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Hey tea lovers! 🐉✨ Exciting news as we step into the Dragon Year of 2024 - with Yixing teapot purchase, we're gifting you an exclusive Dragon Year style tea mat to add that extra flair to your tea rituals. It's our way of celebrating with you, but remember, it's a limited-time offer! Don't miss out on making your tea sessions even more special with this mystical addition. 🍵💫

Hey tea lovers! While many of you know us as a premium Chinese tea wares company. We also specialized in teas in Huang Shan region. Huang Shan is home to the most famous Chinese teas – Huang Shan Mao Feng, Keemun and Tai Ping Hou Kui. As natives of this breathtaking place, we have a deep connection to the land and its rich tea heritage.

We understand that finding the perfect tea can be a personal journey, which is why we offer our sample pack. It allows you to explore the diverse flavors of Huang Shan teas and discover the one that resonates with your taste buds.

Each of the teas are sourced and produced directly from the tea farmers, ensuring the quality and the authentic taste.

Sample pack including:
Huang Shan Mao Feng – 10g
Tai Ping Hou Kui – 10g
Keemun Mao Feng – 10g
Osmanthus Keemun – 10g

We can’t wait to hear from your feedbacks on our teas. Join us on this journey and let us be your guide as you explore the enchanting world of Huang Shan teas.

Please note that the tea and tea wares will be shipped in seperate packages according to customs requirement. Usually tea will come slightly later than the tea wares.

Dear customers,

If you experienced any issues during checkout, please contact us at cary.wang@cnteaspirit.com. And we will help you out.

Below we listed common payment errors and their solutions for your reference.

#1: China Tea Spirit does not ship to this location. Please use a different address.

This is a known bug from PayPal. It occurs randomly. If you have seen this error message, please contact us at cary.wang@cnteaspirit.com. We will work this out for you.

The Gift of Mist at 30° North

Why Taiping Houkui Rivals Longjing as the Pinnacle of Chinese Green Tea

In the world of Chinese green teas, West Lake Longjing is revered for its “vibrant green color, elegant shape, rich aroma, and mellow taste.”
Yet standing proudly alongside it is another legend—Taiping Houkui, celebrated for its unique “two leaves and a bud” form and its signature “monkey charm” (猴韵 hóu yùn).

As the old saying goes:

“Once you’ve seen Mount Huangshan, no other mountains impress you; once you’ve tasted Taiping Houkui, no other tea compares.”

Seasoned tea experts even praise it as

“A single cup of Houkui surpasses Longjing.”

Renowned as the crown jewel of Chinese green teas and often chosen as a national gift tea, Taiping Houkui’s journey from hidden mountain gardens to the grand tables of state banquets is nothing short of extraordinary.

What secrets lie behind its unrivaled reputation?
Let’s dive deep into the misty mountains and uncover the legendary story of Taiping Houkui.


A Century of Legend:

From Wild Mountain Tea to National Treasure

Tracing back to its origins, Taiping Houkui was officially created in 1900 during the late Qing Dynasty.
Its predecessor was known as Taiping Jiancha (Taiping Pointed Tea), first cultivated in 1859 along the banks of the Machuan River.

Legend has it that by the late Qing period, savvy merchants would carefully handpick the finest, most uniform buds from Taiping Jiancha, packaging them separately for high-end markets in Nanjing—where tea lovers eagerly sought them out at premium prices.

Among these tea artisans was Wang Kuicheng from Hougang Village, a master tea maker who believed that perfect tea didn’t just come from sorting finished leaves—it began with raising the picking standard.

In the high-altitude tea gardens of Houkeng’s Phoenix Peak (750 meters above sea level), he meticulously selected strong, upright one-bud-two-leaf sprigs and crafted a new form: long, orchid-shaped leaves with a bold yet delicate fragrance.

Because this new tea originated from Monkey Pit Village (Houkeng) in Taiping County (now part of Huangshan District), bore the best quality among all Taiping teas, and was pioneered by Wang Kuicheng (with “Kui” in his name), it was thus named:
Taiping Houkui.

In 1915, it was sent overseas by recommendation of local merchants like Liu Jingzhi to the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco—and it won the Gold Medal, thrusting Houkui into the international spotlight.

Since then, the accolades have kept coming:

  • In 1999, selected among China’s Top Ten Famous Teas.
  • In 2003, awarded National Geographic Indication Protection.
  • In 2008, its production techniques were listed as a National Intangible Cultural Heritage.
  • And in 2022, along with other traditional Chinese teas, it was inscribed in UNESCO’s Representative List of the Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity.

Over the course of a century, from remote mountain valleys to world stages, Taiping Houkui has lived up to its name: the king among teas.
Its excellence stems from more than craftsmanship—it draws from the wondrous waters and mists of Mount Huangshan, unique tea cultivars, and generations of passionate tea makers.


A Natural Masterpiece:

The Golden Belt of 30° North

Great tea is born from great land.

The heartland of Taiping Houkui—villages like Houkeng, Hougang, and Yanjia—lies along 30°0′ to 30°26′ north latitude, part of the so-called “Golden Belt for Tea Production.”
Here, nature is nothing short of generous.

The region enjoys a subtropical monsoon climate:

  • Warm and humid,
  • Rich in rainfall,
  • Gentle sunlight,
  • Distinct seasons,
  • And abundant clouds and mist drifting year-round between tea gardens perched 300–700 meters above sea level.

The soil, formed by Danxia landforms, is a lush mix of black and yellow sandy loam—fertile, well-drained, rich in organic matter, and ideal for tea trees.
Soils are slightly acidic (pH 5.5–6.5), encouraging vibrant, tender growth.

Taiping Houkui’s quality also owes much to its unique tree species: the Shidacha group cultivar, a local heirloom tea variety.

This late-budding tree produces broad leaves and thick, robust buds, ideal for creating the large yet tender forms that Houkui is famous for.
The ideal harvest season?
From just before Grain Rain (Gu Yu) to the start of Summer (Li Xia).

The harvest process follows a strict “Four Picks and Eight Discards” rule:

  • Pick:
    • High-mountain, misty slopes,
    • Thriving Shidacha tea bushes,
    • Strong, upright tender shoots,
    • Uniform one-bud-three-leaf sprigs.
  • Discard:
    • Overgrown, underdeveloped, thin, curved, pale, purple, double leaves, and pest-damaged leaves.

Harvesting must happen on foggy, sunny mornings, ensuring that only the freshest, plumpest, and most vibrant leaves are selected.
Only with such careful tending can the true soul of Taiping Houkui be captured in every cup.

Masterful Craftsmanship: The Art Behind a “Tea King”

Blessed by a pristine environment, enriched by the native Shidacha cultivar, and shaped by strict leaf-picking standards, the foundation for Taiping Houkui’s exceptional quality is nothing short of remarkable. But what truly defines its status as the “King of Green Tea” is the meticulous craftsmanship passed down through generations.

The production of Taiping Houkui follows a precise process: short withering (including the tip-selection step), pan-firing, hand-shaping, and careful drying. During pan-firing, artisans must follow the principle of “gentle handling, thorough tossing, and open spreading” to ensure the leaves are evenly heated without rolling or clumping—preserving their freshness and fragrance.

Drying is the defining stage where the signature form of Taiping Houkui comes to life. As documented in the Chinese Tea Classic (中国茶经), the tea is dried in three phases: zi hong (young fire), lao hong (old fire), and da lao huo (finishing fire). This layered technique results in the hallmark shape known as: “pointed at both ends, flat and straight, neither curled nor loose.”

Visually, the finished tea features the iconic “two knives guarding one spear” structure—two leaves tightly wrapped around a plump bud—standing tall and straight. The dry leaves have a uniform dark green luster, and once brewed, the tea glows with a bright, clear green hue. A lasting orchid aroma rises from the cup, and each sip delivers a mellow, full-bodied taste with a signature “monkey charm” that lingers delightfully.

Made from robust spring leaves of the Shidacha variety, harvested around Rain Season (谷雨), Taiping Houkui is also known for its impressive steeping endurance. Even after multiple brews, the leaves remain whole, tender, and vibrant, with a unique “red thread” along the leaf veins—a classic sign of high-quality craftsmanship.

If West Lake Longjing is the elegant scholar of Jiangnan—known for its delicate aroma and bean-flower sweetness—then Taiping Houkui is the hermit of the mountains, bearing the strength and mystery of majestic Huangshan. The clouds and mist infuse it with a serene orchid fragrance, and its late-budding leaves, packed with nutrients, give it a richer, deeper character than Longjing.

A great Taiping Houkui delivers a layered experience: the first infusion is aromatic, the second rich in flavor, and by the third and fourth, the lingering fragrance still dances in the cup. Truly, it exemplifies the beauty of “late harvest, greater reward.”

👉 Curious to experience it for yourself? Explore our Taiping Houkui tea here.

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