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Warm grain, gardenia, and a sugarcane finish that lingers through a dozen steeps. Golden Echo is Ma Wei Shan Huang Cha (马尾山黄茶), a Yunnan yellow tea built on thick Yunkang #10 leaves that carry more body than most teas in this category. The liquor pours pale gold, shifting from floral sweetness toward toasted grain as the session unfolds. What You'll Taste The first steep opens with gardenia and a soft grain sweetness, like warm bread fresh from the oven. By the third round, sugarcane takes over and the floral notes drop into the background. The liquor stays clear and pale gold throughout, making this a calm morning cup or a slow afternoon pour when warmth across many rounds is exactly the point. Where It Grows Ma Wei Shan sits in the Simao district of Pu'er, Yunnan, at 1,300 meters, where cool mountain air slows leaf growth and concentrates sugars in the thick Yunkang #10 leaves harvested each spring. The April 2025 pick arrived when the plants push their most flavor-dense flush of the year. Yunnan's generous terroir gives the cup a fuller body than yellow teas from the smaller-leaf gardens of Anhui or Zhejiang. How It's Made After a light pan-firing to stop oxidation, the leaves go through men huang (sealed yellowing), spending hours in cloth at controlled temperature. Moisture and gentle heat do what pan-firing alone cannot: they transform sharp, grassy edges into warm grain and floral sweetness. The thick Yunkang #10 leaves hold their structure through the process, landing in the sweet spot between green freshness and full fermentation. A 25g pouch holds five sessions at 5g per serving, giving plenty of room to explore how the flavor shifts from gardenia to grain across a dozen steeps. If something lighter and more delicate sounds better, try Bright Matter for comparison. Brewing Guide Brew 5g of leaf in 100ml at 85°C for 20 seconds to start, adding five seconds per round after that. A 25g pouch covers five full sessions. Keep the temperature below boiling because excess heat draws out astringency that hides the grain and gardenia notes. FAQ What is yellow tea? One of six traditional Chinese categories, and the rarest. Production starts like green with a kill-green (pan-firing) step, then adds sealed yellowing (men huang) to mellow the flavor. The result tastes warmer and smoother, with grain and floral character instead of grassiness. Our guide to all six categories explains the differences. How does Golden Echo compare to Bright Matter? Golden Echo brings Yunnan warmth and body from thick Yunkang #10 leaves. Bright Matter is an Anhui-style needle with a lighter, crisper floral profile. Think of it as full-bodied versus delicate; Golden Echo rewards gongfu brewing with deep grain sweetness, while Bright Matter shines in shorter, lighter steeps. Why does Golden Echo hold up for so many steeps? Yunkang #10 is a large-leaf cultivar bred for Yunnan's climate. Its thick leaves release flavor slowly, giving a dozen steeps before fading. The sealed yellowing process also creates compounds that dissolve gradually, so later rounds still carry sweetness. Does sealed yellowing change the caffeine level? Not meaningfully. The men huang process transforms flavor compounds but does not reduce caffeine in any significant way. Expect a similar amount to green, though the smoother body often makes the cup feel gentler on the system.