2026 Update · Steeped Roots

Beginner's Guide to the Six Major Chinese Tea Categories

⚡ Quick Answer

China's six tea categories are Green, White, Yellow, Oolong, Black (Red), and Dark (Pu-erh), classified by oxidation level and processing method. Brew green tea at 75–85 °C / 167–185 °F for 1–2 min; white & yellow at 80–90 °C; oolong at 90–98 °C; and black & dark Pu-erh at 95–100 °C for 3–4 min.

Master Comparison: Six Chinese Tea Categories (2026)

The table below is the single fastest way to understand how each category differs. All temperatures are confirmed by current professional brewing standards.

CategoryOxidationWater Temp (°C / °F)Steep TimeKey Flavor NotesFamous ExamplesBeginner Difficulty
Green~0%75–85 °C / 167–185 °F1–2 minGrassy, chestnut, fresh, sweetLongjing, Biluochun⚠ Easy to over-brew
WhiteLight natural80–90 °C / 176–194 °F2–3 minFloral, silky, honeydew-sweetBaihao Yinzhen, Bai Mudan✅ Very forgiving
YellowLight + "yellowing"80–85 °C / 176–185 °F1–2 minMellow, soybean-sweet, silkyJunshan Yinzhen, Huoshan Huangya✅ Smooth & gentle
Oolong8–80% (varies widely)90–98 °C / 194–208 °F30s–1 min (Gongfu)Orchid → fruit → roasted rockTieguanyin, Da Hong Pao🎯 Complex but rewarding
Black (Red)90–100%95–100 °C / 203–212 °F3–4 minMalty, honey, dried fruit, warmDian Hong, Qimen (Keemun)✅ Rich & robust
Dark (Pu-erh)Microbial post-fermentation95–100 °C / 203–212 °F3–4 min (ripe); 2–3 min (raw)Earthy, woody, aged; ripe = smoothMenghai Pu-erh, Anhua Heicha🎯 Bold; start with ripe

* Gongfu-style oolong uses much shorter, repeated steeps (30 s). Western-style oolong: 3–4 min at the same temperature.

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Each Category at a Glance

Six cards. Scan the numbers first, read the flavor note, then brew.

🍃 Green Tea

75–85 °C 1–2 min 0% oxidation

Key step: High-heat fixation ("kill-green") locks in fresh chlorophyll and delicate aromatics instantly.

Taste: Grassy, bright, chestnut finish. The most "alive" cup.

Pair with: Sushi, fresh fruit, light pastries.

Best entry point: Longjing (Dragon Well) — nutty-sweet, forgiving.

🌸 White Tea

80–90 °C 2–3 min Minimal oxidation

Key step: No frying, no rolling — only sunlight withering and slow air-drying. Least intervention of all six.

Taste: Delicate, honeydew, silky; deepens beautifully with age (store 5+ years).

Pair with: Mild cheeses, salads, light desserts.

Best entry point: Bai Mu Dan (White Peony) — almost impossible to over-brew.

🌼 Yellow Tea

80–85 °C 1–2 min Light + yellowing

Key step: A controlled "yellowing" (sealed warm pile) after fixation — reduces the sharp grassy edge of green tea.

Taste: Mellow, soybean-sweet, smooth and slightly floral.

Pair with: Fresh fruit, mild cheese, light pastries.

Best entry point: Junshan Yinzhen — elegant, rare, utterly smooth.

🍊 Oolong Tea

90–98 °C 30 s – 1 min (Gongfu) 8–80% oxidation

Key step: Repeated bruising (shaking) followed by partial oxidation — the artisan controls every step to build complexity.

Taste: The widest range of any category — orchid floral → tropical fruit → deep roasted mineral rock.

Pair with: Dim sum, pastries, savory bites.

Best entry point: Light-roast Tieguanyin — creamy orchid, crowd-pleasing.

🍒 Black Tea (Red Tea)

95–100 °C 3–4 min 90–100% oxidation

Key step: Full withering → aggressive rolling → complete oxidation — turns the leaf deep copper and builds malt depth.

Taste: Honey, malt, dried fruit, warm and cozy. Yunnan Dian Hong adds a distinctive golden sweetness.

Pair with: Breakfast, dark chocolate, spiced pastries.

Best entry point: Yunnan Dian Hong (2 g / cup) — sweet, zero bitterness.

🌑 Dark Tea (Pu-erh)

95–100 °C 2–4 min Microbial fermentation

Key step: Wet-piling (wo dui) for ripe Pu-erh OR decades of slow natural aging for raw — living microorganisms reshape the leaf chemistry.

Taste: Ripe = earthy, smooth, woody-sweet. Raw (Sheng) = fresh & astringent young → rich, complex, aged.

Pair with: Hearty savory meals, fatty meats, post-dinner digestion.

Best entry point: Ripe Menghai Pu-erh — stomach-friendly, deeply comforting.

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How to Brew Chinese Tea Correctly (5-Step Method)

This universal framework works for all six categories. Adjust only the temperature and time using the table above.

  1. Measure your leaf precisely

    Use 2 g of tea per 150–200 ml (5–7 fl oz) of water as your baseline. Pu-erh and oolong Gongfu style: use 5–8 g per 100 ml in a small Gaiwan or Yixing pot. A kitchen scale removes all guesswork — or use a single 2 g Mini Disk.

  2. Heat water to the correct temperature

    Boil filtered water, then cool to target range: 75–85 °C for green/yellow, 80–90 °C for white, and 95–100 °C for black, oolong, and Pu-erh. A variable-temperature kettle removes all guesswork. Never pour rolling-boil water on green tea — it scorches the leaf and releases harsh tannins.

  3. Warm your vessel first

    Pour a small amount of hot water into your cup, Gaiwan, or teapot; swirl and discard. This raises the vessel temperature by 10–15 °C, preventing the leaf from cooling too fast and ensuring even extraction from the first pour.

  4. Steep for the correct duration — then pour completely

    Add leaves, pour water, start a timer. Green: 1–2 min. White: 2–3 min. Oolong (Gongfu): 30–45 seconds, increasing by 10 s each additional infusion. Black & Ripe Pu-erh: 3–4 min. Drain the vessel completely — residual water left on leaves continues extracting and creates bitterness.

  5. Re-steep and discover new layers

    Quality loose-leaf teas reward multiple infusions. Oolong and Pu-erh: up to 8–12 steeps. Green and white: 2–3 steeps. Add 10–15 seconds to each successive steep. The third infusion of a good Pu-erh is often the most complex cup of the entire session.

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Detailed Brewing Parameters — Metric & Imperial

Standardized for 2026. Use as a laminate-and-pin reference.

TeaLeaf DoseWater VolumeTemp (°C)Temp (°F)First SteepInfusionsVessel
Green2–3 g200 ml / 7 fl oz75–85 °C167–185 °F1–2 min2–3Glass or porcelain
White2–4 g200 ml / 7 fl oz80–90 °C176–194 °F2–3 min3–5Porcelain Gaiwan
Yellow2–3 g150 ml / 5 fl oz80–85 °C176–185 °F1–2 min2–3Glass or Gaiwan
Oolong (Gongfu)5–8 g100 ml / 3.4 fl oz90–98 °C194–208 °F30–45 s6–12Yixing or Gaiwan
Black (Red)2–3 g200 ml / 7 fl oz95–100 °C203–212 °F3–4 min2–4Yixing or teapot
Ripe Pu-erh5–7 g100 ml / 3.4 fl oz95–100 °C203–212 °F10 s rinse + 30 s8–12Yixing (dedicated)
Raw Pu-erh (Sheng)5–7 g100 ml / 3.4 fl oz90–95 °C194–203 °F10 s rinse + 20 s6–10Porcelain Gaiwan

* Always discard the first 10-second "rinse" steep for compressed Pu-erh cakes and bricks to open the leaves.

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Match Your Mood & Moment

The right tea at the right time transforms a cup into an experience.

SituationRecommended TeaWhy It WorksTemp / Time
💻 Deep Focus / WorkAged White Tea or Dian HongSustained caffeine release; light taste won't distract the palate85–90 °C / 2–3 min
🧘 Weekend Ritual / Slow MorningOld Tree Raw Pu-erh (Sheng)Complex evolving flavors reward attention; promotes mindful presence90–95 °C / multiple steeps
🍽️ After a Rich MealRipe Pu-erh (Shou)Smooth, earthy, digestion-friendly — the classic "stomach hug"100 °C / 3 min
🌅 Gentle Morning Wake-UpLongjing Green TeaBright, clean caffeine with fresh vegetal sweetness — clears the mind80 °C / 1.5 min
🍫 Afternoon TreatHeavy-Roast Da Hong Pao OolongRoasted mineral depth pairs like magic with dark chocolate98 °C / 45 s (Gongfu)
😌 Evening Wind-DownWhite Peony (Bai Mu Dan)Low caffeine, floral calm — a gentle transition to rest85 °C / 2 min
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Expert FAQ — 2026 Edition

The questions our customers ask most — answered precisely.

  • How are the six tea categories officially classified?
    Classification is based on oxidation degree and processing method — not region, tree age, or leaf size. Green (0%), White (minimal natural), Yellow (light + yellowing), Oolong (8–80%), Black (90–100%), and Dark (microbial post-fermentation). A Yunnan leaf can become green, black, OR Pu-erh depending solely on how it is processed after harvest.
  • Why does green tea turn bitter so easily?
    Green tea is high in catechins (a type of tannin) that release rapidly at temperatures above 90 °C / 194 °F. Keep water at 75–85 °C and steep for no more than 2 minutes. If your kettle only boils, simply let it sit uncovered for 3–4 minutes before pouring. Small-leaf greens like Biluochun tolerate 75 °C best; broader-leaf styles like Longjing can handle up to 85 °C.
  • Which Chinese tea is best for absolute beginners?
    Top 3 beginner picks: (1) Bai Mu Dan White Tea — almost impossible to brew bitter, floral and smooth; (2) Ripe Pu-erh (Shou) — earthy and warming, tolerates boiling water perfectly; (3) Yunnan Dian Hong Black Tea — rich, sweet, and zero astringency. All three forgive minor temperature and timing errors, letting newcomers focus on enjoying the cup rather than stressing about technique.
  • What is the difference between raw (Sheng) and ripe (Shou) Pu-erh?
    Sheng (Raw) Pu-erh is compressed and left to age naturally — young versions taste grassy and astringent; aged cakes (10+ years) develop rich, complex honey-leather sweetness. Shou (Ripe) Pu-erh undergoes an accelerated wet-piling (wo dui) process over 45–60 days that mimics decades of aging — producing the characteristic earthy, smooth, woody profile immediately. Beginners should start with Shou; Sheng rewards patience and experience.
  • What does "Gongfu brewing" mean and do I need it?
    Gongfu (工夫) brewing uses a higher leaf-to-water ratio (5–8 g per 100 ml) in a small vessel (Gaiwan or Yixing teapot) with very short steeping times (20–45 seconds), repeated many times. It is not required — Western-style brewing (2 g per 200 ml, 3–4 min) works beautifully for all six categories. Gongfu simply unlocks more layers of flavor across 6–12 infusions and is ideal for premium oolong and Pu-erh where complexity rewards repeated exploration.
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🌿 Further Reading

Deepen your knowledge with these curated guides from Steeped Roots.

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