Phoenix Oolong (Feng Huang Dan Cong) — Loose Leaf Oolong Tea
Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong tea garden in the Phoenix Mountain area of Guangdong
Phoenix Mountain (Wudong Shan) - high-altitude home of Dan Cong oolong, Guangdong
Tea farmer hand-picking Dan Cong oolong leaves on Phoenix Mountain, Guangdong
Harvesting single-bush Phoenix Dan Cong leaves from ancient tea trees
Sun-withering fresh Dan Cong leaves on bamboo trays - Phoenix oolong processing
Traditional processing of Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong - the 216-step Phoenix craft
Traditional processing of Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong - the 216-step Phoenix craft
Phoenix Oolong (Feng Huang Dan Cong) — Loose Leaf Oolong Tea
Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong tea garden in the Phoenix Mountain area of Guangdong
Phoenix Mountain (Wudong Shan) - high-altitude home of Dan Cong oolong, Guangdong
Tea farmer hand-picking Dan Cong oolong leaves on Phoenix Mountain, Guangdong
Harvesting single-bush Phoenix Dan Cong leaves from ancient tea trees
Sun-withering fresh Dan Cong leaves on bamboo trays - Phoenix oolong processing
Traditional processing of Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong - the 216-step Phoenix craft
Traditional processing of Feng Huang Dan Cong oolong - the 216-step Phoenix craft
ValleyGreenTea

Phoenix Oolong (Feng Huang Dan Cong) — Loose Leaf Oolong Tea

$24.40 AUD

  • 50g

Phoenix Dan Cong:

Feng Huang Dan Cong

Other names: Phoenix Dan Cong, Feng Huang Dan Cong, Dancong Oolong, Dan Cong Oolong, Phoenix Single Bush, Phoenix Oolong, Guangdong Oolong, Feng Huang Oolong, 凤凰单丛, 凤凰单枞

 

What Is Phoenix Dan Cong?

If Wuyi Rock Tea is the powerhouse of oolong and high mountain oolong is the gentle one, Phoenix Dan Cong (凤凰单丛) is the show-off — the most aromatic oolong China produces, full stop.

The name means "Phoenix Single Bush." It comes from Phoenix Mountain (Feng Huang Shan) in Guangdong Province, where the finest tea is still picked and processed bush by individual bush — no blending, because each old tree has its own character worth keeping separate.

Dan Cong is the top tier of China's single-bush teas, and it's famous for one extraordinary trait: the leaves naturally mimic the aromas of flowers and fruit. Tea so fragrant that locals traditionally name each type after the scent it echoes.

This Feng Huang Dan Cong carries a high, elegant, pure orchid-type aroma, a bright deep-yellow brew, and a mellow, full texture. The floral note lingers long after you swallow — the kind of cup that pulls you straight back for the next pour. A must-try for any oolong lover.

 

The Only Great Oolong Not From Fujian or Taiwan

Here's something that makes Dan Cong special before you even taste it: almost all of China's famous oolong comes from just two places — Fujian Province and Taiwan. Dan Cong is the great exception.

  • Fujian — home of Wuyi Rock Tea (bold and roasted) and Anxi's Tie Guan Yin (floral and fresh).
  • Taiwan — home of high mountain oolongs like Mt Ali and Wenshan Baozhong (smooth and aromatic).
  • Guangdong — and then there's Dan Cong, standing alone in the third great oolong region, with a style found nowhere else.

Grown on the high, misty slopes of Phoenix Mountain — some trees centuries old — Dan Cong is the most aromatic branch of the entire oolong family. If you've worked through the Fujian and Taiwan oolongs, this is the one that shows you a completely different side of what oolong can be.

 

What to Expect in the Cup

Open the bag: long, twisted, dark-brown strands — bigger and more dramatic than rolled oolongs, with a high floral aroma already lifting off the dry leaf.

In the cup:

  • Liquor: bright, deep golden-yellow, clear and luminous
  • Aroma: high, elegant, and pure — a lifted orchid-type floral fragrance that fills the room
  • Texture: mellow and full, with a smooth, almost creamy body
  • Finish: a deep, lingering 喉韵 (throat rhyme) and lasting floral sweetness that draws you back to the cup
  • Brews: exceptionally generous — a good Dan Cong gives 10-15 infusions, the aroma evolving the whole way through

Dan Cong is best brewed strong and hot — unlike the delicate Taiwan oolongs, it wants full boiling water to drive out that famous high aroma. The flavour is at its fullest from the third to the eighth brew: that's where the orchid fragrance, mellow body, and deep throat-finish all come together. Brew it the traditional Chaozhou gongfu way, in a small clay pot, and you'll see why this corner of Guangdong built an entire tea culture around a single cup.

 

So — convinced? Brew this Phoenix Dan Cong Oolong the right way, check out our professional Brewing Guide, Storage Care, and The Origins below 👇

🍵 Brewing Guide

How to brew Phoenix Dan Cong properly?

Dan Cong is different from the delicate Taiwan oolongs in one key way: it wants full boiling water. A good Dan Cong isn't afraid of heat — in fact, high temperature is exactly what drives out its famous high aroma and deep throat-finish. The challenge is the timing: Dan Cong releases fast and can turn bitter if you over-steep, so quick, clean pours are everything.

The Vessel: Zhuni Clay or Gaiwan

The traditional choice is a small Chaozhou zhuni (red clay) teapot — the heart of Chaoshan gongfu tea culture. A Yixing zisha teapot works on the same principle, gathering and rounding the aroma. A 110ml white porcelain gaiwan is the easy alternative and shows off the bright golden liquor. Browse our Gaiwan collection or Tea Infuser collection for options.

The Ritual (Gongfu Style)

  • Temperature: 100°C — full boiling water. Don't hold back; high heat is what unlocks the aroma.
  • Ratio: 7g for a 110ml pot or gaiwan.
  • Step 1 — Warm the Vessel: Rinse with boiling water and discard.
  • Step 2 — Add the Leaves: Place the long twisted leaves in, and enjoy the high floral dry aroma.
  • Step 3 — First Brew (Awaken): Pour boiling water, decant within about 3 seconds. Quick — this wakes the leaves.
  • Step 4 — Following Brews: Add about 5 seconds each brew. Pour fast and decant cleanly — never let it sit.
  • Step 5 — Enjoy the Arc: Brews 3 to 8 are the heart of the session — the fullest aroma, body, and throat-finish.
  • Step 6 — Keep Going: A quality Dan Cong gives 10-15 brews, sometimes more.

Common Mistakes

  • ❌ Using cooler water — the one oolong where you should use full boiling water. Cooler water mutes the aroma.
  • ❌ Over-steeping — Dan Cong releases fast and turns bitter if it sits. Quick pours, especially early.
  • ❌ Too much leaf in a small pot — 7g is plenty; overpacking makes it harsh.
  • ❌ Letting the last drops sit in the pot between brews — always decant completely.
📦 Storage & Care

Storage Care for Phoenix Dan Cong

Dan Cong is a charcoal-roasted oolong, which makes it relatively stable — but its high floral aroma is the whole appeal, so protecting that fragrance is the priority.

  • Cool, Dark, and Dry: Store in a cool, dark place away from sunlight and heat. A roasted Dan Cong keeps well at a stable room temperature; for a lighter-roasted batch, refrigeration helps preserve the fresh aroma.
  • Airtight Seal: Keep the bag sealed between sessions to protect the aroma and keep moisture out. We recommend a Tea Bag Sealer for long-term storage.
  • Return to Room Temperature: If refrigerated, let the sealed bag warm to room temperature before opening, to avoid condensation on the leaves.
  • Light and Air: Both fade the high floral fragrance over time. A dark airtight container — tin, ceramic, or opaque jar — protects best.
  • Keep Separate: Dan Cong's aroma is its signature — keep it well away from coffee, spices, and scented foods, which it readily absorbs.
🌿 The Origins

From Phoenix Mountain, Guangdong

  • Core Terroir: Phoenix Mountain (Feng Huang Shan, 凤凰山) in Chaozhou, eastern Guangdong Province — the one great oolong region outside Fujian and Taiwan. The best Dan Cong grows on high, misty slopes above 800 metres, where cool air, big day-night temperature swings, and granite-rich soil slow the tea's growth and concentrate its aroma. Some of the tea trees here are centuries old.
  • Single Bush: "Dan Cong" (单丛) means "single bush." Traditionally, the finest Dan Cong is picked and processed one individual tree at a time — never blended — because each old bush has its own distinct aromatic character worth preserving. This is what sets Dan Cong apart from every other oolong.
  • The Aroma Cultivar: Dan Cong is famous for a remarkable natural trait — the leaves mimic the fragrances of flowers and fruit. Local growers traditionally name each tea after the scent it most resembles. This batch carries a high, elegant, pure orchid-type aroma.
  • The Craft: Dan Cong follows the full traditional oolong process — sun withering, repeated "shaking" to bruise the leaf edges and trigger oxidation, fixing, rolling into long twisted strands, and a slow charcoal roast that locks the aroma into the leaf. It's among the most labour-intensive teas in China.
  • VGT Sourcing: For 18 years, Valley Green Tea has been the trusted destination to buy authentic loose leaf Chinese oolong tea online in Australia. Our Phoenix Dan Cong is sourced from the Phoenix Mountain area and shipped fresh to Sydney. Want to explore the rest of the oolong world? Try bold, roasted Wuyi Rock Tea, floral Tie Guan Yin, or smooth Taiwan high mountain oolong.