Section
Fresh tea drinks
This section follows China’s modern tea-drink market through brands, formulas, health language, and high-discussion topics from the Chinese internet: rapid chain growth, light milk tea, lower-sugar formulas, fruit tea, ingredient transparency, and the changing place of tea in everyday urban life.
Latest / featured reading
Why peach gum deserves a place in 2026 fresh tea: from sweet-dessert memory to a gentler gel-texture tea drink better suited to light floral tea bases, restrained dairy, and calmer topping logic

From the basic fact that peach gum is a translucent plant gum processed from peach-tree exudate, to the reason it fits 2026 trends of lighter dessertification, lighter dairy use, visible ingredients, and more restrained topping logic, this drinks feature argues that peach gum is not really selling wellness slogans. It is selling a quieter texture structure: a calm gel-like layer that can coexist with floral tea bases without erasing the tea.
Why osmanthus Longjing is worth writing about again in 2026: it does not make Longjing sweeter, it rewrites it as a lighter, straighter, more urban cup for late spring and early summer — China Tea Library

From Molly Tea describing osmanthus Longjing as a clear, bright floral green tea with lingering osmanthus aroma, to tea shops in 2026 more deliberately managing drinks that feel lighter, more tea-forward, and more suitable for daytime repeat drinking, this long drinks feature explains why osmanthus Longjing deserves to be separated from the broader return of osmanthus and the Longjing spring-tea story. What it really sells is not sweet floral comfort plus famous-tea aura, but a more urban lightness that rounds off Longjing while keeping its fresh green structure.
The rise of Chagee: why it grew from a regional brand into a national modern tea chain - China Tea Library

A long-form feature on Chagee's rise, brand language, store expansion, Oriental tea-drink identity, consumer psychology, and why it became one of the most closely watched modern tea chains in China.
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