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Roasted grain, chestnut shell, and a warm buckwheat-honey finish that lingers long after the cup is empty. Dark Matter is for people who find green tea too grassy and black too heavy. Huoshan Huang Da Cha (霍山黄大茶) means "large-leaf yellow tea," and the name fits: bold leaves roasted darker than anything else in the category. What You'll Taste Think toasted grain with chestnut warmth, like buckwheat pancakes drizzled with honey. The liquor pours amber-gold with a roasted cereal scent rising from the cup. First steeps land smooth and full-bodied, coating the mouth with nutty sweetness and a dry mineral edge. Later rounds lean into roasted barley and a faint smokiness that builds without sharpness, stretching through five to seven steeps before fading. Roasted darker than any other yellow tea — that buckwheat-honey warmth is what sets Huang Da Cha apart. Where It Comes From Huoshan County sits in the Dabie Mountains of Anhui province, where misty ridges and cool air at 800 meters slow leaf growth and concentrate flavor. The Cheng Xu Gao family and their farmer cooperative pick these leaves each April from Jinjizhong bushes, a cultivar chosen for its thick, sturdy leaf that holds up to heavy roasting. Lu'an has been producing tea for over a thousand years. Huoshan's yellow teas rank among the oldest documented styles in China, with roots stretching back to the Ming dynasty and a reputation that once reached the imperial court. How It's Made Most yellow tea goes through a gentle smothering step called men huang, where damp leaves sit wrapped in cloth until they turn golden. Dark Matter takes that further with longer smothering and higher-heat roasting, which pushes the flavor from light and floral into deep cereal and chestnut territory. The result looks and tastes darker than any yellow tea you have seen. In the cup it lands closer to a roasted oolong, but with the smooth, rounded body that the men huang process creates underneath. A 25-gram bag gives you five or six sessions to explore this tea, enough to know whether it belongs in your rotation. Try it alongside the rest of the yellow tea collection to taste the range from light and delicate to roasted and bold. Brewing Brew 5g in 100ml of 95°C water for 20 seconds, then resteep freely. Five grams is about a tablespoon of these large leaves, and you can expect five to seven rounds before the flavor fades. Use water just off the boil and do not be shy with the temperature. Dark Matter handles heat better than lighter styles, and the higher water temperature pulls out more of the toasty grain character that makes this tea stand apart. FAQ What is yellow tea? One of six traditional Chinese tea categories, sitting between green and oolong. The leaves go through a slow smothering step called men huang that removes grassiness and builds a sweeter, smoother body. Most producers skip it because the process takes more time and skill, which is why you rarely see yellow tea on shelves. How is Dark Matter different from Bright Matter? Dark Matter is roasted heavier with deeper cereal and chestnut flavors. Bright Matter is a lighter Huang Ya (needle grade) with sweet corn silk and a floral lift. They come from the same Gao family in Huoshan but represent opposite ends of the spectrum. Why is yellow tea so rare? The sealed yellowing step takes extra time, skill, and attention that most producers skip in favor of faster-selling green tea. Fewer than a dozen makers in China still practice the traditional method. That scarcity is why yellow tea rarely appears outside specialist shops. Does the heavier roasting change the flavor compared to lighter yellow teas? Significantly. Most yellow tea is gentle and floral, but Dark Matter's extended roasting pushes the flavor into chestnut and toasted grain territory — closer to a roasted oolong than a delicate yellow. The men huang step underneath keeps the body smooth, which is what separates it from true oolong despite the darker profile.