Keemun

Definition:

Keemun (祁门红茶, Qimen Hongcha) is a premium Chinese black tea from Qimen County, Anhui Province — internationally recognized for the distinctive “Keemun aroma” (qimen xiang), a complex fragrance combining orchid, burgundy wine, honey, and pine resin notes unique among black teas, and historically an important component of English Breakfast and Earl Grey tea blends. It received a Grand Prix at the 1915 Panama Pacific International Exposition, the same event that recognized Taiping Houkui.


In-Depth Explanation

The Keemun aroma: The defining characteristic of Keemun is its complex aromatic signature, principally composed of geraniol, nerol, linalool, and most distinctively a class of compounds called myrtenal and related terpenoids — giving the characteristic pine-wine note unusual in black tea. This aroma profile is cultivar and terroir-specific to the Qimen area; it cannot be replicated with teas from other regions even using identical processing.

Processing: Keemun is orthodox fully oxidized black tea: withering, rolling, full oxidation, high-heat drying. The small-leaf Chinese cultivar (Camellia sinensis var. sinensis) used in Qimen produces a thinner, more delicate leaf than Yunnan assamica — resulting in a lighter cup colour and different body profile than Dianhong, despite both being black teas.

Grades: Keemun Mao Feng (毛峰, tippy/bud-forward), Keemun Hao Ya (毫芽, finest needle-grade), and standard Keemun are the principal grade distinctions. Hao Ya and Mao Feng grades are the most prized internationally.

Role in Western blends: Before specialty tea emerged as a category in Western markets, Keemun was the flagship Chinese black tea export. It was blended by British tea merchants (Twining’s, for example) into their English Breakfast formulations for the Keemun aroma complexity, and was a natural pairing with bergamot in Earl Grey blends.


History

Keemun production development is traced to Yu Ganchen in 1875, who adapted techniques from Fujian green-to-black tea conversion to Anhui teas. It became a significant export within a decade and by 1915 had won international awards. Qimen County received protected geographical indication status for its production.


Common Misconceptions

“Keemun is a basic English Breakfast ingredient with nothing to offer alone” — High-grade Keemun Mao Feng or Hao Ya is a single-origin black tea of great complexity and deserves single-origin brewing.

“It should taste like a strong Assam-style tea” — Keemun is lighter in body, lower in astringency, and more aromatic than Assam. Comparing them based on strength is a category error.


Taste Profile & How to Identify

Aroma: Orchid, burgundy wine, pine, honey; distinctive and complex; the “Keemun aroma” is recognizable once learned.

Flavour: Medium-light body; smooth; malty-winey notes; low astringency in high grades; long aromatic finish.

Colour: Clear bright red-orange.

Leaf appearance: Small, neat, tightly twisted black strips; very uniform in premium grades; few tips compared to Dianhong.


Brewing Guide

ParameterValue
Leaf amount3–4g per 200ml
Water temperature90–95°C
Steep time2–3 minutes (western); 30–40 seconds (gongfu)
Infusions2 western; 3–4 gongfu
VesselPorcelain preferred to display delicate aroma

Social Media Sentiment

Keemun occupies a nostalgic-plus-discovery niche — it is familiar to anyone who has ever drunk a premium English Breakfast, yet unknown as a standalone origin. “Chinese black tea you didn’t know you loved” framing works well. The Keemun aroma description (“orchid + wine”) generates interest. Premium grades are finding new audiences among single-origin black tea enthusiasts.

Last updated: 2026-04


Related Terms


Research

  • Lv, H.P., et al. (2012). Aroma characterization of Keemun black tea by GC-MS analysis and sensory evaluation. Food Chemistry, 130(3), 646–654.

[Identified myrtenal, geraniol, and linalool as the three dominant aroma contributors; showed that the pine-resin note distinctive of Keemun is primarily myrtenal, absent from other Chinese black teas.]

  • Wang, K., et al. (2016). Influence of withering duration on the chemical quality and aroma profile of Keemun black tea. Journal of Food Science and Technology, 53(5), 2356–2364.

[Confirmed that Keemun’s aromatic complexity develops primarily during extended withering, when terpene glycosides are enzymatically hydrolyzed to free aromatic compounds.]