Complete Guide to IngenuiTEA vs Traditional Gongfu Brewing – White Peony
How to Brew White Peony (Bai Mu Dan) Tea: Complete Guide to IngenuiTEA vs Gongfu Gaiwan Brewing
White Peony tea, also known as Bai Mu Dan (白牡丹), is one of the world’s most beloved white teas. Appreciated for its delicate floral aroma, natural sweetness, silky texture, and forgiving brewing nature, Bai Mu Dan offers a tea experience that can be enjoyed by both beginners and seasoned tea enthusiasts alike.
One of the most common questions among white tea drinkers is:
“Why can White Peony be brewed only 2–4 times using a Western tea maker like the IngenuiTEA, while traditional Gongfu brewing can easily reach 8–12 infusions?”
The answer lies not in the quality of the tea, but in the science of extraction, tea-to-water ratio, steeping time, and brewing philosophy.
In this guide, we’ll explore both brewing methods in detail and help you discover which approach best suits your lifestyle and tea preferences.
Understanding White Peony (Bai Mu Dan)
White Peony tea is traditionally produced in Fujian Province, China, using unopened tea buds together with the first one or two young leaves. Unlike green or black tea, white tea undergoes minimal processing, allowing its natural compounds to remain largely intact.
A properly brewed White Peony often exhibits:
- Fresh floral aromas
- Sweet honey notes
- Delicate melon and stone fruit characteristics
- Soft hay or fresh grain nuances
- A silky, smooth mouthfeel
- Very little bitterness when brewed correctly
One of the greatest strengths of White Peony is its remarkable forgiveness. Unlike many green teas that can quickly become bitter, Bai Mu Dan remains enjoyable across a relatively wide range of brewing parameters.
Two Completely Different Brewing Philosophies
There are two major ways tea drinkers prepare White Peony:
Western-Style Brewing
Using larger vessels such as the IngenuiTEA, teapots, or tea infusers.
Traditional Chinese Gongfu Brewing
Using a small gaiwan with repeated short infusions.
Neither method is inherently better. They simply produce different experiences.
Side-by-Side Comparison: IngenuiTEA vs Gongfu Gaiwan
| Parameter | IngenuiTEA 16oz | Traditional Gongfu Gaiwan |
|---|---|---|
| Vessel Size | 475 ml (16 oz) | 100–120 ml |
| Tea Amount | 3.5 g | 4–5 g |
| Tea-to-Water Ratio | 1:135 | 1:22–30 |
| Brewing Style | Full immersion | Quick extraction |
| First Infusion | 3 minutes | 8–12 seconds |
| Average Infusion Count | 2–4 | 8–12 |
| Difficulty | Very easy | Moderate |
| Cleanup | Easy | Easy |
| Best For | Daily drinking | Tea appreciation |
| Flavor Style | Rich, smooth, comforting | Layered, evolving |
| Time Required | Minimal | More involved |
Brewing White Peony with the 16oz IngenuiTEA
The IngenuiTEA brewer offers one of the simplest and most effective methods for brewing White Peony while still allowing multiple infusions.
Its biggest advantage is the ability to completely separate the tea leaves from the brewed liquor after each infusion.
Equipment
- 16oz IngenuiTEA brewer
- Filtered water
- White Peony tea
Tea Amount
Use: 3.5 grams (approximately 1.5 teaspoons)
Water Temperature
Fresh White Peony (less than 3 years old)
190°F (88°C)
Aged White Peony (5 years or older)
203°F (95°C)
IngenuiTEA Brewing Schedule
| Infusion | Time | Flavor Profile |
|---|---|---|
| First | 3 minutes | Fresh floral aroma, downy sweetness |
| Second | 3.5 minutes | Softer body, honey notes |
| Third | 4.5 minutes | Mineral sweetness, gentle finish |
| Fourth | 6 minutes | Light sweetness, final infusion |
First Infusion
Fill the brewer to the 16oz mark and steep for 3 minutes.
Once complete, immediately place the brewer over your cup and allow all tea liquor to drain.
This infusion typically delivers:
- White tea fuzz aroma
- Fresh flowers
- Sweet hay notes
- Silky texture
For many tea lovers, this is the most aromatic infusion.
Second Infusion
Refill with fresh water and steep for 3½ minutes.
The floral character becomes softer while honey sweetness becomes more noticeable.
Many White Peony enthusiasts consider this infusion the most balanced.
Third Infusion
Steep for approximately 4½ minutes.
At this stage:
- Floral aromas decrease
- Mineral character increases
- Sweetness becomes softer and deeper
Fourth Infusion
Steep for 6 minutes.
This final infusion usually produces:
- Mild sweetness
- Gentle warmth
- Minimal floral aroma
Most tea experts recommend stopping after this infusion.
The Most Important IngenuiTEA Rule
The single most important rule when brewing White Peony using an IngenuiTEA is:
Completely drain all brewed tea after every infusion.
Do not allow the tea leaves to sit in leftover tea liquor.
If leaves remain submerged:
- bitterness increases,
- sweetness decreases,
- and future infusions become weak and astringent.
The ability to fully separate tea leaves from liquid is precisely why the IngenuiTEA performs much better than ordinary Western teapots for repeated infusions.
Can White Peony Be Brewed a Fifth Time?
The answer is:
Yes—but with limitations.
For standard White Peony brewed using 3.5 grams of tea:
| Infusion | Recommended Time |
|---|---|
| Fifth Infusion | 8–9 minutes |
However, expect:
- almost no floral aroma,
- very little white tea fuzz character,
- mild sweetness,
- increased wateriness,
- slight astringency.
For aged White Peony, the fifth infusion may still provide pleasant honey and woody notes.
How to Get a Better Fifth Infusion
If you regularly want a worthwhile fifth infusion:
Increase tea quantity to:
4.2–5 grams
while maintaining the same brewing schedule.
This provides more extractable compounds for later infusions.
Traditional Gongfu White Peony Brewing
Gongfu tea preparation follows a completely different philosophy.
Instead of extracting as much flavor as possible from one infusion, Gongfu brewing extracts only a small portion of the tea during each steep.
This allows the tea to evolve gradually over many infusions.
Equipment
- 100–120 ml gaiwan
- Fairness pitcher
- Tea cups
- Filtered water
Tea Quantity
Use:
4–5 grams
for a 100–120 ml gaiwan.
Water Temperature
Fresh White Peony:
190°F–195°F (88–90°C)
Aged White Peony:
203°F (95°C)
Typical Gongfu Brewing Schedule
| Infusion | Time |
|---|---|
| 1 | 8–12 seconds |
| 2 | 10 seconds |
| 3 | 15 seconds |
| 4 | 20 seconds |
| 5 | 25 seconds |
| 6 | 35 seconds |
| 7 | 45 seconds |
| 8 | 60 seconds |
| 9+ | Add 20–30 seconds each infusion |
Why Can Gongfu Produce 8–12 Infusions?
Many tea drinkers assume Gongfu brewing extracts more flavor.
In reality, the opposite is true.
Gongfu brewing intentionally extracts less during each infusion.
Reason #1: Much Higher Tea-to-Water Ratio
Gongfu
- 5g tea
- 110ml water
Ratio:
1g : 22ml
IngenuiTEA
- 3.5g tea
- 475ml water
Ratio:
1g : 135ml
The Western method exposes the tea leaves to over four times more water.
Reason #2: Extraction Time
Gongfu
First infusion:
8–12 seconds
IngenuiTEA
First infusion:
180 seconds
Longer exposure extracts significantly more compounds from the tea leaves.
Reason #3: Extraction Method
Gongfu
The water briefly contacts the leaves before being completely removed.
IngenuiTEA
The leaves remain submerged for several minutes.
Submersion extracts flavor compounds much more aggressively.
Reason #4: Residual Water
A gaiwan drains almost completely.
The tea leaves remain relatively dry between infusions.
Even when emptied, larger Western brewers retain small amounts of liquid around the leaves, allowing continued extraction.
A Simple Analogy
Imagine tea leaves as a sponge full of flavor.
Gongfu
You gently squeeze the sponge many times.
IngenuiTEA
You soak the sponge in a bucket and squeeze most of the flavor out at once.
Both methods work.
One simply extracts more flavor per infusion.
Can You Make an IngenuiTEA Behave Like a Gaiwan?
Surprisingly, yes.
To achieve 5–6 infusions:
- Use 4–5 grams of tea.
- Reduce water volume to 100–150 ml.
- First infusion: 45–60 seconds.
- Increase each infusion by 20–30 seconds.
However, at this point, you’re essentially using Gongfu principles inside a Western brewer.
Which Method Should You Choose?
Choose the IngenuiTEA if you:
✓ Prefer convenience
✓ Drink tea while working
✓ Enjoy fuller body tea
✓ Want minimal cleanup
✓ Prefer 2–4 excellent infusions
Choose Gongfu brewing if you:
✓ Enjoy tea rituals
✓ Love discovering changing flavors
✓ Appreciate aroma complexity
✓ Want maximum value from premium tea
✓ Enjoy spending time with tea
Final Thoughts
There is no universally “correct” way to brew White Peony tea.
The IngenuiTEA method offers simplicity, consistency, and excellent flavor with minimal effort. For many daily tea drinkers, it represents the perfect balance between convenience and quality.
Traditional Gongfu brewing, meanwhile, transforms White Peony into an evolving experience, revealing new aromas and flavors with every infusion.
Whichever method you choose, one rule remains universal:
Always separate the tea leaves from the brewed tea liquor once the infusion is complete.
If you love white tea and have never explored Bai Mu Dan using both brewing methods, this may be the perfect opportunity to begin your own White Peony tea journey.
At T7 TEA, we encourage every tea lover to experiment, compare, and discover which brewing style brings out the White Peony experience they enjoy most.