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- 2025/10/6
- Oolong Tea
Tie Guan Yin, literally “Iron Goddess of Mercy,” is the most celebrated among China’s oolong teas and the one whose name is whisp...- 21Read
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- 2025/10/6
- Oolong Tea
Tieguanyin, literally “Iron Goddess of Mercy,” is the most revered sub-style of Chinese oolong, a tea that sits poetically betwee...- 20Read
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- 2025/10/5
- Oolong Tea
Tieguanyin, literally “Iron Goddess of Mercy,” is the most revered name within the vast oolong family. To the Chinese nose it is...- 26Read
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- 2025/10/5
- Oolong Tea
Walk into any serious tea house from Taipei to Turin and you will almost certainly find a tin whose label reads “Tie Guan Yin.” ...- 21Read
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- 2025/10/5
- Oolong Tea
Rising like an emerald spine through the clouds of central Taiwan, the Alishan mountain range has been whispering tea stories sin...- 23Read
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- 2025/10/5
- Oolong Tea
Cradled in the cloud-veiled peaks of Taiwan’s Chiayi County, Alishan High-Mountain Oolong (阿里山高山烏龍) is the island’s most fragrant...- 22Read
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- 2025/10/4
- Oolong Tea
Few Chinese teas have crossed cultural borders as gracefully as Tie Guan Yin, the “Iron Goddess of Mercy.” Named after the Bodhis...- 25Read
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- 2025/10/4
- Oolong Tea
Alishan High-Mountain Oolong is not merely a tea; it is a vertical journey through the clouds. Grown between 1,000 and 1,400 metr...- 23Read
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- 2025/10/4
- Oolong Tea
Tie Guan Yin, literally “Iron Goddess of Mercy,” is more than a tea; it is a moving dialogue between rock, mist, and human devoti...- 23Read
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- 2025/10/3
- Oolong Tea
Few leaves carry as much folklore, craftsmanship, and sheer aromatic charisma as Tie Guan Yin, the “Iron Goddess of Mercy.” Hail...- 22Read
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