Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Iodine
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by CHAroma
Average preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 2 min, 15 sec 1 g 7 oz / 200 ml

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From Mariage Frères

A green tea for connoisseurs, grown near Mount Fuji.

Its fine leaves, grand aroma, and subtle taste indicate its outstanding quality.

About Mariage Frères View company

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4 Tasting Notes

68
1 tasting notes

Smooth and sweet tasting, color yellowish green.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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16557 tasting notes

Adventaggedon Day 8 – Tea 3/6

Japanese green tea!? Nooo…

Toasty teas like Genmaicha/Hojicha aside, Japanese green tea is sort of my nemesis. I wasn’t thrilled for this cup, obviously. However, I kept my water temperature SUPER low and my steep time SUPER short and the result was an incredibly soft and delicate take on those oceanic flavours. Pretty smooth, and a gentle way to ease into the day that ended up being okay.

Advent Photo: https://www.instagram.com/p/CIjkTExg-d5/

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75
11 tasting notes

I went into the Mariage Freres tea shop on Place de la Madeleine, in Paris. Being pretty new to tea, I asked the salesman for some help. He was really helpful and told me that the difference between Japanese and Chinese green teas were that Japanese teas had much more iodine flavor to them. After smelling different teas, I settled my mind on Fuji-Yama.
It tastes exactly as advertised. Really fresh, with an iodine flavor to it. Definitely a great green tea for me. It’s one of my go to’s when it comes to non-flavored green teas.

Flavors: Iodine

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec 1 g 7 OZ / 200 ML

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86
987 tasting notes

Every Thursday night I go to the Toronto Reference Library to meet up with my writing critique group. The Balzac’s Cafe inside the library is one of the only places I know of in Toronto to stock Mariage Freres’ tea, but I certainly wish this wasn’t the case – I’d love to get more!

I don’t have any info about the steeping parameters (temperature, water/leaf ratio, etc) since I purchased this from the cafe, but here’s what I remember about the first steep I drank this evening:

- Yellow-green liquor that shaded down to light amber as the tea steeped and cooled down.
- Vegetal, but not too grassy. Some of the flavours I picked up in the steep were hay, spinach, and asparagus. Because of this, I suspect that it might be a first-flush tea.
- This tea is rather astringent; as I progressed further into the cup, my tongue got that “dried up” feeling that sometimes comes from astringency.
- This wasn’t particularly brothy, but it was riding the cusp between savory and sweet.

I’d really like to get my hands on a full package of Fuji-Yama, rather than having to get it through the cafe. Even so, this feels like the kind of tea that’s best reserved for special occasions or when you have the time to sip and savour. This is not a “sitting in front of the computer gettin’ shit done” kind of tea!

Bottom line: this tea was so good that I saved my disposable cup and the teabag, and brought the teabag home with me so I can see about resteeping it tomorrow morning!

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