Home News Express Historical and Cultural cities Shanghai Guide Photos & Videos Editors' Picks
 
  Life in Hangzhou  
Sweet times in heartland of green tea

Zhejiang Province is known for its health-giving green tea, and business is improving with local consumption and exports rising, encouraging farmers to expand their output, but competition is strong and profits are thin, Xu Wenwen reports.

 
Tourists enjoy the Dragon Well (Longjing) tea on the roof of a tea farmer's house.

The measure of Zhejiang's important role in China's tea industry is all in the figures. It boasts 10 percent of the country's tea-producing farms which yield 20 percent of its tea output. And these crops amounted to 30 percent of China's total tea output value last year, according to Zhejiang Province's Department of Agriculture.

Zhejiang has been at the heart of the Chinese tea industry since ancient times. More than 1,000 years ago, the "Sage of Tea," Lu Yu, finished his book "The Classic of Tea" ("Cha Jing") in Hangzhou and highly recommended Zhejiang's tea.

The province's specialty is green tea and one of the best-known brands is Dragon Well (Long Jing), grown in the hills surrounding Hangzhou.

High-grade Dragon Well is expensive and is often displayed like jewelry in luxury outlets. Its leaves, brilliant emerald green spears about 1.9 centimeters long, are renowned throughout China for their beauty.

Tea houses abound in this home province of green tea and it boasts more than 4,000 such outlets where residents can pass their time relaxing over a quiet sip.

They come in all shapes and sizes, many offering food buffets. The capital, Hangzhou, leads the pack with around 1,000 tea houses.

 
A tea expert checks the fresh green tea leaves at the China Tea Museum in Hangzhou.

Tea has been proved to contain specific antioxidants and health-promoting ingredients and these aspects have boosted Zhejiang tea industry's prospects. Last year, the province's tea output value reached 7.75 billion yuan (US$1.13 billion), up 17.7 percent compared with 2008. The value of sales in Hangzhou's tea houses exceeded 1 billion yuan last year.

 
 

Largest Zhuang embroidery shines in Shanghai

 

Expo Anhui Week preparation into sprint period

 

Qinghai impresses Expo visitors

Key Words

Tea   West Lake   

Temple      Su Dongpo 

zhouzhuang

Fans   Embroidery

Garden     Fuzimiao

Zhonghua Gate

Nanjing Salted Duck

 
 
| About us | E-mail | Contact |
Constructed by Chinadaily.com.cn
2003-2010 Ministry of Culture, P.R.China. All rights reserved