2026 Meng Ding Shi Hua “Stone Flower” Green Tea – Rare First Harvest from Mist‑Veiled Meng Ding Mountain
2026 Meng Ding Shi Hua “Stone Flower” Green Tea – Rare First Harvest from Mist‑Veiled Meng Ding Mountain
2026 Meng Ding Shi Hua “Stone Flower” Green Tea – Rare First Harvest from Mist‑Veiled Meng Ding Mountain
2026 Meng Ding Shi Hua “Stone Flower” Green Tea – Rare First Harvest from Mist‑Veiled Meng Ding Mountain
2026 Meng Ding Shi Hua “Stone Flower” Green Tea – Rare First Harvest from Mist‑Veiled Meng Ding Mountain

Meng Ding Shi Hua Green Tea Spring Tea

$88.85

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: 50.0G

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Frequently Bought Together

Total price:$266.12
  • This item: Meng Ding Shi Hua Green Tea Spring Tea $18.57
  • Colored Glaze Gaiwan Set $177.27
Description
  • Chinese: míng qián méng dǐng shí huā yù huā chūn chá
  • Translation: Pre-Qingming Meng Ding Shi Hua Green Tea Spring Tea
  • Type: Green Tea
  • Cultivar: Lao Chuan Cha
  • Origin: Ya'an, Sichuan.
  • Harvest Date: 2026/03/15
  • Storage Methods: Refrigeration, Sealing, Moistureproof, Avoid light.
  • A Taste of Spring, Captured in a Bud

    There is a moment in early spring, high above the clouds on Meng Ding Mountain, when the tea gardens awaken. The air is cool and damp, the peaks wrapped in a soft white mist that never seems to leave. Here, at over 1,000 meters, ancient tea bushes—tended for centuries by monks who once lived in the mountaintop temples—push out their very first buds of the year. These are not ordinary leaves. They are small, tender, covered in silvery fuzz, and packed with the pure, sweet essence of the season.

    This is Meng Ding Shi Hua—the “Stone Flower.”

    For generations, this Meng Ding Shi Hua tea has been revered as one of China’s most elegant green teas. The name comes from the way the buds behave when steeped: they stand upright in the cup, delicate as white blossoms emerging from a bed of stone. But the real magic lies in the cup itself.

  • Flavor That Speaks of the Mountain

    Pour hot water over these tiny, twisted buds and watch them slowly unfurl. The liquor is pale jade, clear as mountain spring water. Bring the cup to your nose, and you’ll find a fragrance that is both gentle and complex—fresh steamed chestnuts, a hint of morning dew on wild grass, and an underlying whisper of sweet cream.

    The first sip is surprisingly soft. There is no harshness, no astringency. Instead, a natural, lingering sweetness coats your tongue—what the Chinese call gan lu, or “sweet dew.” Midway, a delicate umami unfolds, reminiscent of fresh peas or the broth of a light vegetable consommé. The finish is clean and refreshing, leaving a cooling sensation at the back of the throat and a subtle nuttiness that invites another sip.

    This is what happens when a tea is harvested at the absolute peak of freshness—the 2026 First Harvest Meng Ding Shi Hua (Yuhua) —and processed with a light, traditional pan-firing that locks in the bud’s natural sugars. It’s a taste that feels authentic, alive, and deeply satisfying.

  • Why This Tea Stands Apart

    Most green teas sold today are either too bitter, too grassy, or simply flat. Meng Ding Shi Hua is none of those. Because it is made exclusively from the first spring buds—not mature leaves—it contains high levels of L‑theanine (the amino acid responsible for calm focus) and low levels of bitter tannins. The result is a cup that is naturally sweet, smooth, and deeply flavorful without any of the sharpness that turns so many people away from green tea.

    It is also a tea with a soul. Grown on the mountain often called the “birthplace of Chinese tea,” each sip carries the history of the monks who first cultivated it, the cool mountain mists that nurture it, and the hands that carefully pluck each bud at dawn.

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Frequently Asked Questions

I’ve bought green teas before that looked beautiful but tasted flat or burned. Why would this one be different?
That’s a common disappointment. Many mass‑market green teas are roasted at high temperatures to speed production, which kills the delicate flavors and leaves a charred, one‑dimensional taste. Our Mengding Shihua First Harvest is handled differently. The buds are lightly pan‑fired using a traditional low‑heat method that preserves their natural sweetness and floral complexity. The result is a tea that tastes alive—fresh, layered, and deeply satisfying, not flat or scorched.
I see “Meng Ding” teas online, but often they’re broken leaves or taste like hay. How do I know this is the real thing?
You’re touching on the biggest issue in the tea market: authenticity. True Meng Ding Shi Hua Chinese Tea Green Tea is defined by its whole, unbroken buds—silvery green and tightly twisted. If the tea you receive is mostly fragments or dusty, it’s not genuine. Our 2026 First Harvest is sourced directly from the historic tea gardens on Meng Ding Mountain. You’ll see the buds unfurl completely during brewing, a signature of authentic Mengding Shihua. We stand behind the leaf quality, so you get exactly what’s pictured: pure, whole buds.
I struggle with green tea because it always turns bitter if I’m not extremely careful. Is this one forgiving?
This is perhaps the most common frustration—and it’s exactly why Meng Ding Shi Hua is so beloved. Because it’s made from young buds rather than mature leaves, it contains far fewer bitter compounds. It’s naturally more forgiving than standard green teas. Still, to help you get the best experience, we provide clear brewing instructions (water temperature 75–80°C / 170–175°F, steep 1–2 minutes). Even if you’re new to high‑end tea, you’ll find this one easy to brew and impossible to ruin.
I’ve bought “first flush” teas before that tasted stale. Is this really from the 2026 harvest?
Staleness is a genuine pain point—nothing is worse than paying a premium for old, faded tea. That’s why we explicitly label this as Mengding Shi Hua First Flush Harvest and package it immediately after the spring 2026 picking. The vibrant green color, the lively aroma, and the bright, sweet taste are all hallmarks of a truly fresh harvest. If you’ve ever been disappointed by a “new” tea that turned out to be last year’s stock, you’ll notice the difference the moment you open this bag.
Can this tea be steeped more than once? I hate feeling like I’m wasting good leaves.
Absolutely. Because these are whole, high‑altitude buds, they’re designed for multiple infusions. Many buyers on Reddit and elsewhere express frustration when a tea gives only one decent steep. With Meng Ding Shi Hua Green Tea, you can enjoy 3 to 4 infusions. The first steep is delicate and sweet; the second brings out more chestnut richness; the third offers a deeper umami. Each steep is a new chapter—so you get far more value and enjoyment from every serving.