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Bamboo Leaf Green

Green tea

About this tea

Zhu Ye Qing, or 'Bamboo Leaf Green,' is a pan-fired green tea grown on the misty slopes of Mount Emei in Sichuan Province — one of China's Four Sacred Buddhist Mountains. Unlike many of China's green teas, which trace their names back centuries, Zhu Ye Qing is a deliberately modern creation, developed in the 1960s and named for the flat, narrow, jade-green leaves that resemble the leaves of a bamboo plant. The cup is light, smooth, and gently sweet, with a signature chestnut-like roastiness layered over fresh, vegetal brightness. It has become one of Sichuan's most recognizable green teas, prized as both an everyday drink and a graceful gift tea.

How to brew: 80°C, 1.5 min, 3 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

80°C
1.5 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

vegetal, sweet, smooth, toasted

Often associated with

Focus, Moderate energy

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-morning

Tags

FocusSweet

Origin & Production

China — Mount Emei, Sichuan Province

Mount Emei (Emeishan) rises to nearly 3,100 meters in southwestern Sichuan and has been a center of Buddhist monastic life for almost two thousand years, its temples surrounded by dense, cloud-wrapped forest. Tea gardens sit on the mountain's lower and middle slopes, generally between 600 and 1,200 meters, where heavy seasonal mist, filtered sunlight, and acidic, mineral-rich mountain soil slow leaf growth and concentrate amino acids. This combination produces tender, slightly thicker leaves that hold up well to the pan-firing process used to shape Zhu Ye Qing. Sichuan's small-leaf local tea cultivars, picked mainly in early-to-mid spring, give the tea its characteristic sweetness and resistance to the harsh, grassy bitterness that can show up in lesser green teas. While Mount Emei has grown tea since at least the Tang dynasty, Zhu Ye Qing itself is a 20th-century invention layered onto this much older tea-growing landscape.

Production process

1

Spring plucking

One bud with one or two young, tender leaves is hand-picked from Mount Emei's mist-shaded gardens, mainly in March and April when amino acid content is highest.

2

Withering

Fresh leaves are spread thinly in cool, shaded indoor air for a few hours to soften them and reduce surface moisture before firing.

3

Kill-green (pan firing)

Leaves are tossed rapidly in a hot wok at high temperature to halt oxidation, lock in the green color, and drive off grassy aromas — the defining step of all Chinese pan-fired green teas.

4

Shaping into bamboo leaves

While still warm and pliable, the leaves are pressed and rubbed flat between the palms or against the wok surface, gradually elongating them into the narrow, flat, bamboo-leaf silhouette that gives the tea its name.

5

Drying and final firing

A lower-temperature final firing removes the remaining moisture, develops the tea's gentle chestnut-roasted aroma, and stabilizes the leaves for storage.

6

Sorting and grading

Finished leaves are sorted by uniformity, color, and size — flat, even, jade-green leaves with intact tips are graded highest and reserved for premium spring batches.

Pan-fired green teaMount EmeiModern tea (1960s)Bamboo-leaf shapedSichuan specialty

History & Tradition

Mount Emei has grown tea for well over a thousand years, but Zhu Ye Qing itself is a comparatively young invention — a 20th-century green tea built on an ancient mountain, designed to showcase the region's leaf quality in a distinctive new shape.

1
Tang dynasty (618–907)

Tea cultivation begins on Mount Emei

Buddhist monasteries on Mount Emei began cultivating tea for ritual use and trade, establishing the mountain as one of Sichuan's earliest tea-growing centers — laying the groundwork, many centuries later, for Zhu Ye Qing.

2
1960s

Zhu Ye Qing is created

Tea technicians on Mount Emei developed Zhu Ye Qing as a new pan-fired green tea style, designing the flat, narrow leaf shape and naming it for its resemblance to bamboo leaves — a deliberate, modern addition to Sichuan's tea catalogue rather than an ancient inherited style.

3
1970s–1980s

Domestic popularity grows

As production techniques were refined and standardized, Zhu Ye Qing spread beyond Mount Emei's monastery gardens to become a recognized regional green tea sold across Sichuan and neighboring provinces.

4
1996

UNESCO World Heritage listing

Mount Emei, together with the nearby Leshan Giant Buddha, was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, raising the profile of the mountain — and the teas grown on it — among both domestic and international visitors.

5
2000s–present

Export and wider recognition

Zhu Ye Qing increasingly appears in specialty tea shops outside China, often marketed for its approachable, smooth flavor and distinctive bamboo-leaf appearance — a relatively young tea finding new audiences far from Mount Emei.

Health Benefits

Gentle, clear focus

Like other green teas, Zhu Ye Qing pairs a moderate amount of caffeine with L-theanine, an amino acid associated with calm, sustained alertness rather than a jittery spike — a useful lift during reading, study, or focused work.

Antioxidant catechins

As an unoxidized green tea, Zhu Ye Qing retains a high concentration of catechins, including EGCG, plant compounds widely studied for their antioxidant activity in the body.

Light, easy on the stomach

The tea's low-temperature final firing and tender spring leaves give Zhu Ye Qing a smooth, mellow character with less astringency than many green teas, making it a comfortable everyday cup even on an empty stomach when brewed gently.

Everyday wellness ritual

In Sichuan, Zhu Ye Qing is commonly drunk as a daily green tea rather than reserved for special occasions, valued as part of a routine of mindful, unhurried tea drinking that many find calming.

Moderate, steady energy

Zhu Ye Qing carries roughly the caffeine of a typical green tea — enough for a noticeable but moderate lift, well suited to mid-morning or early-afternoon drinking without the intensity of a strong black tea or coffee.

Grades & Varieties

Pre-Qingming spring pluck

Picked before the early-April Qingming festival, this grade uses the youngest, most tender buds and leaves, producing exceptionally flat, even bamboo-leaf shapes and the sweetest, most delicate chestnut notes. Yields are small and this grade commands the highest price.

Best for

  • Gift-quality tea
  • Quiet, attentive tasting sessions
  • Special occasions

Standard spring grade

Picked through mid-to-late spring, this is the most widely available grade — still showing the characteristic flat bamboo-leaf shape and chestnut sweetness, with slightly more body and a touch more vegetal brightness than the earliest pluck.

Best for

  • Everyday drinking
  • First introduction to Zhu Ye Qing
  • Office or study sessions

Did you know?

Zhu Ye Qing is a surprisingly modern invention: it was created in the 1960s on Mount Emei and deliberately shaped to resemble bamboo leaves, unlike most Chinese green teas whose names trace back centuries.

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Drinks with this tea