# Formosa Oolong: Taiwan's High Mountain Style

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**Source:** teas.co.uk, UK tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent

## Summary

Formosa is the historical name for Taiwan; high-mountain (gao shan) oolong from Alishan, Lugu, Shan Lin Xi is lightly to moderately oxidised with floral creamy character.

## Description

Formosa oolong, in summary: Formosa is the historical name for Taiwan, so "Formosa oolong" just means Taiwanese oolong, led by high-mountain (gao shan) tea from Alishan, Lishan and Shan Lin Xi, lightly to moderately oxidised, floral and creamy. Buy on named origin, not the word "Formosa".

Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Formosa Oolong: Taiwan’s High-Mountain Style. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/formosa-oolong-explained/
"Formosa oolong" is a phrase that sounds specific but is really a doorway to the whole world of Taiwanese oolong, and the honest first move is to say so. Formosa is the old name for Taiwan, so "Formosa oolong" simply means Taiwanese oolong, an enormous category that ranges from delicate high-mountain teas, green in spirit, to the famous bug-bitten Oriental Beauty. Treating "Formosa oolong" as if it named one tea is the first mistake; understanding what Taiwan does differently is the useful knowledge underneath the label.
Last reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in May 2026.
What Taiwanese oolong actually is

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Taiwan specialises in oolong and is widely regarded as making some of the world's best, across a clear set of styles. Gao Shan (high mountain) oolongs, grown above roughly 1,000 metres in places like Alishan and Lishan, are lightly oxidised, intensely fragrant, sweet and creamy-textured, and are the teas most people mean when they praise Taiwanese oolong. Dong Ding is a more traditional, more oxidised and roasted style with a rounder, toastier character. Oriental Beauty (Bai Hao, Dongfang Meiren) is a heavily oxidised, unroasted oolong whose honeyed, fruity, muscatel character comes from leaves deliberately left to be nibbled by a small leafhopper, a genuine part of its making rather than a flaw. Jin Xuan, the "milk oolong" cultivar, is Taiwanese too.
The high-mountain regions

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The most celebrated category is gao shan tea, grown above roughly 1,000m in the Central Mountain Range, where cool nights, mist, slower growth and strong UV at altitude all build the rich aromatic character. The five most-cited regions are Alishan (Chiayi, 1,000 to 1,400m), Lishan (Taichung, 1,800 to 2,500m, the highest commercial production), Shan Lin Xi (Nantou, 1,500 to 1,800m), Yu Shan (the Jade Mountain area, around 1,500m) and Wushe (Nantou, 1,200 to 1,500m). Each has a quietly different cup signature, and a serious drinker eventually learns to pick the regions blind. An everyday Taiwanese oolong is a delight and need not be a top-priced competition lot.
How it differs from Chinese oolong

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The fair, non-chauvinistic summary is that Taiwanese oolong, especially the high-mountain style, leans toward clean, high floral fragrance, sweetness and a silky mouthfeel, usually at lighter oxidation and lighter roast than the classic Chinese Wuyi rock teas, which run darker, roastier and more mineral. Chinese oolong as a whole spans a far wider oxidation range (10 to 70%) and an older, more varied family, from the lightest greens to the darkest roasts; Taiwanese oolong concentrates in the 15 to 40% band and a single defining style. The cup-level result is obvious even to a beginner: a Taiwanese gao shan is pale yellow-green, floral and creamy with a clean buttery finish, while a Wuyi rock oolong is amber-brown, mineral and smoky-roasted. Neither tradition is superior; a flight of one of each teaches the difference faster than any reading, the same judge-side-by-side habit the oolong tea guide develops.
The sourcing caution

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Because Taiwanese high-mountain tea commands premium prices, mislabelling is a known problem. Taiwanese cultivars including Jin Xuan, Cui Yu and Qing Xin have been planted in Vietnam by Taiwanese investors since the 1990s, and the cup is broadly similar, so some packs labelled "Formosa oolong" or "Taiwan-style oolong" are actually Vietnamese-grown, while "high mountain" is claimed loosely. The defence is provenance plus palate: buy from sellers who name the estate, the elevation and the specific Taiwanese region rather than the generic "Formosa" tag, and judge the cup for the clean fragrance and sweet, thick texture genuine gao shan delivers, the same label-substance test the how to judge tea quality guide takes.
Brewing it, and the harvest season

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Most prized Formosa oolongs are lightly oxidised, so brew them like the delicate teas they are. Western style, use about 5g of leaf per 250ml of just-off-boil water (around 90 to 95C; a full rolling boil is too aggressive for light gao shan) for a 3 to 4 minute steep. Gongfu style, use 6 to 7g in a 100ml gaiwan with short 15 to 30 second steeps across six to ten infusions, the first few giving floral top notes, the middle the creamy buttery body, the later ones a lingering mineral finish. Oriental Beauty and roasted Dong Ding take slightly hotter water and a little more robustness in line with their higher oxidation. Season matters too: spring pluck (April to May) is prized for floral character, winter pluck (November to December) for richer body and honey, while summer leaf is generally lower grade and sold for blending. A pack that names its season tells you about the cup; a generic one is usually a mid-quality blend.
Formosa oolong at a glance 
Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Formosa Oolong: Taiwan’s High-Mountain Style. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/formosa-oolong-explained/
AspectNoteNameFormosa is the historical Portuguese name for TaiwanProduction scale~22,000 tonnes/year; small relative to China but premium-focusedBest-known regionsAlishan, Lugu, Shan Lin Xi, Li Shan, Dong DingElevation500 to 2,500m; high mountain (gao shan) is the famous tierTypical oxidation15 to 40% (lighter end of the oolong spectrum)Cup characterFloral, creamy, buttery, slight stone-fruit; distinctiveVs Chinese oolongLighter and creamier on average; less roastedSourcing noteSome "Formosa" labelled oolong is actually Vietnamese or mainland
As a true oolong, the health picture is the standard one: caffeine, polyphenols, hydration, no miracle, and no Taiwanese style is a weight-loss or detox tool whatever the marketing aimed at oolong claims. The real reason to seek Formosa oolong out is sensory; the high-mountain fragrance and the Oriental Beauty honey are among the finest experiences in tea. The companion Tieguanyin, Dan Cong and milk oolong guides cover the neighbours, and you can source genuine Taiwan oolong from the oolong range, the brand directory, or the full tea shop.
The relevant aisle: the loose leaf range and worldwide teas.
Reference noted

EFSA Scientific Opinion on the Safety of Caffeine (2015)

From the curatorteas · If a tea on this page sounds appealing, just try it once. You learn more in one cup than in twenty articles. 
Source: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Formosa Oolong: Taiwan’s High-Mountain Style. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/formosa-oolong-explained/
More from the tea wikiContinue with oolong tea, Tieguanyin, milk oolong, Dan Cong, oolong oxidation and how to judge tea quality.

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