Yellow tea
Yellow tea is a particular lightly oxidized tea, either Chinese huángchá and Korean hwangcha.
Chinese ''huángchá''
Huángchá is increasingly rare and expensive. The process for making it is similar to that of green tea but with an added step of encasing, or sweltering, giving the leaves a slightly yellow coloring during the drying process. Chinese yellow tea is often placed in the same category as green tea because of its light oxidation. One of the goals of this production method is to remove the characteristic grassy smell of green tea.Varieties
- Junshan Yinzhen : from Hunan Province, China is a Silver Needle yellow tea. A Chinese Famous Tea.
- Huoshan Huangya : from Mt. Huo, Anhui Province, China.
- Meng Ding Huangya : from Mt. Meng, Ya'an, Sichuan Province, China.
- Mogan Huangya : from Mount Mogan, Zhejiang Province, China.
- Beigang Maojian : from Yueyang, Hunan Province, China. Also known by the Tang Dynasty-era name Yōnghúchá.
- Weishan Maojian : from Mt. Wei, Weishan Township, Ningxiang, Hunan Province, China.
- Haimagong Cha : from Dafang County, Guizhou Province, China.
- Da Ye Qing : from Guangdong Province, China. Literally Big Leaf Green.
- Pingyang Huangtang : from Zhejiang Province, China. Could be called one of the Wenzhou Huangtang ; the latter term is literally translated as Yellow Broth or Yellow Soup.
- Yuan'an Luyuan : from Yuan'an County, Hubei Province, China.
Korean ''hwangcha''