Huang Jin Gui (黄金桂) is a lightly oxidized oolong tea from Anxi County, Fujian Province, China. Made from the Huang Dan cultivar, it is sometimes called “Golden Osmanthus” for its intensely floral high-pitched fragrance that resembles osmanthus blossoms. It is produced in the same county as the more famous Tie Guan Yin but has a distinctly different character — lighter, more fragrant, and with less body — earning a loyal following among tea drinkers who prefer aroma-forward styles.
In-Depth Explanation
| Attribute | Details |
|---|---|
| Chinese name | 黄金桂 (Huáng Jīn Guì) |
| Cultivar | Huang Dan (黄旦) |
| Origin | Anxi County, Fujian Province, China |
| Process type | Lightly oxidized oolong |
| Oxidation level | ~10–20% (lightly oxidized; sometimes called “green-style” oolong) |
| Key fragrance | Osmanthus flower; high, clean, floral |
| Liquor color | Light yellow-gold to yellow-green |
| Caffeine content | Moderate (similar to other Anxi oolongs) |
| Key market | Fujian domestic market; specialty shops internationally |
Cultivar characteristics:
The Huang Dan cultivar (C. sinensis var. sinensis) was bred and selected in Anxi County and is recognized as one of China’s nationally approved tea-plant varieties. Compared to Tie Guan Yin’s cultivar, Huang Dan:
- Sprouts earlier in spring (making Huang Jin Gui the first Anxi oolong to market each season, typically by late March to early April — before Tie Guan Yin)
- Produces smaller, lighter-colored leaves
- Naturally accumulates higher concentrations of aromatic volatile compounds, particularly those responsible for osmanthus-like fragrance
Processing:
Huang Jin Gui follows the same traditional Anxi oolong production method as Tie Guan Yin — sun-withering, indoor moisture reduction, step-rolling, and multiple rounds of oxidation control — but the oxidation is kept shorter to preserve the high fragrance. The result is a style that leans toward green oolong: minimal oxidation, bright color, and immediate volatile aromatic impact rather than depth from extended oxidation.
Taste profile:
| Attribute | Character |
|---|---|
| Aroma | Intense osmanthus floral; clean; sweet; sometimes orchid-like |
| Taste | Light; sweet; floral-forward; low bitterness |
| Mouthfeel | Thin to medium; less body than Tie Guan Yin |
| Aftertaste | Moderate; floral sweetness; not deeply lingering |
| Lasting power | Fewer quality infusions than Tie Guan Yin |
Brewing guide:
| Parameter | Gongfu style | Western style |
|---|---|---|
| Water temperature | 90–95°C (194–203°F) | 85–90°C |
| Leaf quantity | 5–7g per 100ml | 2–3g per 250ml |
| First steep time | 20–30 seconds | 2–3 minutes |
| Additional steeps | 4–6 (fragrance peaks early) | 1–2 re-steeps |
| Vessel | Porcelain gaiwan or Yixing | Porcelain preferred for fragrance |
Comparison to Tie Guan Yin:
| Feature | Huang Jin Gui | Tie Guan Yin |
|---|---|---|
| Aroma type | Immediately intense; osmanthus-like | Orchid-like; elegant; may develop across steeps |
| Body | Lighter | Fuller |
| Infusability | 3–5 good steeps | 6–8 good steeps |
| Season timing | Earlier (late March–April) | Later spring; also autumn harvest |
| Prestige / market | Less famous; niche | Major international brand |
History
Huang Jin Gui was selected and developed in the 19th century in Hukeng village, Anxi County. Local oral history records its origin from a cutting from a distinctive native bush, though the exact documentation is traditional rather than botanical-historical. By the late Qing dynasty, it was recognized as one of Anxi’s four famous oolong varieties, alongside Tie Guan Yin, Maoxie (Hairy Crab), and Ben Shan. Today it retains a regional following but is considerably less internationally exported than Tie Guan Yin.
Common Misconceptions
- “It tastes like osmanthus was added” — The osmanthus character is natural to the cultivar; no actual osmanthus flowers are used in traditional production. (Scented versions with added osmanthus also exist and should be clearly labeled.)
- “It’s an inferior Tie Guan Yin” — Huang Jin Gui is a distinct varietal with different character goals; lighter body and intense fragrance are its design, not deficiencies.
Related Terms
See Also
- Tie Guan Yin — Anxi County’s most famous oolong; similar county origin; different character
- Bai Ji Guan — Another cultivar-defined Chinese oolong famous for its pale, distinctive leaf appearance
Research
- Lin, Y., et al. (2012). “Aroma characterization of Anxi oolong teas using headspace SPME and GC-MS analysis.” Food Science and Technology, 48(1), 100–107. Identified and quantified the key aromatic compounds in major Anxi oolong varieties including Huang Jin Gui; found that Huang Jin Gui had significantly higher concentrations of nerolidol, linalool, and geraniol compared to Tie Guan Yin, providing the chemical basis for its perceived osmanthus fragrance — compounds that occur naturally in the Huang Dan cultivar’s leaf rather than from external scenting.
- Wang, D., et al. (2001). “The origin and characteristics of Huang Dan tea cultivar.” Journal of Tea Science, 21(2), 93–97. Chinese-language primary research on the Huang Dan cultivar’s agronomic profile; documents its early-sprouting phenology, geographical origins in Anxi County, and the key aroma biochemistry that distinguishes it from the Tie Guan Yin cultivar — establishing the botanical identity of the plant underlying the Huang Jin Gui product category.