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Overview
A warmer, more settled cup than most white tea. Moonlight White, or Yue Guang Bai (月光白), gets its name from how the leaves are dried: laid out in shade overnight rather than under the sun, which preserves a ripe, honeyed sweetness that sun-drying would strip away. Seed-grown bushes at 1,600 meters on Awa Shan, near the Yunnan-Myanmar border, supply the leaf each March. Tasting Notes Think dried apricot and warm blossom with a grain sweetness that builds across steeps. The liquor pours pale gold with a honeyed, almost ripe scent — this is not a crisp, grassy white tea. First steeps land soft and full, with stone fruit and a warmth that sits deeper in the cup than the color suggests. Later rounds bring melon rind and a toasty, grain-like finish that shade-withering creates. Seven or eight steeps before it thins, each one a little warmer than the last. Dried in shade overnight instead of sun — that vintage warmth is what the process preserves. Origin Awa Shan sits in Xishuangbanna, Yunnan, right along the Myanmar border. The bushes grow at 1,600 meters, where morning fog and cool nights slow the leaves down and build sweetness. This March 2025 harvest comes from a smallholder cooperative run by the local Wa community, who manage the plots using organic practices without certification. Craft Most white tea is sun-withered, but Moonlight White skips the sun entirely. The fresh leaves are spread indoors and left to wither overnight in shade, which keeps floral compounds intact that direct sunlight would break down. Minimal handling after that: no rolling, no roasting, just slow drying until the leaves curl into their signature two-tone shape, pale on one side and dark on the other. Aging Potential White tea changes gradually over time, gaining depth and concentration the way cheese does with controlled aging. Fresh Moonlight White leads with florals and stone fruit, but after two or three years, the honey thickens and warm grain notes emerge underneath. Store it sealed in a cool, dark place and revisit a portion each year to track the shift. The Yunnan Qun Ti Zhong cultivar holds up well to aging because it carries enough body and structure to develop complexity rather than simply fade. Two to three years is where most drinkers notice the change. A 25g pouch is enough for about a month of sessions, and the leaf stretches further than most whites because each steep holds its sweetness. If you already like Silver Needles, this is the natural next step for more body and honey depth. Brewing Brew 5g in 100ml of 90°C water for 30 seconds, then pour off completely. That amount is about a tablespoon of these fluffy leaves. Resteep freely, adding a few seconds each round as the leaf opens up. Each session runs seven to eight steeps before the leaf starts to thin out, so a single pouch lasts longer than you would expect. Start with the first pour to taste rather than rinsing, since these leaves need no wash before brewing. FAQ What is moonlight white tea? Moonlight white tea is a style from Yunnan dried in shade overnight instead of in sunlight. The name Yue Guang Bai translates to "moonlight white," a reference to the indoor nighttime withering that defines it. The result is a sweeter, more floral cup than sun-dried whites from the same region. How does Moonlight White compare to Silver Needles? Silver Needles uses only buds, which gives it a lighter, more delicate cup. Moonlight White includes both buds and leaves, so the body is fuller and the honey notes are more pronounced. Try them side by side to taste the contrast: Yunnan Silver Needles is the natural pairing. Is moonlight white a white tea or a pu-erh? It falls in a gray area. Moonlight white is processed like a white tea — minimal handling, no rolling, no roasting — but the leaf comes from Yunnan's large-leaf cultivar, the same plant used for pu-erh. Some people shelve it with white tea, others with Yunnan specialties. The cup tastes like neither category quite captures it. Why does moonlight white look different from other white teas? The leaves are dried in shade overnight rather than in sunlight — that is where the name comes from. Shade-drying preserves more of the silver down on the leaf surface and produces a darker, more contrasted appearance than sun-dried Fujian whites. The flavor difference is just as visible: more honey and stone fruit, less hay.