White Peony
Stone fruit, peony blossom, and a honeyed body that most white teas only hint at. Bai Mu Dan (白牡丹) uses both the bud and the leaf, and that combination is what gives it more body and sweetness than bud-only whites. This March 2025 lot from coastal Fuding brews a golden cup that fills the mouth instead of floating past.
What You'll Taste
Think ripe peach with honey and a floral sweetness that stays, like stone fruit warmed by afternoon sun. The liquor pours pale gold with peony in the aroma, and first steeps land soft and coating, with gentle sweetness filling the mouth before dried apricot and a light hay note emerge in later rounds. Bud and leaf together — that is where the body comes from, and why Bai Mu Dan fills the mouth where other whites float past.
Where It Grows
White Peony comes from Fuding, a coastal city in Fujian where morning fog rolls in from the sea and keeps the leaves cool while they grow. The Fuding Da Hao cultivar thrives at 600 meters here, where mild temperatures and coastal moisture produce naturally thick, downy buds picked in March 2025, early in the season when sweetness peaks. The city has been making white tea longer than anywhere else in China.
How It's Made
After picking one bud with one or two leaves still attached, the tea maker spreads everything across bamboo racks outdoors and lets the open air do the work. There is no rolling, no pan-firing, no machine heat at any point in the process. That slow sun-withering is what sets white tea apart: the leaf sheds moisture over hours rather than minutes, which locks in floral aroma and builds the honeyed body that fills each steep.
How It Ages
White tea ages well, and Bai Mu Dan is one of the best candidates for it. With time, floral notes mellow into dried fruit and honey, and the body deepens until the cup becomes something different entirely. In China, there is a saying: one year tea, three years medicine, seven years treasure.
The 25-gram bag gives you around five sessions — enough to know whether this belongs in your regular rotation. If you have tried silver needles and wanted more body and sweetness, this is the natural next step.
How to Brew
Brew 5 grams in 100 ml of 90°C water for 30 seconds — about a tablespoon of fluffy leaf. Bai Mu Dan handles six rounds or more, with each steep pulling out different layers from the same leaves. Drop the temperature to 85°C if early steeps feel too strong, and add a few seconds to each round after the third.
FAQ
What is bai mu dan?
Bai Mu Dan is a white tea made with one bud and one or two leaves, rather than buds alone. The name translates to "white peony," and Fuding in Fujian is where the style originated. It sits between silver needles (lighter, bud-only) and shou mei (bolder, more leaf).
How is White Peony different from Silver Needles?
Silver Needles uses only buds, which makes it lighter and silkier, while White Peony includes the leaf alongside the bud for fuller body and more stone-fruit character. If you want delicacy, start with Silver Needles — if you want more flavor and body, start here.
Can I drink white peony before bed?
White tea carries less caffeine than green or black, and white peony sits in the middle of that range. Many people drink it in the evening without trouble, especially with shorter steeps. If you are caffeine-sensitive, try a quick rinse before your first real steep to reduce the amount in the cup.
Is white tea really lower in caffeine than green?
Generally yes, though it varies by grade and brewing method. White peony uses both bud and leaf, which distributes the caffeine more broadly than bud-only grades. Short steeps with cooler water keep each cup on the lighter side. Most people find it noticeably gentler than green or black tea.