Yamakai Sencha - 2010 1st Harvest Shizuoka Sencha

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by teaddict
Average preparation
150 °F / 65 °C 1 min, 45 sec

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7 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This was the third Asamushi-style sencha I tried from Norbu. I didn’t know much about the leaf cultivar going into it, but it possessed a wonderfully vanilla scent to the dry leaves. That same...” Read full tasting note
    95
  • “Had my best session yet with this tea this morning. I actually started with the water hotter, because I’d been considering starting the day with Dragonwell, and had the kettle already up to 160...” Read full tasting note
    90
  • “Once again, this was a rather pleasant tea. I accidentally over steeped the first infusion, which resulted in more bitterness than usual, and it was harder to taste the grassiness, which was kind...” Read full tasting note
    81

From Norbu Tea

This beautiful Sencha hails from the Ushizuma area in Aoi-Ku (ward) of Shizuoka. It is composed entirely of Yamakai cultivar tea plants, and it comes from a small scale/single estate farm which specializes in Munouyaku farming. Munouyaku is a term which basically means “no agricultural chemicals,” but it is important to emphasize that Munouyaku is not a regulated term or certification of any sort. In the case of this tea farm, it means that the farmers take great pride in managing their farm in a natural manner, from intensive, hands-on natural soil management without chemical fertilizers to careful weeding by hand. They also use hand operated trimmers to harvest their tea instead of the large tractor-type harvesters used on large scale farms. Basically, the people who produce this tea love the land it is grown on as much as they love the awesome final tea they produce, and the extreme care taken throughout cultivation is clearly evident in the beautiful deep green of the leaves before, during and after steeping and the brilliant yellow-gold of the infused liquor.

Our Yamakai Sencha is a light steamed tea, allowing the delicate but distinctive flavor of the Yamakai culitvar to come through in the cup. The infused liquor is delicate & sweet, and the aftertaste is perfectly bittersweet, mouth coating and long-lasting. It is a rare treat to find a tea like this one that has been produced with such obvious love for the art and science of traditional tea farming.

Because of the delicate nature of this tea, we strongly recommend steeping this tea using 140°F water (no higher than about 150°F maximum) and somewhere between 1 and 1.5 grams of tea per ounce of water used. It has been my experience that using a high leaf to water ratio and a relatively low steeping temperature really brings out the sweet subtleties of this awesome Asamushi Sencha.

About Norbu Tea View company

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7 Tasting Notes

95
348 tasting notes

This was the third Asamushi-style sencha I tried from Norbu. I didn’t know much about the leaf cultivar going into it, but it possessed a wonderfully vanilla scent to the dry leaves. That same characteristic also translated to the liquor’s taste. I never call sencha creamy, but this definitely was on the foretaste with a strong fruit note. My heart still belongs to guricha and Fukamushi-style senchas, but this ranks well up there.

Full Review: http://www.teaviews.com/2011/04/16/review-norbu-tea-2010-spring-yamakai-sencha/

Preparation
140 °F / 60 °C 2 min, 30 sec

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90
311 tasting notes

Had my best session yet with this tea this morning. I actually started with the water hotter, because I’d been considering starting the day with Dragonwell, and had the kettle already up to 160 degrees, and it was quite full, and I did not want to wait for the water to cool back to 145, or two play with adding cool water to get there. So I used the hotter water, 5 grams of tea in the 5 oz kyusu, and started with one very short infusion (started pouring at 25 seconds); then 20", 1 minute, and 5 minutes. By the time I’d gotten to the last one, however, the water, which was cooling slowly in the kettle, was down to 145 degrees. And all were sweet, fresh young asparagus and peas, very little grassiness, and no astringency or bitterness at all. Just my thing, and one of those accidental brewings that would be very difficult to precisely replicate again.

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 0 min, 30 sec

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81
250 tasting notes

Once again, this was a rather pleasant tea. I accidentally over steeped the first infusion, which resulted in more bitterness than usual, and it was harder to taste the grassiness, which was kind of weird as the grassiness is usually the source of bitterness in green teas. I wonder if that was because of how careful I was with respect to water temperature, or because of the inconsistent water quality in my dorm (which, for the record, was exceptional today). Regardless, the only downside to this tea is that I only got 4 infusions out of it.

Preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 2 min, 0 sec
Geoffrey Norman

Big fan of the Yamakai. Very interesting – if rough – character.

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