí Lán (武夷奇兰, Wǔyí Qí Lán): Qí Lán variety cultivated in Wǔyí Mountains (武夷山) using yancha (岩茶) technology. Cultivar brought from Pinghe or Guangdong adapted to Danxia topography, and finished tea acquires characteristic «bone structure» (岩骨, yángǔ) — mineral foundation atypical for Guangdong versions. Orchid note is present but complemented by almond and caramel overtones from charcoal roasting.
In conclusion:
Lingtou Qi Lan — tea for those who value elegance without ostentation. Unlike bright and powerful Fenghuang dancongs that take with aroma intensity and depth of «mountain resonance», Qi Lan offers chamber, subtle experience: pure orchid, gentle sweetness, gradually manifesting ginseng undertone and aftertaste that doesn’t release for long minutes after the sip. This is tea in which the terroir of eastern Guangdong hills — granitic red soils, foggy dawns, night coolness — is imprinted not abstractly but tangibly, in every steep.
Born from Fujian roots but shaped by Guangdong soil and mastery of Chaozhou craftsmen, Lingtou Qi Lan remains one of the most undervalued oolongs of southern China — and all the more precious for those ready to discover it.
13. Comparison with other Guangdong and “orchid” oolongs:
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Fènghuáng Zhī Lán Xiāng Dāncóng (凤凰芝兰香单丛, Fènghuáng Zhī Lán Xiāng Dāncóng): The closest stylistic analogue from the Fenghuang school of dancongs. Both teas have orchid aromatics, however Fenghuang Zhi Lan Xiang is produced from Fenghuang dancong cultivars and possesses a more pronounced “mountain note” (山韵, shānyùn). Lingtou Qi Lan is softer, sweeter and has a unique “ginseng resonance” absent in Fenghuang analogues.
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Lingtou Dancong / Bái Yè Dāncóng (岭头单丛 / 白叶单丛, Lǐngtóu Dāncóng / Bái Yè Dāncóng): Originates from the same village, but from a different breeding clone. Lingtou Dancong is distinguished by honey-floral aroma (蜜兰香, mìlán xiāng) and orange-yellow liquor, while Qi Lan tends toward pure orchid and lighter liquor. Dancong is officially recognized as a national variety; Qi Lan remains a more niche product.
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Bái Yá Qí Lán (白芽奇兰, Bái Yá Qí Lán): A Fújiàn oolong from Pínghé County (平和县), also bearing “Qi Lan” in its name and possessing orchid aroma. However, this is a separate cultivar (灌木型, medium-leaf, early-medium), growing in the mountains of southern Fujian. Bai Ya Qi Lan liquor is usually lighter and fresher, with pronounced green-floral notes and without ginseng undertones. Leaf shape is also cord-like, but less weighty.
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Wǔyí Qí Lán (武夷奇兰, Wǔyí Qí Lán): A variety of Qí Lán cultivated in Wǔyí Mountains (武夷山) using yan cha (岩茶) technology. The cultivar brought from Pinghe or Guangdong is adapted to Danxia terrain, and the finished tea acquires the characteristic “bone structure” (岩骨, yángǔ) — a mineral foundation atypical for Guangdong versions. The orchid note is present, but supplemented by almond and caramel overtones from charcoal roasting.
In conclusion:
Lingtou Qi Lan is a tea for those who value elegance without ostentation. Unlike the bright and powerful Fenghuang dancongs, which captivate with aroma intensity and depth of “mountain resonance,” Qi Lan offers an intimate, subtle experience: pure orchid, gentle sweetness, gradually emerging ginseng undertones and an aftertaste that lingers for long minutes after swallowing. This is a tea in which the terroir of eastern Guangdong hills — granite red soils, misty dawns, nighttime coolness — is captured not abstractly, but tangibly, in every steeping.
Born from Fujian roots but shaped by Guangdong soil and the mastery of Chaozhou craftsmen, Lingtou Qi Lan remains one of the most undervalued oolongs of southern China — and all the more precious for those ready to discover it.