Wu Yi Shan "Qing Xiang Rou Gui" Rock Oolong Tea
A light-roast take on classic Rou Gui (literally “cinnamon”), a Yancha cultivar prized since the Qing Dynasty. Spring leaf is gently fired to preserve high fragrance while revealing clean rock-mineral sweetness and that signature cinnamon-bark lift.
Why it’s special
-
True Qing Xiang style: light charcoal roast to spotlight aroma and clarity.
-
Rou Gui cultivar delivers spice-tinged florals over steady Wuyi minerality.
-
Late-April pick for concentrated aromatics and a smooth, creamy texture.
-
Forgiving to brew: 7–10 infusions gongfu without losing sweetness.
Tasting notes
-
Aroma: cinnamon bark, orchid, warm mineral, toasted grain.
-
Liquor: deep golden; medium body with a creamy, viscous glide.
-
Flavor: spice-led opening that turns fruit-sweet (stone fruit, citrus peel) with gentle roast in the background.
-
Finish: long, cooling after-aroma with a clear rock rhyme and lingering sweetness.
Origin & processing
-
Area: Wuyishan, Fujian
-
Cultivar: Rou Gui
-
Harvest: late April (first flush)
-
Craft: wither → shake/bruise → moderate oxidation → light charcoal roast to set fragrance and texture
Brewing guide
(Good water helps. Adjust to taste.)
Gongfu (recommended)
-
6–7 g per 100 ml
-
98–100 °C
-
Quick rinse, then 8–10 s • 10–12 s • 15 s • 20 s • 25 s… for 7–10 infusions
-
Tip: keep the first two steeps short to emphasize florals; push later steeps slightly for deeper fruit.
Western
-
3 g per 300 ml (10 oz)
-
95–98 °C for 2–3 minutes
-
2–3 infusions, adding 20–30 s each round
Grandpa style
-
1–1.5 g per 100 ml
-
90–95 °C, top up as you sip
-
Smooth, lightly spiced sweetness with low astringency
Pairing & occasions
Great with almond cookies, sesame snacks, or mild cheeses. Ideal as an afternoon oolong or for side-by-side comparison with our more roasted “Classic Rou Gui” to explore how roast level shifts the balance from florals to caramelized depth.
In Summary
-
Caffeine: medium
-
Storage: airtight, cool, dry, away from strong aromas. Light-roast Rou Gui is delicious now and will settle pleasantly over the next 6–12 months.
-
Tea: Qing Xiang Rou Gui (Wuyi Rock Oolong)
-
Harvest: Late April (spring)
-
Region: Wuyishan, Fujian
-
Roast: light, aroma-preserving style
In short: a floral-spiced, mineral-clean Rou Gui with creamy texture, steady sweetness, and the stamina for many infusions.