# Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain's Aromatic Oolong

**Canonical URL:** https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
**Source:** teas.co.uk, UK tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent

## Summary

Dan Cong is the Phoenix Mountain single-bush oolong family, famous for fruit and flower aromas (honey orchid, gardenia, duck shit); brew gongfu for full character.

## Description

Dan Cong, in summary: Dan Cong is the Phoenix Mountain oolong family, prized for fruit and flower aromas that come from cultivar and craft, not flavouring. "Single bush" is mostly a style name now; brew it short and hot, gongfu style, to get the best from it.

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain’s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
Phoenix Dan Cong is the oolong famous for tasting uncannily of fruit and flowers, almond, orchid, honey, lychee, magnolia, with nothing added, and it is also a tea whose name is widely misunderstood, which is where an honest guide earns its place. "Dan Cong" literally means "single bush", and the romantic implication is that every one comes from a single ancient tree. In practice the term now mostly denotes a style and a group of aroma-type cultivars from the Phoenix (Fenghuang) mountains of Guangdong. True single-tree Dan Cong exists, but it is rare and expensive; most Dan Cong you buy is a named aroma type grown from many bushes. Saying that clearly is the difference between an informed buyer and a romanced one.
Last reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in March 2026.
What Dan Cong actually is

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for What Dan Cong actually is , Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain&apos;s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
It is a Guangdong oolong, usually fairly oxidised and often roasted, from the Phoenix mountains, made from cultivars selected and named for the natural aroma they evoke. The mimicry of fruit and flower is genuine and is the whole point of the tea, produced by cultivar, terroir and skilled processing rather than by scenting. The aroma name describes the target flavour, not an additive, and the best examples are among the most astonishing sensory experiences in all of tea.
The famous aroma cultivars

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The named-aroma system is the heart of Dan Cong, and learning a few names turns random sampling into targeted exploration. Mi Lan Xiang (honey orchid) is the most widely available and the natural starting point, rich and honeyed with gentle sweetness across many steeps. Ya Shi Xiang (literally "duck shit fragrance", a deliberately humble name said to have discouraged thieves from the original mother trees centuries ago) is, despite the name, one of the most beautiful, full of almond blossom and lychee. Zhi Lan Xiang (gardenia) is sharper and brighter; Xing Ren Xiang (almond) is genuinely almond-scented; and Gui Hua Xiang (osmanthus), Huang Zhi Xiang and Da Wu Ye round out what the UK speciality market usually carries. Each one tastes clearly different side by side, which is what makes drinking across a few cultivars such a rewarding small project.
Single bush, or single cultivar?

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Single bush, or single cultivar? , Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain&apos;s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
Because "single bush" sounds exclusive, it is used to inflate prices, so the honest framing matters. In the oldest Phoenix practice the words meant exactly what they say: one ancient bush of unique genetics, harvested on its own for a tiny annual crop. A handful of those original mother trees, some recorded at over 600 and even 700 years old, still produce genuine single-bush tea that sells for extraordinary money, often £200 to £500 and up per 50g when it appears at all.
The vast majority of modern Dan Cong, though, is grown from cuttings of those named mother trees, planted in larger gardens and harvested at scale. The cultivar genetics carry through the cuttings, so the cup is true Dan Cong character; it is simply not literally single-bush. An honest seller will say "Mi Lan Xiang cultivar" or "Dan Cong cultivar tea" rather than "single bush", and will price any real mother-tree tea separately. The sensible read: cultivar-true Dan Cong from cuttings is the right entry buy at around £15 to £40 per 50g, while literal mother-tree tea is a special-occasion purchase at £100 and up. The same know-the-tier habit runs through the how to judge tea quality guide; judge the aroma, clarity and finish in the cup, and treat "single bush" as a style word unless a reputable seller credibly documents one old tree.
Brewing without bitterness

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Brewing without bitterness , Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain&apos;s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
Dan Cong is famously easy to over-brew into harshness, which is the single most common reason an expensive one disappoints. Brew it gongfu: about 5 to 6g of leaf in a 100ml gaiwan, near-boiling water at 95 to 100C, and a very short first steep of 8 to 12 seconds, lengthening cautiously across five to eight rounds (15s, 25s, 40s and on). Each cup reveals a different layer of the cultivar's aroma, and a good session is twenty to forty minutes of attentive drinking. Warm the gaiwan first so it does not steal heat from the leaf, keep the water hot (Dan Cong wants near-boiling, not the cooler temperatures sencha likes), and resist long steeps; anything much over thirty seconds early on turns the cup astringent and buries the very aroma you paid for. Western single-steep brewing works but loses the layering, so if there is one oolong worth owning a small gaiwan for, it is this one, the same buy-the-tool-for-the-cup point the how to make tea guide makes.
Dan Cong at a glance 
Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain’s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
AspectNoteRegionPhoenix Mountains, Chaozhou, Guangdong, ChinaName meaning"Single bush", traditionally one tree, one harvestOxidationVaried, typically 30 to 60% across the familyCultivars / aromasMi Lan Xiang (honey orchid), Ya Shi Xiang, Zhi Lan Xiang (gardenia), and many moreFamous treesOld single bushes 100+ years old, some over 700Cup characterSingle-cultivar fruit and flower notes, vividly aromaticBrewingGongfu in a small gaiwan; Western works but loses nuance"Single bush" todayMostly propagated cuttings, not from one tree
As a true oolong, the health story is just the ordinary tea story: caffeine, polyphenols, hydration, nothing dramatic and no special powers from the aromatics. The fruit and flower character is sensory, not medicinal, so treat any wellness claim as marketing on top of an extraordinary-tasting tea; the aroma alone is reason enough. The companion oolong tea, Tieguanyin and oolong oxidation guides cover the rest of the family, and you can source Dan Cong from the oolong range, the brand directory, or the full tea shop.
Reference noted

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Reference noted , Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain&apos;s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/

EFSA Scientific Opinion on the Safety of Caffeine (2015)

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Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Dan Cong: Phoenix Mountain’s Aromatic Oolong. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/dan-cong-oolong/
More from the tea wikiContinue with oolong tea, Tieguanyin, milk oolong, oolong oxidation, oolong roast levels and how to judge tea quality.

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