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Xinyang Mao Jian

Green tea

About this tea

Xinyang Mao Jian is one of China's ten most celebrated famous teas, hand-plucked in the Five Yunshan mountains and Cha Yun Mountain range surrounding Xinyang in southern Henan Province. Its name means 'Fur Tip' or 'Downy Point,' describing the thin, tightly twisted, needle-like leaves covered in fine silvery-white down. Despite the similar-sounding name, Xinyang Mao Jian is a distinct tea from Huangshan Mao Feng — grown hundreds of kilometers away in a different province, plucked and rolled into a slimmer, more tightly twisted needle shape rather than Mao Feng's softer curled form. The cup is bright jade-green, brisk, and chestnut-sweet, with a clean vegetal core and a lingering nutty finish that has made it a favorite among Chinese green tea connoisseurs since the early twentieth century.

How to brew: 80°C, 1.3 min, 3 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

80°C
1.3 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

nutty, sweet, vegetal, fresh

Often associated with

Focus, Moderate energy

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-morning, Early afternoon

Tags

FocusSweet

Origin & Production

China — Xinyang, southern Henan Province

Xinyang Mao Jian grows in the Five Yunshan (Wuyunshan) and Cha Yun mountain ranges that ring the city of Xinyang in southern Henan, one of China's most northerly major tea-growing regions. The area sits near the Huai River watershed, where cool, humid air, frequent mist, and granite-derived soils slow the growth of the tea bushes and concentrate sugars and amino acids in the young shoots. Elevations in the core production zones reach roughly 300 to 800 meters, with the surrounding pine and bamboo forests sheltering the gardens from harsh winds. Because Henan's growing season is shorter and cooler than the famous green tea regions further south, Xinyang Mao Jian tends to be picked slightly later in spring, producing a leaf that is robust enough to handle a tight, wiry roll while still yielding a remarkably sweet, brisk cup.

Production process

1

Spring plucking

Pickers select a single bud with one or two young leaves, usually beginning in mid-to-late April once Henan's cooler spring has fully warmed the gardens.

2

Withering

Fresh leaves are spread thinly on bamboo trays for a short rest, losing surface moisture and softening so they can later be rolled without tearing.

3

Kill-green (sha qing)

The leaves are tumbled in a hot wok or drum at high temperature to halt oxidation enzymes quickly, preserving the bright green color and fresh, chestnut-like aroma.

4

Rolling into needles

Warm leaves are rolled by hand or in light rolling machines under gentle pressure, twisting them into the thin, pointed, slightly curved needle shape that gives Mao Jian its name.

5

Drying over charcoal or hot air

The shaped leaves are dried in stages, traditionally finished over low charcoal heat in baskets, which sets the silvery down in place and develops a toasty, chestnut-sweet depth.

6

Sorting & grading

Finished leaves are hand-sorted to remove stems and broken pieces, with the thinnest, most evenly twisted, downiest needles reserved for the top grades.

Hand-rolled needlesHenan originSpring harvestTen Famous Teas of China

History & Tradition

Tea has been cultivated around Xinyang for well over a thousand years, but the Mao Jian style as it is known today was refined relatively recently, rising from a regional specialty to one of China's most decorated green teas within a few generations.

1
Tang & Song Dynasties

Early Xinyang tea culture

Historical records and tea classics from the Tang and Song periods already mention tea grown in the Huai River region around Xinyang, noting its reputation as tribute-quality leaf.

2
1903

Modern gardens established

Local tea growers, organized through early tea associations, began planting and revitalizing gardens on Xinyang's surrounding mountains, laying the groundwork for the modern Mao Jian style.

3
1910s–1920s

Mao Jian style refined

Local tea masters combined techniques borrowed from other famous green teas with Xinyang's own leaf to develop the thin, twisted needle shape and charcoal-finished aroma that define Mao Jian today.

4
1915

Panama-Pacific Exposition award

Henan tea, including early Xinyang Mao Jian production, was recognized at the Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco, an early milestone in its national and international reputation.

5
1959

Named among China's Ten Famous Teas

Xinyang Mao Jian was formally recognized as one of China's Ten Famous Teas at a national tea evaluation conference, cementing its place alongside Longjing and Biluochun in the country's green tea canon.

6
2000s–present

Protected origin & global reach

Xinyang Mao Jian gained geographic-indication protection in China and is now exported worldwide, prized by specialty tea drinkers for its needle-thin leaf and chestnut-sweet character.

Health Benefits

Calm, steady focus

Like other fine spring greens, Mao Jian is naturally rich in the amino acid L-theanine, traditionally associated with an alert-yet-relaxed mental state that pairs smoothly with its moderate caffeine.

Smooth, moderate lift

Mao Jian carries a medium caffeine level — enough for a noticeable, even lift through a work session, without the sharp spike or crash often associated with coffee.

Antioxidant-rich leaf

As a minimally oxidized green tea, Mao Jian is abundant in catechins such as EGCG, plant compounds widely studied for their antioxidant activity in the cup.

Light, brisk, and clean

The thin needle leaf and careful charcoal-finished drying give Mao Jian a brisk, clean-tasting cup with moderate astringency, making it an easy, refreshing tea to return to throughout the day.

A grounding daily ritual

Brewing and savoring a fragrant, chestnut-sweet green tea offers a quiet pause in the day, supporting a general sense of well-being and mindful, unhurried attention.

Grades & Varieties

Pre-Qingming special grade

The earliest, finest pluck — a single downy bud with at most one barely-opened leaf, harvested before the Qingming festival. Extremely thin needles, intensely sweet and brisk with almost no bitterness.

Best for

  • Special tasting sessions
  • Gongfu-style brewing
  • Gifting to discerning tea drinkers

Premium spring grade

A slightly later spring pluck of bud and one young leaf, still thin and downy with a clear chestnut-sweet aroma. Well balanced and forgiving to brew — the standard for everyday fine Mao Jian.

Best for

  • Daily focus sessions
  • Western-style brewing
  • Introducing newcomers to Henan greens

Standard grade

A later-harvest grade with slightly larger, less uniform leaves and a fuller, more robust body. Less downy and delicate than the top grades but forgiving and very pleasant for casual, all-day drinking.

Best for

  • Casual all-day drinking
  • Iced and cold-brew preparations
  • Cooking and tea-infused recipes

Did you know?

Xinyang Mao Jian's name means 'Fur Tip,' describing its thin, tightly twisted needle leaves covered in fine silvery down; it was honored at the 1915 Panama-Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco.

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