Snow Shan Green
Green tea
About this tea
Snow Shan Green is a green tea hand-processed from the leaves of ancient, wild-growing Shan Tuyet ('snow mountain') tea trees high in Vietnam's far-northern highlands — the same centuries-old tree population that also yields the region's well-known black Shan Tuyet, but picked and processed in a completely different way. Instead of being withered and fully oxidized, the leaf here is pan-fired soon after plucking to halt oxidation almost entirely, locking in a fresh, green character while still carrying the trees' natural downy-bud sweetness. The result is a full-bodied green tea unlike most plantation greens: a slightly smoky-sweet cup with a soft vegetal core and a lingering honeyed finish that builds with each subsequent steep. Because the trees are unpruned, untreated, and tended by H'mong and Dao families who climb into the canopy to pick them, Snow Shan Green carries the same wild, high-altitude terroir as its black sibling, but expresses it as freshness and gentle smoke rather than malt and deep oxidation.
How to brew: 85°C, 1.5 min, 3 g per cup.
Caffeine
Medium
How to brew
Flavor notes
smoky, sweet, honeyed, mineral
Often associated with
Focus, Sustained energy
Best time to enjoy
Morning, Mid-morning
Tags
Origin & Production
Snow Shan Green is grown in Ha Giang, Vietnam's northernmost province, on the same limestone karst plateaus and high ridgelines — above 1,000–1,600 meters — that are home to the region's famed ancient tea forests, concentrated around districts like Hoang Su Phi and the Tay Con Linh range. The Camellia sinensis var. assamica trees here are wild or semi-wild, many over a century old and tall enough that pickers climb into the branches rather than reaching from the ground. Cool temperatures, near-constant mist, and acidic forest soil slow leaf growth and concentrate the buds' natural sugars and aromatic oils, which is what gives this green tea its unusually full body and honeyed depth compared to lowland or plantation-grown green teas. Because the same trees can be processed as either green or black tea depending on the season and the producer's choice, Snow Shan Green is best understood as a deliberate processing decision — preserving the leaf's freshness — rather than a separate cultivar.
Production process
Climbing and hand-plucking
Pickers climb into the canopy of the tall, unpruned trees to hand-pluck the bud and top one or two leaves, working tree by tree across scattered forest rather than along plantation rows.
Brief withering
Fresh leaf rests for a short time on bamboo trays to lose surface moisture and soften slightly, but only briefly — unlike black tea processing, the goal here is to move quickly into fixing before oxidation can take hold.
Pan-firing (kill-green)
Leaves are tossed by hand in hot woks or drums at high heat for several minutes, a step called 'kill-green' that deactivates the oxidizing enzymes and is responsible for the tea's gentle smoky note and green character.
Rolling
The fixed leaves are rolled by hand to shape them and gently break down cell structure, releasing aromatic compounds while the leaf is still pliable from the heat of firing.
Drying
Rolled leaves are dried over gentle, often charcoal-fed heat until moisture drops to a stable level, further developing the tea's sweet, lightly toasted aroma and locking in the silvery down still visible on many buds.
Sorting and grading
Finished leaves are hand-sorted to remove stems and broken pieces, then graded by bud content and leaf integrity before packing for domestic sale or export.
History & Tradition
The ancient Shan Tuyet trees of Ha Giang have been tended by local highland communities for generations, and while the region is now better known internationally for its black tea, green processing of the same leaf has its own long, more locally rooted history.
Ancient trees take root
Wild and semi-wild tea trees became established across the high ridges of Ha Giang, long predating organized plantation agriculture; many of today's harvested trees are believed to be 100–300 years old or more, and green tea — requiring fewer processing steps and no specialized oxidation rooms — was likely the original way local households prepared their own leaf.
French colonial tea surveys
French colonial administrators in Indochina documented wild tea forests in the northern mountains, but the remote Ha Giang highlands remained largely outside formal plantation systems, leaving traditional household-scale green tea processing largely undisturbed.
A household staple
Through decades of conflict and isolation, H'mong and Dao households continued hand-firing green tea from their family trees mainly for daily household drinking and small local markets, passing down wok-firing technique within families rather than through formal training.
Rediscovery by the specialty trade
As Vietnam opened its economy, domestic tea companies and international buyers began seeking out Ha Giang's old-growth tea trees, and while black Shan Tuyet drew early export attention, small-batch green processing of the same leaf began reaching specialty buyers who wanted a fresher, less oxidized expression of the same ancient terroir.
Sustainable and fair-trade attention
Conservation groups and specialty importers have promoted Ha Giang's ancient tea forests as both a biodiversity asset and a livelihood for ethnic minority communities, supporting organic, wild-harvest certification and direct trade relationships — with green Shan Tuyet increasingly marketed as a distinct, terroir-driven counterpart to the region's black tea.
Health Benefits
Calm, sustained focus
As an unoxidized green tea, Snow Shan Green retains more of the leaf's natural L-theanine alongside a moderate caffeine level, a combination traditionally associated with steady, clear-headed focus rather than a sharp jolt — well suited to deep work sessions.
Catechin-rich leaf
Because green processing skips full oxidation, more of the leaf's original catechins are preserved compared to black tea, compounds generally associated with antioxidant activity in green tea research.
Mineral depth from old roots
The deep root systems of centuries-old trees are thought by growers to draw minerals from far below the topsoil, contributing to the tea's savory, slightly mineral backbone underneath its vegetal sweetness.
Gentle wok-fired warmth
The hand pan-firing step leaves a faint toasty, smoky warmth on the cup that highland communities traditionally enjoy as a grounding daytime drink, distinct from the brisker, grassier character of steamed green teas.
Everyday wellness ritual
Like other green teas, Snow Shan Green is traditionally included in everyday wellness routines across tea-growing Asia as part of a balanced lifestyle — best enjoyed as one habit among many, not a remedy.
Grades & Varieties
Bud-rich Snow Shan (silver tip)
The highest grade, plucked mostly as single downy buds, producing a pale-gold liquor with a delicate sweetness, soft body, and only the faintest trace of smoke. Limited in volume because each ancient tree yields relatively few true buds.
Best for
- ✓Quiet, unhurried morning cup
- ✓Short gongfu-style steeps
- ✓Tea collectors and connoisseurs
Classic bud-and-leaf Snow Shan
The standard grade, combining a bud with the top one or two leaves. Delivers the full slightly smoky-sweet character the tea is known for, with more body and a deeper, honeyed finish than the bud-only grade.
Best for
- ✓Daily focus-and-work sessions
- ✓Multiple resteeps through the day
- ✓Building a daily green tea habit
Rustic wok-fired leaf
A heartier, less uniform grade with larger, more broken leaf and a more pronounced smoky-toasty note from the firing step. Bold and rustic, this style is closer to how families in the Ha Giang highlands brew the tea for themselves.
Best for
- ✓Strong, robust everyday brewing
- ✓Drinking with milk or a touch of honey
- ✓Those who enjoy toasty green teas like hojicha
Did you know?
Snow Shan Green is hand-picked by climbing into the canopy of wild Shan Tuyet trees in Vietnam's Ha Giang highlands, some believed to be 100 to 300 years old or more.
Foods with this tea
What to Eat with Snow Shan Green Tea
Full-bodied, slightly smoky-sweet, and finished with wild honey — Snow Shan Green wants light Vietnamese highland fare, fresh herbs, and gently sweet bites that let its honeyed finish shine.
Snow Shan Green Tea-Steamed Fish with Ginger and Scallion
Whole fish steamed over a Snow Shan Green tea broth, finished with hot oil, ginger, and scallion — a highland-inspired dish that lets the tea's smoky-sweet depth perfume the fish.
Snow Shan Green Honey Panna Cotta
A silky panna cotta infused with Snow Shan Green tea and wild honey — the tea's gentle smoke and natural sweetness turn a simple dessert into something quietly complex.
Drinks with this tea
Snow Shan Green Focus Tonic with Lemon and Honey
A clean, steady-focus tonic that lets Snow Shan Green's smoky-sweet, honeyed character lead — brightened with lemon for a clear-headed start to a work session.
Iced Snow Shan Green with Peach and Honey
Cold-brewed Snow Shan Green with fresh peach and a touch of honey — a smooth, smoky-sweet iced tea that turns the leaf's honeyed finish into a refreshing afternoon sipper.
Snow Shan Green and Honey Whiskey Sour
A smoky-sweet cocktail where Snow Shan Green-infused whiskey meets honey and fresh lemon — the tea's wild-honey finish turns a classic sour into something distinctly its own.