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Dried apricot and jujube sweetness in a cup you can brew in thirty seconds flat. Silent Tribute is pressed into single-serve cubes, each one pre-portioned so you drop it in, pour water, and drink. The leaves come from semi-wild bushes in Fuding that nobody tends or prunes, and five years of aging turned them warm and honeyed with a thick, coating body. What You'll Taste Think dried apricot with jujube sweetness, like fruit leather with a warm grain finish. The liquor pours amber-gold with a bready warmth you catch before the first sip. First steeps land smooth and coating, with a silk texture that fills the mouth. Later rounds shift toward toasted grain and a quiet woody note that stretches through eight to ten steeps without thinning out. Drop a cube, pour water, and the apricot sweetness is there in thirty seconds — five years of aging packed into a single serve. Where It Comes From Guan Yang sits in the hills above Fuding, in Fujian's Ningde prefecture, at 900 meters where fog rolls through the bushes most mornings. The plants here are ye fang cha (野放茶), meaning they were planted and then left to grow on their own with no pruning, no fertilizer, and no spraying. That neglect is the point: roots dig deeper, leaves grow tougher, and the result is Ye Sheng Gong Mei (野生贡眉), a wild gong mei with a mineral backbone that tended gardens miss. Chinese tea from semi-wild groves like these tastes different from anything a manicured plantation can produce. How It's Made The processing is minimal: wither the leaves, dry them, and stop. No rolling, no roasting, no oxidation control. Workers picked these leaves in April 2021 and sun-dried them on bamboo trays before pressing the dried leaf into small cubes. Each cube holds about three grams, enough for a single session. Four years of shelf aging did the rest, deepening the sweetness and softening any rough edges into something mellow and warming. The cube format locks in a consistent stage of transformation, so every session starts from the same place. How It Ages Fresh leaves from these bushes taste grassy and light. After a few years, the flavor shifts toward dried fruit and grain as slow oxidation builds depth. Silent Tribute sits at five years, the point where honeyed warmth replaces the green notes but the cup still keeps clarity. Sealed cubes slow the process, so each one holds roughly the same stage of development. In another five years, the grain notes will deepen and the texture will grow thicker, making a cup that settles even more. A 25-gram bag gives you enough cubes to get to know this tea over a couple of weeks. That is about eight sessions, each one lasting eight to ten steeps, so the bag stretches further than you expect. How to Brew Drop one or two cubes (about 5 grams) into 100 ml of 95°C water and steep for 30 seconds. Give it a quick rinse first: pour hot water over the cube, wait five seconds, pour it out, then start your real steep. Three grams is roughly a tablespoon of loose leaf. No scale needed: each cube is already portioned. The forgiving character of aged leaf means a longer steep brings more body rather than bitterness, so beginners can relax about timing. If you are brewing in a mug, use two cubes and double the water. FAQ What is aged wild white tea? It starts as the least processed category: leaves are withered and dried with no rolling or roasting, preserving a gentle, naturally sweet flavor. Aging adds depth over several years, shifting the taste from grassy and light toward dried fruit and grain. Browse the full collection to compare styles at different ages. How does Silent Tribute compare to Wild Arbor? Silent Tribute is five years old and pressed into single-serve cubes for quick, consistent sessions. Wild Arbor is a ten-year cake with a thicker body and deeper complexity that rewards longer, slower brewing. Think of Silent Tribute as the weekday cup and Wild Arbor as the weekend session. How do I brew from a compressed cube? Drop one cube into your cup or pot, pour hot water over it, and steep for 30 seconds. The cube opens up on its own as the water works through the compressed leaf — no breaking or tools needed. Each cube is pre-portioned for a single session, so there is nothing to measure. Are compressed cubes the same quality as loose leaf? Yes. Compression is a format choice, not a quality indicator. These cubes use the same Fuding white tea leaf that goes into loose bags. The pressed shape slows air exposure, which can actually help the tea age more evenly over time. The convenience of a pre-portioned cube is a bonus.