Tea Name: | Bai ji guan |
Tea Type: | Oolong |
Tea Color: | Wuyi |
Tea Image: | Bai Jiguan.jpg |
Tea Origin: | Mount Wuyi, Fujian Province, China |
Tea Names: | White cockscomb, white rooster, Chinese: 白鸡冠 |
Tea Quick: | Light Wuyi tea |
Bai Ji Guan or Bai Jiguan (; pronounced) is a very light Si Da Ming Cong tea, a well-known oolong tea of Wuyi, in Fujian, China.
Legend has it that the name of this tea (which translates to 'white rooster' or more literally 'white cockscomb') was given by a monk in memorial of a courageous rooster that sacrificed his life while protecting his baby from an eagle. Touched by the display of courage and love, the monk buried the rooster and from that spot, the Chinese: bai ji guan tea bush grew.[1]
Unlike most Wuyi teas, the leaves of this tea are yellowish to light green rather than dark green or brown.The flavour is also quite different from the other Wuyi oolongs, which tend to be otherwise very similar to a group. Like most Wuyi oolongs, it sits in the highly oxidized end of the oolong tea spectrum, though in the lower range of oxidization for a Wuyi tea, which tend to be 60-80% oxidized.