Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea
Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea – Fuding White Peony White Tea

Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea Spring Tea

$10.15

Encounter a heart-warming tea container, taking a sip or two of light and elegant tea in the middle of a busy schedule; between touch and vision, clearly comprehend heaven, earth and people of nature and ingenuity.

Weight: Sample 10g

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Total price:$1,211.07
Description
  • Chinese: fú dǐng bái mǔ dān sǎn chá
  • Translation: Fuding Bai Mu Dan Loose Tea
  • Type: White Tea
  • Cultivar: White Tea
  • Origin: Nodding, Fuding, Fujian
  • Harvest Date: 2026/04/25
  • Storage Methods: Sealing, Moistureproof, Avoid light.
  • Diantou Town has a typical tropical marine climate, with abundant rainfall, sufficient water, light and heat resources, an average annual precipitation of 45MM, 12 hours of sunshine, a temperature of 25 degrees, and a frost-free period of 290 days.
    Diantou Town is famous for its tea. It is the hometown of Fuding Dabai Tea and Fuding Dahao Tea, and is known as the "No. 1 White Tea Town in China".
  • Diantou is adjacent to Shacheng Port in the east and Zherong in the west. It has a subtropical marine monsoon climate and is the origin of Fuding Da Baicha. The silver needle tea produced here is very fresh and its aroma and taste truly reflect the fragrance of honey.
  • Bai Mu Dan, or White Peony, is often considered the second highest grade of white tea (after Silver Needle) and was traditionally produced in the northern Fujian Province of China. It comes from the top two leaves and bud of the tea bush, which can be shade dried and/or lightly fired. This gives White Peony a pale cup color and delicate, nutty aroma. The complex flavor is toasty, slightly sweet and creamy, with a clean aftertaste.
  • This land with beautiful ecology and high altitude breeds the top white tea - Fuding Bai Mu Dan with Flower Fragrance. The craftsmen here take exquisite craftsmanship as their creed, carefully picking and making each piece of tea. Imagine that they wear the hats of traditional craftsmen, shuttle through the tree-lined mountain paths, and treat each piece of tea as a treasure. They combine nature and craftsmanship to create this intoxicating white tea.
  • Bai Mu Dan has a rich floral fragrance and a sweet taste, finding the perfect balance between Silver Needle White and Shoumei. It comes from a high mountain area far from the sea, and its quality is even better. Combining natural weather with just the right craftsmanship makes the taste more pure and delicate.
  • Fuding's fragrant white peonies are also closely linked to traditional Chinese culture. Its alpine picking sites and traditional craftsmanship demonstrate the heritage of China’s traditional tea culture. Let’s try this tea together and enjoy its clear and sweet taste and unique tea culture experience!
  • In the hot summer, it is recommended to try cold brewing White Peony. With only 2 bottles of mountain spring water, 5-8 grams of tea and 2-3 lychees, you can make a delicious tea that is sweet, refreshing, and full of floral and fruity aromas.
Reviews5.0

Customer Reviews

Based on 1 review
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M
Maria
Grassy and creamy

A little bit more grassy than I expected but still creamy and smooth as a white tea should be.

Frequently Asked Questions

The tea was completely tasteless — weak and watery no matter how long I steeped it.
This tea was harvested in spring 2026 — not three years ago, sitting in a warehouse losing its character. The 2026 vintage benefited from an unusually dry growing season that allowed flavour compounds and minerals to concentrate in the buds and leaves. The aroma right out of the bag is distinctly present. Brewed properly (we recommend 2g leaf per 8oz water at 185°F, steep 3 minutes), the tea delivers a clear, sweet, flavourful cup — not a thin imitation. If you still find it lighter than expected, try using slightly more leaf (3g per 8oz) of this Loose Leaf White Peony Tea before blaming the tea itself. Many customers who complain about weak tea are simply not using enough leaf — white tea should not be measured like black tea.
I keep reading about health benefits, but does any of it actually apply to me?
We don‘t overpromise. That said, here‘s what studies indicate: White Peony (Bai MuDan) is naturally rich in polyphenols — compounds that have demonstrated antioxidant activity in laboratory settings. Research suggests white tea polyphenols may help protect against alcoholic liver injury. A 2024 study investigating white tea extract in a high-fat diet model found potential anti-aging properties supported by molecular evidence. Additionally, white peony has been scientifically investigated for anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and cardiovascular protective effects. We are not doctors — but these studies indicate there‘s genuine science behind the claims, not just marketing. The best way to experience white peony tea benefits is one cup at a time, consistently.
The tea leaves had a stale smell — like old hay — and no freshness whatsoever.
Freshness is not optional — it’s the backbone of a great Bai Mu Dan Single Origin White Tea Loose Leaf. Tai Mu Shen Yun is packaged within weeks of the 2026 spring harvest and sealed in a resealable kraft stand-up pouch designed to keep moisture and air out between uses. We do not buy surplus leaf from wholesalers who have been sitting on inventory for years. If stored properly (cool, dark, dry place, pouch sealed tight), this Bai Mu Dan Tee will maintain its aromatic profile for months. We also recommend using the tea within 12 months for optimum flavour — though many white tea drinkers actually enjoy watching Bai Mu Dan evolve gently over time as it ages, developing deeper honey and dried-fruit notes.
The tea left a weird film on the surface and residue on the side of my cup.
White Peony produces a clear, bright infusion with no sediment, film, or residue when brewed properly. The liquor is pale apricot to light gold, translucent and clean. If you see a film, check your water quality first (hard water can produce mineral residue) and ensure your teaware is thoroughly rinsed. Beyond that, the tea itself will not leave foreign substances in your cup.
I tried to brew it but no matter what I did, it came out bitter — completely different from what I expected.
The vast majority of bitterness issues come down to brewing parameters, not the tea itself. Here‘s our tested approach for Bai Mu Dan Tea: Water temperature: 175°F–185°F (80°C–85°C). Not boiling. Boiling water extracts bitter compounds aggressively. Leaf amount: 2g per 8oz cup (about 1 heaping teaspoon). White tea fluffs up more than black tea — it’s easy to over-leaf. Steep time: 2–3 minutes for Western-style brewing. Start at the shorter end. Oversteeping: Unlike many greens, oversteeped Bai Mu Dan doesn‘t become sharply astringent, but the cup can become oddly “overwhelming” — one reviewer said it made them “feel a bit off” when brewed too strongly. If this happens, use less leaf next time, not less time. Another experienced reviewer noted: “The leaf is so packed with flavour that not much leaf is needed”. Try these parameters before concluding the tea is bitter. The likelihood is high that the tea will taste sweet, floral, clean — and not bitter at all.