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Overview
Pine resin and snowmelt sweetness from buds that most people have never seen. These are ya bao, the dormant branch tips a tree grows as winter armor, picked in February before spring arrives. Wild Winter Buds, or Ye Sheng Ya Bao (野生芽苞), brew into a cup that tastes like a cold mountain forest, with near-zero caffeine that makes them a rare choice for any hour. Tasting Notes Think pine resin with a cool herbal finish, like standing in a mountain forest after snow. The liquor pours clear pale gold with a woodsy scent rising from the cup, and first steeps land clean and light, with pine sweetness settling over the palate before later rounds bring dried flowers and a faint mineral thread that stretches the finish. Near-zero caffeine and pine resin — ya bao after dinner is a session most teas cannot offer. Origin The buds come from wild Camellia Assamica Dehongensis trees growing untended at 1,100 meters in Mangshi, Dehong, Yunnan. Nobody prunes these trees or feeds the soil — they grow as they choose, and the flavor carries that wildness. Cold mountain nights and thin air slow the buds down, concentrating a resinous sweetness that sets ya bao apart from leaf-based white tea. Craft Ya bao are not leaves. They are the dormant growing tips that cap each branch during winter, sealed in layers of pale fuzz. Pickers snap them off by hand in February 2025, before the first spring flush opens. The buds go through minimal processing, sun-dried and nothing else, which preserves the pine-resin character and keeps caffeine close to zero. That simplicity is the whole point of ya bao: less handling means more of the tree in the cup. Aging Potential White tea changes with time, and ya bao follow the same path. Fresh buds taste bright and piney, and as they rest over months the resinous notes soften into something warmer and honeyed while a quiet depth builds underneath. Set a portion aside for six months or a year and taste how the cup evolves. A 25-gram bag holds four or five sessions, enough to decide if this tea fits your routine. The near-zero caffeine makes it a natural evening pick, something you can brew after dinner without a second thought. Brewing Brew 5 grams in 100 ml of 90°C water for 30 seconds. That is about a tablespoon, and a 25-gram bag covers roughly four sessions. Use water just off the boil, let it cool for a minute to reach 90°C, then resteep freely, adding a few seconds each round for eight to ten steeps. FAQ What are winter tea buds? Ya bao are the dormant growing tips that tea trees produce in autumn to protect new growth through winter. They look like small, fuzzy cones rather than flat leaves and brew into a light, sweet cup with minimal caffeine. How is Wild Winter Buds different from Moonlight White? Wild Winter Buds draws from dormant branch tips with pine resin and near-zero caffeine. Moonlight White uses spring leaves dried in shade, with honey sweetness and standard caffeine. If that matters to you, Wild Winter Buds is the clear evening pick. Why are winter-picked teas different from spring teas? Winter buds (ya bao) form as the tree's defense against cold, packed with stored energy and protective compounds. That concentrated chemistry produces a resinous, piney character you do not find in spring-picked leaf, which is softer and more floral. The season shapes the flavor from the start. Is winter tea lower quality than spring? Different, not lower. Spring tea is prized for sweetness and complexity, while winter buds bring a unique resinous intensity that spring leaf cannot replicate. Ya bao is a distinct product with its own following, not a lesser version of spring white tea.