Valley Peak (Ding Gu Da Fang)

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Alkaline, Anise, Apricot, Astringent, Buffalo Grass, Butter, Cabbage, Cocoa, Cream, Dry Grass, Earth, Fruity, Garden Peas, Grain, Herbs, Honeysuckle, Lemon, Marine, Mineral, Nutty, Osmanthus, Rice, Salt, Seafood, Seaweed, Smooth, Sweet, Toasted Rice, Toasty, Chestnut, Creamy, Floral, Honey, Nuts, Umami, Vegetal, Grass, Bitter, Roasted
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by derk
Average preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 30 sec 5 g 8 oz / 246 ml

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33 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This came as a free sample from the people at Mandala Tea who also seem very nice, thanks for the sample, guys! The shape and smell of this one does remind me of a dragonwell, but I’ve been very...” Read full tasting note
    94
  • “thanks much to jamie at mandala for this great sample. i would say that green teas are the ones i am least familiar with so really this was an excellent sample to send. to me this is a complicated...” Read full tasting note
    92
  • “Got this as a sample from Mandala with a teapot I ordered This is pretty darn good! Similar to dragonwell, which usually isn’t my favorite, but I really enjoyed this tea. It has a nice nutty taste,...” Read full tasting note
    93
  • “I do agree with LiberTEAs on this one…it sort of reminds me of a yellow tea! Mellow and delicate yet sweet and nutty…my fave part…it’s SMOOTH. Very nice!” Read full tasting note
    84

From Mandala Tea

Like many of China’s famous greens, this tea also has a rich history. Known in China as Ding Gu Da Fang (Valley Peak Da Fang), it was named after the Buddhist monk who originally grew the plants on Huangshan (Yellow Mountain) centuries ago.

Da Fang cared for the plants and served its elixir to scholars who would visit the monastery. His tea became famous and people would come to the temple just to sip his tea.

He gave tea plants to local farmers and while the crops flourished, the farmers became prosperous and named the tea in homage to Da Fang and it’s growing region.

It is said by many tea scholars that this tea is the ancestor to the now very famous Longjing (a.k.a. Dragonwell).

Grown not just organically in this pristine nature reserve, the farmers here use biodynamic growing methods – it is like homeopathy for the land and the growers pay very close attention to everything in the soil and environment to keep all of its life in balance.

If you enjoy Longjing green, you are sure to relish several steepings of this great tea! Mellow and delicate with a lovely sweet after taste and a slight hint of nuttiness. A treat for any lover of green tea. And if you’re not a green tea lover to begin with, this one may very well make you a convert!

About Mandala Tea View company

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33 Tasting Notes

92
123 tasting notes

This is really a gorgeous tea. Even with my ridiculously hard city tap water, and with leaves that are easily a year old, it’s still giving me a beautiful cup. First infusion was smooth, nutty-sweet, and extremely slurp-able. Second and third infusions were more grassy and fruity, but still very nice. Fourth didn’t fare so well (it was a bit like swimming pool water with lemon – sorry!) but I couldn’t care less because of the amazingness of the first two. Definitely restocking this one when it’s finished!

Flavors: Grass, Nuts

Preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 1 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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92
42 tasting notes

Really enjoying this one! Very savory, delicate, flavor. Its buttery and nutty, maybe even hints of corn… so good, I’m eating cherry pecan chocolate with it, Yumm! Definitely ordering more.

Preparation
0 min, 45 sec
Garret

This is one of my very favorite greens. When I was at the farm last April, I was so excited. I got to taste this tea after it had been processed just the day before. Super-clean growing area, clean air… so good. A long hike to get there, but well worth it.

What you were writing about is the crop from the 2013 spring harvest. I’m really happy that you enjoy it!

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80
1546 tasting notes

Another 2020 harvest green tea acquired as a stand-in until the new harvests arrive in full swing. I’ll probably be ordering Chinese greens this year from stateside vendors since I never buy enough of them to justify the more expensive and faster shipping options (been waiting on a small package from Teavivre for 2 months, ugh).

The dry leaf smells buttery-nutty with dark cocoa powder and an herbal undertone. Wet leaf aroma is alkaline. It reminds me of butter-browned napa cabbage, barbecued oysters, farro, earthy-sweet cooked snow peas, rice crackers and anise.

I’ve been brewing this in a gaiwan with a lower leaf:water ratio to mitigate the less-than-fresh qualities that are apparent in grandpa and western steeping (it can turn brassy and buttery-toasty dry grass quickly). The liquor aroma is sweet and nutty; the texture is buttery soft and smooth on the sip. Delicate notes of buttery rice crackers with seaweed bows, lemon, fresh oysters, sweetgrass. A clear quartz-like minerality presents with some salty astringency as it swallows juicy. The tea becomes fruitier, dry grassy and more astringent as steeps progress. There’s a unique aftertaste of custard apple and rice crackers moving to buttery-creamy apricot-osmanthus and toasted rice. Can get bitter if oversteeped.

Valley Peak was the first tea I ever tried from Mandala many years ago, in the days of using mason jars and a fork to simulate a gaiwan. I remember it being so gentle and satisfying. It can be likened to a Dragon Well (however varied those are) but I find it softer, less intense and depending on the Dragon Well’s processing and provenance, less like chestnuts.

Flavors: Alkaline, Anise, Apricot, Astringent, Buffalo Grass, Butter, Cabbage, Cocoa, Cream, Dry Grass, Earth, Fruity, Garden Peas, Grain, Herbs, Honeysuckle, Lemon, Marine, Mineral, Nutty, Osmanthus, Rice, Salt, Seafood, Seaweed, Smooth, Sweet, Toasted Rice, Toasty

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90
379 tasting notes

Long green strips, very pale liquor but a surprisingly strong tea, not mild and a long-lasting sweet finish. This reminded me of some Chinese chestnut teas when I was a kid. It’s creamy mouthfeel/throat feel is comforting with umami, honey, chestnuts, floral, vegetal notes.

Porcelain gaiwan, 5g, 110ml, 175˚F, 15s, 18s, 21s, 24s, 27s

Flavors: Butter, Chestnut, Creamy, Floral, Honey, Nuts, Umami, Vegetal

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 4 OZ / 110 ML
derk

I loved Valley Peak. Need to come back to it.

Kawaii433

:D Great to hear.

I heard their Dragon Pearls green jasmine and Wild Arbor Buds White are really good too.

derk

I haven’t had the Dragon Pearls. The Wild Arbor buds I have had and they do get great reviews but that style of tea isn’t my jam. I think I recall liking them better than YS’s, though they might be the same. I do enjoy the buds cold-brewed with some fresh basil in the warm months. Try them, they’re definitely a different and inoffensive tea leaf :)

Kawaii433

hehe kk ^^

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92
139 tasting notes

Drank this at a local restaurant that sources Mandala teas. Loved it!

Very much like the longjing teas that I have had.

Flavors: Nutty, Sweet, Umami

Garret

Yes! A great tea and the grandfather of long jing (dragon well) tea. I stopped sourcing Dragon Well after visiting the growing area in 2008. I could not breathe there. While I’m sure there are days when the factory city pollution is not as bad, I can’t shake the memory of how ill I was for days after being there. That led me to this tea and I had the fortune of visiting the farm in 2012. All clean air. I feel much better about this tea because of the air and water quality there.

I’m sure 20 or 30 yrs ago that the West Lake region (where dragon well is grown) was very nice, I found it unpleasant. So Valley Peak, it is!

JakeB

Thank you for sharing, Garret. I have only had a few Dragon Wells, but it sounds like I should stay clear from them.

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93
4 tasting notes

This is my favorite tea to brew for people who say they don’t like green teas. Why? Because this tea is /smooth/. It has a grassy flavor, but it doesn’t come off as bitter and is accompanied by a light nuttiness. The leaves are quite intact and look lovely as they steep, so it’s also a visually pleasing tea to brew in a glass teapot.

Flavors: Grass, Nutty

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C

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87
21 tasting notes

Classic dragon well green. Bitter grassy smooth

Flavors: Bitter, Grass, Vegetal

Preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 1 min, 0 sec 4 g 5 OZ / 147 ML

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90
107 tasting notes

Got this as a sample from the Mandala guys. Following their directions for amount of tea, temp, and steeping time. First thing… Oh wow, the aroma! So fragrant. Mangos? There is no bitterness to this tea at all. It’s mellow, sweet, fruity. Not flowery. I’ve read other steepster reviews and I think I’m the only person getting the fruit here, lol. Green wasn’t really my thing before I tried this tea, but this is definitely going on my shopping list.

Garret

So very happy that you are digging this tea. It’s one of my very favorite greens. Thanks for the review!

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81
199 tasting notes

Thanks to Mandala for the sample!
This is a very complex cup.. When it’s hotter, it tastes more buttery and creamy and as the tea cools, it transforms into a slight roasty/nutty flavor. It tastes like a nice green oolong. My only complaint is that I’m finding it heavy to drink, so it might be better savored in smaller portions.

Flavors: Butter, Creamy, Nuts, Roasted

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 30 sec 3 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML
TeaBrat

This is a yummy tea!

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1758 tasting notes

This is a fairly sweet green tea with notes of cream and honeysuckle. There is also a strong floral and vegetal component to the tea as well as a slight sour taste. Lat night I drank rooibos in the hopes of getting to sleep. I couldn’t sleep a wink, I think because of caffeine withdrawals. Ironicallu, lack of caffeine can cause sleeplessness. Hopefully there is enough caffeine in this to keep me from going through withdrawals but not to keep me awake.

I brewed this once in an 18oz teapot with 4 tsp leaf and 175 degree water for 1 min.

Flavors: Cream, Floral, Honeysuckle, Vegetal

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 0 sec 4 tsp 18 OZ / 532 ML
TeaBrat

I couldn’t sleep last night either!

AllanK

I am thinking of giving up on giving up on caffeine. If no caffeine makes it impossible to sleep at all, better off a green tea with low caffeine and no withdrawal symptoms.

cookies

Have you tried hojicha at bedtime? I have it about every night and it doesn’t affect my sleeping patterns.

AllanK

No I haven’t but I think most greens have less caffeine, at least that is what my gastroenterologist says.

cookies

Yes, and houjicha supposedly has even less because of how roasted it is. Kukicha (and hoji-kukicha) are also good because apparently the twigs/stems don’t contain as much caffeine as the leaves.

TeaBrat

Maybe you could just drink caffeine in the morning. I find if I drink some later in the afternoon it does give me problems.

AllanK

That was exactly what I had done the night I had complete insomnia, I stopped drinking caffeine around 12 or 12:30 in the afternoon and didn’t sleep a wink. Last night with a green tea I slept good.

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