Bi Luo Chun

Bi Luo Chun (碧螺春, Bì Luó Chūn, “Green Snail Spring”) — also written as Biluochun — is one of China’s Ten Famous Teas, a premium hand-rolled green tea produced in early spring from the Dongting Mountain area of Jiangsu Province. It is distinguished by its tight spiral shape, fine silvery-white down (毫, háo) on the leaves, and a uniquely fruity-sweet aroma produced by the traditional practice of interplanting tea bushes among peach, plum, apricot, and persimmon trees.

For the full detailed entry on this tea, see Biluochun.


Overview

Origin: Dongting Mountain, Taihu Lake region, Suzhou, Jiangsu Province, China

Oxidation: Unoxidized (green tea)

Harvest: Early spring (Qingming, early April); highest grades from pre-Qingming (明前, míng qián)

Character: Sweet, fruity-floral with apricot/peach notes; delicate umami; clean green finish

What makes it distinctive:

The traditional Dongting Mountain production interplants tea bushes among peach, plum, apricot, and persimmon trees — a multi-century-old practice that some believe contributes a subtle fruity quality to the tea through co-absorption of aromatic compounds in the soil and air. Whether the fruity aroma is primarily genetic, environmental, or processing-derived is debated, but Dongting Bi Luo Chun is consistently more fruity-floral than any replicated version grown elsewhere.

The extremely delicate, tightly rolled spirals are hand-made: freshly plucked leaves are wok-killed (炒青, chǎo qīng), then hand-rolled in the warm wok until the spiral form hold, then lightly dried. Good Bi Luo Chun uses only the finest new-spring bud-and-one-leaf plucks.


Spelling Variants

  • Biluochun — modern Hanyu Pinyin (no spaces)
  • Bi Luo Chun — Pinyin with spaces
  • Pi Lo Chun — older Wade-Giles romanization
  • Green Snail Spring — English translation
  • 碧螺春 — Chinese characters

All refer to the same tea. Geographic-origin “Dongting Biluochun” (洞庭碧螺春) is the protected designation; imitation Bi Luo Chun produced in other provinces lacks this designation.


Brewing

ParameterRecommendation
Water temperature70–80°C (delicate; never boiling)
Leaf-to-water ratio3–4g per 200ml (Western)
Steeping time1.5–2 minutes (Western); 20–30 sec (gongfu)
VesselGlass or porcelain; glass allows visual appreciation of leaf unfurling
Method noteTop-water method (上投法): add leaf first, then pour water from height — generates leaf movement and uniform extraction

See Biluochun for comprehensive tasting notes, history, and cultivar details.


Related Terms