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Wùyuán xiān zhī
Wùyuán xiān zhī · 婺源仙枝
Wuyuan Xian Zhi is one of the most characteristic representatives of the tea tradition of Wuyuan County, renowned for its green teas since time immemorial. The name "Xian Zhi" (仙枝, "celestial branch") traces back to the list of famous teas of Huizhou recorded in the "Hongzhi Huizhou Fu Zhi" (弘治徽州府志) of the late 15th…
Wuyuan Xian Zhi is one of the most characteristic representatives of the tea tradition of Wuyuan County, renowned for its green teas since time immemorial. The name “Xian Zhi” (仙枝, “celestial branch”) traces back to the list of famous teas of Huizhou recorded in the “Hongzhi Huizhou Fu Zhi” (弘治徽州府志) of the late 15th century, where “xian zhi” is mentioned among eight varieties of loose and compressed teas of the prefecture. Modern Wuyuan Xian Zhi is a pure high-mountain green tea with a delicate chestnut aroma and gentle, refreshing sweetness.
1. Classification and Origin:
- Type: Green tea (non-oxidized), 炒青 (chaoqing, 炒青 — tea fixed by pan-firing in a wok).
- Category: Regional famous tea (地方名茶, dìfāng míngchá) within the “Wuyuan Lu Cha” (婺源绿茶, Wùyuán Lǜchá) system — tea with protected geographical indication (地理标志产品).
- Origin: China, Jiāngxī Province (江西省, Jiāngxī Shěng), Shàngráo City (上饶市, Shàngráo Shì), Wùyuán County (婺源县, Wùyuán Xiàn). Main production area — the Dà Zhāng Shān (大鄣山, Dà Zhāng Shān) mountain range and adjacent townships: Duanshen (段莘), Xīkǒu (溪口), Qinghua (清华), Tuochuan (沱川), Zheyuan (浙源) and others among 16 townships within the protected zone.
- Geographic coordinates: Approximately 29°01′–29°35′ N, 117°22′–118°11′ E (according to the boundaries of the “Wuyuan Lu Cha” geographical indication zone).
2. History and Cultural Significance:
- History: Wuyuan County has a documented tea cultivation history spanning more than 1,200 years. In the “Classic of Tea” (茶经, Chájīng) by Lù Yǔ (陆羽, Lù Yǔ) of the Tang era, it is mentioned that in Shezhou (歙州, Shēzhōu, — the administrative unit of that time, which included Wuyuan) “tea grows in the mountain valleys of Wuyuan” (茶生婺源山谷). In the “Memoirs of the Court Cook” (膳夫经手录, Shànfū Jīngshǒu Lù) by Yáng Huā (杨华) of the Tang period (Dazhong era, 大中, ca. 856 CE), it is directly stated that “Wùyuán compressed tea (婺源方茶) is excellently made, without admixture of tree leaves; from Liang to Song, from Yan to Bing, people highly value it.” The name “Xian Zhi” (仙枝) itself first appears in the “Hongzhi Huizhou Fu Zhi” (弘治徽州府志, ca. 1488–1505) of the Ming era: among local tea varieties are listed “Shengjin, Nensang, Xian Zhi, Laiquan, Zhuchun, Yunhe, Huaying” (胜金、嫩桑、仙枝、来泉、朱春、运合、华英). During the Ming era, Wùyuán tea was presented to the court as tribute tea (贡茶, gòngchá). In the early 20th century, American researcher William Ukers in “All About Tea” called Wuyuan green tea “not only the best of the lu-cha category, but also the highest in quality among all Chinese green teas.” In 2008, “Wuyuan Lu Cha” received protected geographical indication status (原国家质检总局2008年第122号公告). In 2010 — agricultural geographical indication status from China’s Ministry of Agriculture. In 2020, Wuyuan green tea was included in the first list of mutually recognized geographical indications between China and the EU. In 2024 — entered the national top-100 regional brands (地理标志) ranking of China.
- Name: 婺源 (Wùyuán) — county name, literally “source of the Wu River” (婺江); 仙 (xiān) — “celestial,” “immortal”; 枝 (zhī) — “branch,” “shoot.” The name “Xian Zhi” is explained by the form of the finished tea: dry tea leaves resemble straight thin pine twigs reaching upward, as if “branches of celestials.” The variant writing “仙芝” (xiānzhī — “celestial lingzhi mushroom”) is also encountered, however 仙枝 (“celestial branch”) is canonical.
- Cultural significance: Wùyuán is the birthplace of Zhú Xī (朱熹, Zhū Xī, 1130–1200), the great Neo-Confucian philosopher, who was a passionate tea lover and called himself a “tea immortal” (茶仙, cháxiān). The county was part of Huīzhōu (徽州, Huīzhōu) — one of China’s key cultural regions — from the 8th century until 1934. Tea culture here is inextricably intertwined with the traditions of Huizhou merchants: it was precisely Huizhou traders who brought Wuyuan green tea to the international market as early as the 19th century under the brand “婺绿” (Wùlǜ — “Wuyuan green”). Part of the famous “Tunxi Lu Cha” (屯溪绿茶, Túnxī Lǜchá — “屯绿”) was historically produced from Wuyuan raw material. Today the county positions itself as “China’s most beautiful village” (中国最美的乡村), and tea is its calling card: tea garden area exceeds 168,000 mu (ca. 11,200 hectares), annual spring tea production — more than 7,400 tons.
3. Botanical Description and Raw Material:
- Species: Camellia sinensis var. sinensis.
- Variety / Cultivar: The foundation of plantations consists of local population varieties (群体种, qúntǐ zhǒng), adapted to mountain terroir over centuries. Among them stands out the Shàng Méi Zhōu (上梅洲, Shàng Méizhōu) variety — a non-clonal variety developed in Shang Mei Zhou village, Meilin township, Wuyuan County. This is a large-leaf type shrub plant, early-maturing, with densely pubescent buds; it is the reference raw material for the famous “Wuyuan Mingmei” (婺源茗眉). For Xian Zhi, seedlings of this and similar local varieties are also used.
- Harvest: Main harvest — spring, from late March to mid-April (before and after Qingming). For premium batches — early spring (ming qian, 明前, míng qián). High-mountain plantations (above 800 m) often harvest slightly later due to late vegetation.
- Harvest standard: One bud and two upper leaves (一芽二叶, yī yá èr yè), just beginning to unfold (初展, chūzhǎn). For Xian Zhi, the integrity of the shoot, its freshness and absence of mechanical damage are important.
- Raw material requirements: Shoots must be uniform in length and color, without purple leaves, without pest damage, without foreign plant impurities.
4. Terroir and Cultivation:
- Growing altitude: From 200 to 1,630 m a.s.l. (highest point — Zhanggongshan peak, 鄣公山, 1,629.8 m). Premium batches of Xian Zhi are collected predominantly at altitudes from 800 to 1,000 m and higher.
- Topography: The county is located at the junction of three provinces (Jiangxi, Anhui, Zhejiang), surrounded by the Huaiyushan (怀玉山) and Huángshān (黄山) ranges. Mountains occupy more than 85% of the area; a local saying states: “eight and a half parts mountains, one part fields, half part waterways and gardens” (八分半山一分田,半分水路和庄园).
- Climate: Subtropical monsoon, average annual temperature 16.7°C. Characterized by the formula “on clear days morning and evening — fog everywhere, on cloudy days — clouds on all mountains” (晴时早晚遍地雾,阴雨成天满山云). Abundant diffused light favors amino acid accumulation.
- Precipitation: About 1,800 mm/year, with maximum in spring and early summer.
- Soils: Red-yellow soils (红黄壤, hóng huáng rǎng) predominate with pH 4.5–6.5, deep humus horizon, high organic content and good drainage capacity. About 90% of tea garden soils belong to this type.
- Ecology: Forest coverage of the county — about 86%. Many plantations are located in natural surroundings of broad-leaved forests, creating conditions of “natural shading” and biodiversity that reduces the need for pesticides.
5. Production Technology:
Wuyuan Xian Zhi is a typical representative of the Huizhou school of pan-fired green tea (炒青, chǎoqīng). The technology includes the following stages:
- Picking (采摘, cǎizhāi): Hand picking according to the “four selections” standard (四选, sì xuǎn) — selection of garden, bush, branch and bud. The rule of “eight prohibitions” applies (八不采, bā bù cǎi): do not pick non-standard, do not pick too thin or too large shoots, do not pick diseased and damaged leaves, do not pick shoots without buds, do not pick shoots with elongated internodes, do not pick scaly and “hoof-shaped” leaves, do not pick in rain, do not pick at the height of midday heat.
- Spreading / Withering (摊青, tānqīng): Freshly picked shoots are spread in a thin layer on bamboo trays in a cool, ventilated room. The process lasts 4–8 hours (no more than 10). The leaf loses surface gloss, becomes soft, moisture decreases to 70–72%, a light fresh aroma appears.
- Fixation / Kill-green (杀青, shāqīng): Key stage — high-temperature pan-firing in a wok (flat pan). Wall temperature 110–200°C according to the principle “first high, then lower” (先高后低). Batch size — about 220–250 g for hand firing. In the first 1–2 minutes — slow stirring for rapid heating; then — vigorous tossing to remove moisture and grassy smell. After ~5 minutes the leaf darkens from bright green to dark green, becomes soft, primary tea aroma appears. Moisture content decreases to ~60%.
- Rolling (揉捻, róuniǎn): Forms cellular structure, releasing juices and setting the shape of tea leaves. Requires high skill — the degree of pressure determines the richness of the future liquor.
- Shaping (做形, zuòxíng): Giving the characteristic Xian Zhi form — thin straight “twigs” with tight rolling.
- Primary drying (初烘, chū hōng): Preliminary drying at moderate temperature.
- Resting / Cooling (摊凉, tānliáng): Redistribution of residual moisture within the leaf.
- Final drying and aroma enhancement (复烘/提香, fù hōng / tíxiāng): Drying to stable moisture (~6–7%) and “lifting aroma” — stage that forms characteristic chestnut notes (栗香, lìxiāng).
6. Organoleptic Characteristics:
- Dry leaf appearance: Thin, straight, tightly rolled tea leaves resembling pine needles or twigs. Color — rich dark green (翠绿, cuìlǜ) with oily luster. White down (white pekoe, 白毫, báiháo) is visible on the surface, especially at the base of buds.
- Dry leaf aroma: Clean, high, with distinct chestnut tone (栗香) and light overtone of field flowers.
- Liquor aroma: Persistent and clean. Roasted chestnut dominates (板栗香, bǎnlì xiāng), complemented by a subtle orchid overtone (兰花香, lánhuā xiāng). Aroma persists through several infusions.
- Taste: Fresh (鲜爽, xiānshuǎng), soft, with pronounced sweetness and full body. Lǒng aftertaste with growing sweetness (回甘, huígān) and sensation of purity.
- Liquor color: Clean, bright, from light green to yellow-green (碧绿清澈明亮). High transparency.
- Spent leaves (叶底, yèdǐ): Tender green, even, with well-preserved structure of bud and two leaves. Leaves are soft and elastic.
7. Chemical Composition:
- Polyphenols (茶多酚): Content — on average about 20–27% of dry mass (characteristic of high-mountain green teas of Jiangxi). Main fraction — catechins (EGCG, EGC, ECG), providing astringent tone and antioxidant potential.
- Amino acids (氨基酸): Elevated content — data from the Tea Research Institute of CAAS (中国农业科学院茶叶研究所, 2005) showed that Wuyuan green teas have one of the highest catechin indices in the country, and the content of water-soluble extractive substances significantly exceeds the national standard (水浸出物 ≥ 36.0%). L-theanine (L-茶氨酸) — key amino acid responsible for taste sweetness and calming effect — accumulates more intensively thanks to mountain mists and diffused light.
- Alkaloids: Caffeine (咖啡碱) — ~2–4% of dry mass. Theobromine and theophylline — in trace amounts.
- Vitamins: C (ascorbic acid), B₁, B₂, E, K. High vitamin C content — characteristic feature of green teas that preserve it thanks to gentle heat treatment.
- Minerals: Potassium, manganese, fluorine, zinc, selenium (in trace amounts, depends on soil).
- Essential oils and volatile compounds: Linalool, geraniol, nerolidol, methyl salicylate — responsible for chestnut and floral tones in aroma.
- Peculiarity: According to inspection data, Wuyuan green teas are distinguished by exceptionally high content of water-soluble extractive substances with moderate polyphenol content, creating a “rich but mild” flavor profile.
8. Health Properties:
- Antioxidant action: High catechin content (especially EGCG) provides powerful protection of cells from oxidative stress.
- Gentle toning and focus: Combination of caffeine and L-theanine gives calm, steady surge of attention without sharp excitement — classic “tea focus.”
- Cardiovascular system support: Regular green tea consumption is associated with lowering “bad” cholesterol (LDL) levels and improving vascular elasticity.
- Digestion: Polyphenols stimulate peristalsis and support healthy intestinal microflora. Tea goes well with light food.
- Oral health: Fluorine and catechins have mild antibacterial effect and help maintain gum health.
- Cognitive functions: L-theanine promotes generation of brain alpha waves, improving the state of relaxed concentration.
- Skin and cellular youth: Green tea antioxidants slow skin photoaging.
- Important: People with increased caffeine sensitivity should observe moderation; strong green tea is not recommended on an empty stomach.
9. Brewing:
- Water temperature: 75–85°C. For delicate early spring batches — 75–80°C; for more mature raw material — up to 85°C.
- Tea amount: 3 g per 150 ml (glass cup) or 5 g per 150 ml gaiwan.
- Teaware: Transparent glass cup with straight walls (ideal for observing the unfolding of “twig” tea leaves), porcelain gaiwan or thin-walled porcelain teapot.
- Process:
- Warm the teaware with boiling water and drain.
- Add dry leaves; let them “awaken” in warm teaware for 15–20 seconds, inhale the aroma of warmed leaves.
- First infusion: pour 75–80°C water to 2/3 volume, wait 40–60 seconds.
- Pour into cups.
- Second and subsequent infusions: increase time by 10–15 seconds with each infusion. When brewing in a glass by European method: 1.5–2.5 minutes for first steeping.
- Number of infusions: 4–6 (in gaiwan); when steeping in glass — 2–3 refills.
10. Storage:
- Container: Airtight, opaque — tin cans with tight lids or vacuum bags made of foil material are preferable. Contact with foreign odors is inadmissible.
- Temperature: Optimally — refrigerator, 0–5°C, in airtight packaging. Without refrigerator — cool dry place (no higher than 10°C).
- Light and moisture: Enemies of green tea. Store away from direct light and moisture sources.
- Shelf life: For best taste — consume within 6–12 months after production. Xian Zhi is not a tea that benefits from aging; freshness here is the main virtue.
11. Market and Price Range:
- Price category: Medium and medium-high segment among Chinese green teas. Early spring batches (明前) from high-mountain Da Zhang Shan plantations cost significantly more than summer harvests. Xian Zhi is one of the most affordable teas in the “Wuyuan Lu Cha” line, inferior in cost to premium “Wuyuan Mingmei” (婺源茗眉).
- How to avoid counterfeits:
- Buy from verified sellers with geographical indication marking “婺源绿茶” and GI mark (地理标志).
- Evaluate appearance: genuine Xian Zhi — thin straight “twigs” with visible white down, color — oily green, not dull yellow.
- Check aroma: chestnut notes should be natural, without synthetic harshness. Flavoring is a typical counterfeiting method.
- Evaluate liquor: transparent, bright green, without turbidity. Cloudy or brownish liquor indicates low raw material quality or technology violation.
- Suspiciously low price — reason to be wary: probable substitution with raw material from neighboring regions (not included in GI zone) or repackaging of last year’s tea.
12. Authenticity Identification:
- The name “Xian Zhi” has a documented age of more than 500 years: it is recorded in the Ming “Hongzhi Huizhou Fu Zhi” (弘治徽州府志, late 15th century) in the list of eight famous teas of Huizhou Prefecture.
- The famous native of Wuyuan — Zhú Xī (朱熹, 1130–1200), pillar of Neo-Confucianism — was a passionate tea lover. Returning from Fujian to his homeland, he brought saplings of Wuyi rock teas and planted them in the ancestral courtyard, renaming the family estate “Tea Courtyard” (茶院, cháyuàn).
- Wuyuan historically was part of Huizhou — the legendary “small homeland” of Huìzhōu merchants (徽商, huīshāng). It was precisely they who brought Wuyuan green tea to the world market in the 19th century. Part of the famous “Tunxi Lu Cha” (屯溪绿茶) was produced from Wuyuan raw material.
- Wuyuan County preserves more than 113 ancestral temples (祠堂), 28 mansions and 187 ancient bridges of the Ming and Qing eras — this is one of China’s best ensembles of traditional Huizhou architecture. Tea gardens are organically integrated into this landscape, making Wuyuan a point of attraction for tea and cultural tourism.
- According to data from the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences (2005), Wuyuan green tea possesses the highest catechin index among similar teas in the country — this is a rare combination of powerful antioxidant strength and mild taste.
13. Recommended Sources:
- Comparison with other green teas:
- Wùyuán Míngméi (婺源茗眉, Wùyuán Míngméi): Flagship of the Wuyuan tea line. Harvested from more tender raw material (one bud and one leaf or bud with first unfolding leaf), has curved form resembling an eyebrow (眉). Taste is more refined and delicate, price higher. Xian Zhi is a more “popular” version: stronger, richer, with pronounced chestnut character.
- Huángshān Máofēng (黄山毛峰, Huángshān Máofēng): Famous Anhui green tea from neighboring region. Form — slightly curved, resembling sparrow tongue. Aroma — gently floral and sweetish, without chestnut tones. Maofeng is hong-qing (烘青, hōngqīng — heat drying), while Xian Zhi is chao-qing (炒青 — pan-firing).
- Xìnyáng Máojiān (信阳毛尖, Xìnyáng Máojiān): Henan green tea with powerful white down and dense astringent taste. Compared to Xian Zhi — more astringent and “northern” in character; Xian Zhi has softer and sweeter body.
- Lúshān Yún Wù (庐山云雾, Lúshān Yún Wù): Another Jiangxi competitor. Conditionally “thicker” leaf, powerful and rich taste. Xian Zhi is more elegant and drier in style.
In conclusion:
Wuyuan Xian Zhi is a tea with a half-millennium pedigree, growing among the same mountains and mists that inspired Zhu Xi and Huizhou merchants. This is not a “quiet one” against the backdrop of loud names like Longjing or Maofeng — this is a truly “own” tea: straightforward, honest, with nutty warmth in aroma and pure sweetness in taste. Brew it in a glass cup, watch how thin “celestial twigs” unhurriedly descend to the bottom — and you will understand why five hundred years ago it was already considered worthy of mention in chronicles.