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Thursday, January 17, 2019

Little hiatus, I think you saw this coming

Happy belated New Year 2019! 

May the teas always be in your flavour.

I know you're used to my very sporadic posting habits, but I've been 2 weeks sleeping most of the day and have generally been very tired. I'm in phase 3 of my Lyme treatment (yay!) but it's making me very tired and I'm having a herxheimer reaction? Also known as herxing. In layman's terms, as Lyme bacteria die-off, they release toxins and it's making my Lyme symptoms worse. My doctor says "getting worse before getting better."

Point in case, you've been warned, I can't update too often. I'm hopeful that this year is the year I get better and can continue to write about tea!

For the love of tea and all those scones, be patient with me.

See you soon! <3

Friday, September 21, 2018

Competition Grade Asamushicha from Sayama vs Fukamushicha from Narama Part I

Yokota Tea Garden
Competition Grade Asamushicha
VS
Yamane-En Tea Shop
Fukamushicha from Narama

Today I'm comparing 2 types of Sencha.
First one is a lightly steamed green tea, meaning that the drying phase through steaming was below 30 seconds. In comparison, regular Sencha is steamed between 30 seconds and a minute.

The second one is a Fukumushicha, a deep steamed green tea that has been steamed anywhere from 1 to 2 minutes.

Quite short steaming times, but lots of differences!


Let's start with Yokota's Tea Garden's Competition Grade Asamushicha.


Harvested in Spring 2017 (making this tea "vintage"), in the region of Sayama in the Saitama prefecture of Japan (North of Tokyo).

The bag notes that it is "Deep steamed for a rich flavor and deep green color". Which is a mistake, as this is without a doubt, a lightly steamed Sencha (Asamushicha), from the title to the taste.

Recommended Steeping method
3 grams of tea ¤ 60 seconds ¤ 70C°/158F° ¤ 200 ml of water
I used a senchado teapot.

Steeping notes: For stronger flavour, use stronger time or less water; for less astringency use a lower temperature. Resteep 3X.


Dry leaf
Long leaves of dark green colour with a few flat light green ones. They were very shiny and looked promising. Their aroma was very sweet and marine, reminiscent of buttered crab meat and roasted nori.

1st infusion (一煎目)

Yeah, it's a cat hair. They're everywhere.
Liquor
The aroma was fainter than the leaves offered but still retained the sweetness of butter cooked crab.
Its colour was a cloudy pale green containing some particles, but shiny.

Taste
It was disappointingly light in taste. I expected a vivid marine attack but it never came, instead, it simply gave me a light butter crab taste coupled with a little astringency.
Even when I added another 45 seconds, it was still disappointing.


Wet leaves
The leaves were fat and engorged with water, very beautiful and tender (perfect for cooking!). Medium-green colour and fleshy, mostly unfurled that looked liked cooked greens. Their aroma was grassy and of buttery crab.


2nd infusion (二煎目)


Liquor
This time cloudier, but still shiny, with a darker shade of green. Again with some particles dusting the bottom.

Taste
Very pleasant taste but too light in my opinion. There's definitely umami in there, but it kept feeling like it needed to steep longer. It was nice but so delicate as to remind me of a Bai Hao Yin Zhen. Not as flavourful as it should have been.

I couldn't discern much so I ended up redoing a completely new infusion. Behold!

So I ended up following the same instructions as for the Fukamushicha.

2nd infusion


As you can see (on the other side of this small pitcher)
200 ml of water yielded almost 200 ml of tea.

New steeping method still with a senchado teapot:
5 grams of tea ¤ 60 seconds ¤ 70C°/158F° ¤ 200 ml of water



Liquor
More cloudy and a darker (but still light) green colour. More particles as expected when you almost double the quantity of tea. Still retains its shininess, after all, this is a tea of quality.

Grassy aroma mingled with melted butter and cooked crab, ending with a finale of wintergreen.

Taste
Cooked crabs remained with a touch of astringency and ending in a beautiful dark earthy mushroom finish — I'm thinking grilled portobello. Deliciously oily and rich, almost perfectly smooth and long in mouth. It had a fullness — filling the mouth without acidity and with a rather sweet aroma — that was not present in the first infusion.

Notes
Even with such a rich profile, I ended up disappointed. As the second steeping of the 2nd infusion (5g) yielded little flavour. This tea pacts a soft delicious punch that's long in mouth, but doesn't translate well into the second cup, so I did not bother with a 3rd one. The recommendations were way off. I know that tea is supposed to be brewed to one's tastes, but I expect that people new to the game will follow the given instructions... and this time, be disappointed.
That's why I always try to brew with the same instructions the tea came with (unless not on the package, then from the website directly).

I would give this tea 3 out of 5 stars. Originally, it was 2.5, but I don't want the misleading instructions to influence my rating, I am, after all, testing tea, not editing packaging content.

Final thought, the fact that this tea was harvested in 2017 might play a big role in its loss of taste — surprisingly, it smelled vividly delicious. I'm a little disappointed that I did not notice prior to purchasing but also that yunomi's tea club was offering it. It is no longer available, making me wonder as to why they wanted us to review it. It seems to me they were trying to get rid of old stock.
I am ready to bet that in 2017, this tea was amazing. But having a little experience with aged teas, I believe not much of the tea profile was lost in the first infusion; most of it happened in the subsequent ones.

Sunday, July 29, 2018

Koukaen Tea Factory: Premium Nishio Tencha Samidori Aged 2016 Vintage

Today's tencha made me do a lot of research and it turns out we're about to see a revolution in Japan's tea industry. Nothing too drastic, but I'll be sure to make a separate post about it!

This Premium Nishio Tencha Samidori has been aged since 2016, so I expected to be blown away by a matured green tea, but no, quite the contrary. More in the review (much more down).

About this tea; I had 2 conflicting information, one source said the cultivar was Samidori, the other Yabukita blend. Since Yabukita makes up 75% of Japan's tea fields, I'm tempted to say that this is a blend of both Samidori and Yabukita.

This tea is from the region of Nishio in the Aichi Prefecture.

If you're interested in the Koukaen Tea Factory, here's what yunomi.life had to say about it: 
Founded in 1948 by Yoshikazu Naito, the Koukaen Tea Factory is owned by the Naito family and employs a total of 9 people including family members. His son, President Tadashi Naito (see photo) is the 2nd head of the company. Based in the Nishio region of Aichi Prefecture, Koukaen specializes in the initial processing of leaves from farms in Nishio into dried unrefined tencha tea leaves (steamed and dried without rolling), and grinding of refined tencha leaves into matcha. (Refinement of the tencha leaves is outsourced to a trusted partner.)

Koukaen Tea Factory
Premium Nishio Tencha Samidori
Aged 2016 Vintage
西尾碾茶サミドリプレミアム

Recommended steeping method
5 grams of tea ¤ 2 minutes ¤ temperature at 80°C/176°F ¤ 250 ml of water


Dry leaf
Small medium-green colour chopped leaves and no stems because tencha is "mostly deveined" leaves that primarily end up ground into matcha. Aroma: very sweet notes of dark chocolate and raspberry jam. It almost smelled like candy.

1st infusion (一煎目)


Liquor
It was both herbaceous and marine (iodine notes mixed with seaweed), with cooked asparagus aromas and a mineral finish. The colour was bright light lime-yellow, shiny and clear, with some dust at the bottom of the cup.

Taste
There was a short attack of cooked asparagus evolving into a drywood and cocoa mouth. Low in asperity, and flowing, it was quite short in mouth, but full of quickly evolving flavours. The finishing notes had a swift richness to them, changing to light raspberry, kelp and an iodine touch.


Wet leaves
Rich medium-dark green colours with hints of cocoa, raspberry and cooked asparagus aromas.

2nd infusion (二煎目)


Liquor
A paler yellow-green colour this time and very clear and bright, still shiny with some dust remaining.
Aromas of raspberry albeit mild, but persistent alongside kelp.

Taste
A rather strong iodine attack with some kelp, quite short in mouth, previous flavours disappeared, unfortunately. With low astringency and flavours ascending, this infusion was frank but frivolous. Fortunately, they tapered off smoothly.

Notes
It seems this tencha tea might have lost a lot of flavours and depth as the ageing process went on. Fresher leaves might yield a more diverse palette, and flavours closer to what the dry and wet leaves impression gave me.
Maybe tencha teas are not meant to be aged?

Results
Quite frankly, this tea receives 3 stars out of 5. While the first infusion was tasty, the second infusion ended up rather disappointing. In general, this tea feels too short in mouth and the dry and wet leaves impressions gave me higher expectations, setting me up for further disappointment.

NaturaliTea Sencha: Setoya Midori (Aged: Best before 2017.12.05)

On the 29th of July 2018, I have tested 2 teas, both aged. Here is the first.

While there was no claim that it was aged, I did notice the best before date (for freshness, not "going bad") was the 5th of December 2017. While not aged very long, this stamp proves NaturaliTea take freshness very seriously as this green sencha was harvested in mid-May.

Setoya is the name given to the area where a few villages merged together enlarging the scope of Fujieda city in the Shizuoka Prefecture of Japan. Setoya is where most of the NaturaliTea's fields are found, and this sencha was 100% grown in Shizuoka.

NaturaliTea is a family-operated farm cooperative, and has been in operation for 42 years.

Here's Yunomi.life's description of the farm: In addition to their own fields, the Kinezuka family's company has partnerships with over thirty other neighboring farmers to both research organic farming techniques and work together to produce tea leaves. Leaves are then aggregated and processed into the products below.

NaturaliTea Sencha
Setoya Midori



Recommended steeping method:
5 grams of tea ¤ 60 seconds steeping ¤ 200 ml of water ¤ temperature at 70°C/158°F



Dry leaves
Those short leaves have a rich forest green colour with a few bright yellow short stems adding vibrancy to the mix. The aroma remind me of freshly mowed grass that has been left in a mound for a couple of hours under the warm sun. A warm, sweeter note which has lost some of it's bright sharper character coupled with hay undertones. There's a sort of saltiness to it which I attribute to marine aromas. Adding to these pleasant notes are zucchinis cooked in butter. 


1st infusion (一煎目)
Liquor
Sadly, in my eagerness, I forgot to snap a shot of the 1st steeping's liquor. This picture (above) is in fact the 3rd steeping I did later without regard to infusion time. Luckily it was so close to it in colour as to fit perfectly as a replacement, so forgive my air-headedness! The only difference is that this picture does not contain dust particles at the bottom (some). But if you are familiar with my blog, you will have seen many examples of what "some dust" at the bottom of a cup looks like.
While pictures never render the exact same colour I see, my impression was that of a more lime colour, sort of a bright green-yellow tone. The liquor was shiny and slightly cloudy. Again, the aroma of cooked zucchini came back with some added cooked spinach. A light mocha note lingered nicely which brought some richness to the mix. It was all around pleasantly sweet!

Taste
I noticed a light astringency but this tea is agreeably round, smooth and slightly oily. A liveliness lingers in this tea even if aged. It delivered a rich mocha attack finishing in notes of oregano. A surprising mix that is both impressive and structured.


Wet leaves
Leaves of vibrant medium green colour with greenish-white stems complimenting the aroma of cooked veggies and tomato flowers. It made me want to eat the leaves. Which you totally can! I like cooking them in butter and adding a little soy sauce.


2nd infusion (二煎目)
Liquor
Again the colour is quite bright, but more towards yellow than green. Still shiny as a good tea should be, but more cloudy. Barely any dust remains after the 1st infusion. Buttery zucchini notes come back again forming a sweet and rich aroma.

Taste
Similar to the 1st taste with a stronger attack and weak finish. Still round and definitely oilier.

Notes
I made a random 3rd infusion that may have been around 2-3 minutes long and I got notes of cinnamon apple spices! I don't know how that happened as my environment was rather clean of lingering kitchen smells.

Results
As you may know, I am not a sencha fan. Their green brightness is usually not pleasant to my palate but I was surprisingly satisfied with this sencha. Each infusion brought interesting notes and sensations.
Likely the ageing of this tea imparted richer tones and tapered the harsh brightness I personally dislike.

My personal rating is 4.5 stars out of 5. This was likely the most pleasant sencha I've had so far. However, I found the 2nd steeping a little more boring as the finish was weaker.
Give it a try here.
I guess aging a sencha reminds me of a long oxidized oolong versus a short oxidized one (for young sencha). It makes sense to me since I'm not a fan of short oxidized wulong either.

Monday, February 12, 2018

Creha Tea - Mirai First, Japanese Black Tea

Hello all!

I have not been active in the last months as my health has been down, my doctors have been going nuts trying to find out what was wrong with me, and I've been, and am still, on all sorts of meds. My immune system has been down the drain and I was sick so frequently I didn't trust my nose to know what tea tasted like anymore. If you're curious, I have Lyme disease. It's a disease that's worth knowing about because it isn't well known yet and most doctors don't know how to treat it. I'll spare you the details, but if you have it, you're not crazy, even if your doctor tells you it's all in your head. You gotta find an expert if you highly suspect that's what you have, they know how to test it properly, but it's not cheap. Even in Canada, some tests are not done here, and there's no coverage if done outside of the country (in my case, Germany). That's how little research there is on the subject in North America. I normally don't share much like this about myself, but I think there's a need for traction in the research department. So I'll recommend 2 things, 1st, a wiki link on it: Wiki link here, and also, a link to the documentary about the disease (note that most cases in this movie are extreme, I mostly only have arthritis and severe fatigue): Under Our Skin. There's also a sequel.

I'm better so I thought I'd give tea cupping another try.

Also the first one of the year, yay!

I received this sample from Yunomi and I've been eager to try it out! I was not disappointed. As a matter of fact, being away from tea for so many months, I was shocked that I did not need my trusty book on flavours to help me orient what I'm tasting and smelling. I think I have improved and it makes me very very, oh so very happy~.

This tea is sold by Yunomi (click here for the Creha tea page). The Creha (Kureha) Tea company also has a wide array of Japanese black teas, some flavoured (cinnamon, yum!) and some straight. Considering what a treat this tea was, I am definitely interested in trying them all.
This tea originates from the Kawanehon (川根本) village, Haibara district, in the Shizuoka prefecture of Japan, farmed by Etsuro Masui. At least that's what the package says, I think Mr. Etsuro Masui is a producer.

Creha Tea
Mirai First, Japanese Black Tea

Recommend steeping: 5 grams ¤ 2-3 minutes ¤ 90C°/194F° ¤ 200-300 ml of water

What I did: 5 grams ¤ 2.5 minutes ¤ 90C°/194F° ¤ 200 ml of water in a small glass teapot


Dry Leaves
I had a hard time capturing the true colour of this tea as my camera would show it as forest green rather than the dark brown I saw. Truly, it is a dark green, but at normal light, these flat tea leaves look brown, almost black. There are a few stems of dark green and copper in the mix, but mostly it's all broken flat parts.
The aroma was rather pleasant, malty and jammy (peaches, currant, blackberries) and bread dough.

Wet Leaves
There wasn't much difference in appearance with the wet leaves compared to the dry ones, aside from being slightly engorged with water. Whiffs of malt & sweet brioche, currant, shellfish and hyacinth came at different intervals. As I was about to go for the liquor, I even caught some hints of citrus and spices like cinnamon.

Liquor
What a beautiful dark burnt orange colour this cup yielded! Silky, thick and almost clear, I could not wait for the first sip. Aromas of apricot jam enveloped in a comforting and warm brioche were telling me this was going to be good.

1st steeping (一煎目)
As there were no instructions for subsequent infusions, I tried to steep it again for about 2 minutes but it yielded a very weak tea, so I'm guessing this tea is only meant for a single steeping when made with the teapot method. Maybe a gaiwan would yield more infusions, but today you get the experience of a single steeping.

At first, it seemed like a strong almost bitter attack but was quick to mellow as to offer no unpleasantness. To the contrary, the promise of delicious apricot jam came back on a nice slice of brioche but didn't linger too long. There wasn't much asperity although it did build up in strength with the next sips but never gave any harshness. The liquid felt silky, with a hint of maltiness and a tip of sourness. The finish was earthy with a little wink of spices like cinnamon.

This tea gets a 4.8/5 stars. I took .2 points out for sourness, not that it was persistent or really displeasing, but it's not my favourite and this is based on personal preferences.

But hey, 4.8, that's excellent. I would buy this again. This was a treat in all aspects of the tea cupping experience.

Sunday, August 6, 2017

An Afternoon (Tea) at the Dove's Nest turned High

I'm sitting at a Starbucks at the moment, sipping on a honey citrus mint tea made with lemonade. The forest fires to the West have brought winds of smoke and it's been a month and half and I'm still sore. Doctor's order, drink lots of tea, yay!

I just came back from the Dove's Nest in Calgary and I am happy to say the Google reviews were not reflecting the service and quality I have seen today.

It's a family business in a nice little square between 14 Street SW and the 90th Ave SW. Not too far off the Heritage Park.

I have been there before, but that was a long time ago and I couldn't remember what my experience had been as I wasn't there alone and couldn't focus entirely on my experience of it.

So, long story short, my spouse and I agreed that we need time off for "me time", so I got this Sunday for myself, he gets tomorrow. After looking up places for Afternoon Tea menus, I found that my only option in Calgary during the summertime was the Dove's Nest, but High Tea (hey I'm not picky, most places will offer the same kind of selection for either). I look up reviews and I see mixed feelings.

Now, I've worked in customer service for YEARS. So I know that one person's interpretation and expectations of a given service can be worlds apart from someone else's - or what's reasonable. I find there is always that one entitled person who wants special treatment and might or might not even mention it to their server and just right out writes a bad review. That's not fair. So I went, hoping for the best.

After kicking my spouse free of my leg, I'm finally in the car and ready to go. Unfortunately, I know I won't make it for 3 pm, that's when they stop doing the High Tea. I thought, maybe if I mention my blog...? But I don't even need to do that.

It's a little past 3 o'clock and I ask nicely and they let me have my High Tea! I just have to mind that they close at 4pm today. Fair enough.
I'm asked if I have any dietary issues or preferences to which I say no, but spy a High Tea tray on a patron's table and tell her no chocolate cake if possible. I know it's weird, but I'm really not a fan of chocolate cakes. Too intense in flavour, I'd rather munch on a chocolate bar.

I'm offered to choose a cup from the cupboard. What a lovely idea! And such marvellous teacups! I take a pansy themed one.


Pansies are my favourite flowers. We got these, but even darker, growing in random spots in my backyard. I remember they used to only grow under the stairs of places I lived as a kid.

They're my special mysterious flowers.

I'm a little stressed (I hope I didn't stress them too) because of personal reasons but soon relax in my chair. I look at the tea menu and notice they have a Darjeeling Castleton. I'm very partial to Castleton. So I ask which flush it is. The waitress, whom I am to assume is one of the daughters of the owner, is unsure. But she is nice and patient and I offer my experience of the tasting profiles of the 1st and 2nd flush and she confirms it's definitely the 2nd one. So far so good, I order it.

Soon, a hot metal pot of tea and milk are brought,


followed by a tray of cakes, a scone with raspberry jam and whipped cream, finger sandwiches and other savoury bites.


I remind them that I did not want chocolate cake and they quickly make the switch for me. Mistakes happen and frankly, I don't blame them as I'm probably the only person in a 10 km radius who dislike chocolate cakes. But for those who do like them, it looked very chocolaty with half an inch of chocolate icing or cream. I'm told it's a brownie square.

I get an extra lemon tart instead.

The waitress asks me if I want to know what's on my tray and I tell her I do. She even wrote me a list, because there's no way I could remember all of those.

Let's start with the sandwiches...

My favourite was the Ham and cheese sandwich. I expected that strong kraft cheese but no, it was better than that. It wasn't too strong and just fit perfectly with the ham salad. The ham part was delicious and had little bits of chopped baby pickles in it. The bread was a mix of white and brown and was very fluffy, it stuck a little bit in my palate. Aside from the last bit, it was really really good.

Ham & Cheese finger sandwich

The Chicken Salad sandwich was the one that impressed me most because I really hate them. (It's the one on the bottom left in the tray) The mix of mayonnaise with chicken makes me nauseous, just the thought makes me nauseous. But not this one! First, they didn't use normal bread, but a cream puff shell instead. I tasted it and it was lightly sweet and puffy.
I think it's a great medium.
The chicken was not mashed, it had texture and celery bits and I'm not sure if it was the celery, but something in it made it taste so fresh. That's the kind of chicken salad sandwiches events should offer. Definitely not your store bought kind!

Then I attacked the Spinach & Swiss quiche (middle of the lower tray). It was still warm and it had a tasty flaky dough. The Swiss cheese was a great choice bringing out a light sharp note. The texture was consistent and for me, that's part of what makes a great quiche.

The Cucumber & Cream Cheese sandwich was not bad, but I felt something was missing (I also edited the picture of the upper part of the lower tray out by mistake because you should never edit when tired). It was creamy and there were enough cucumbers, and some spice sprinkled over the edge. I may be crazy, but I thought I read somewhere that it was a cucumber mint sandwich, so if that was dried mint, its effect was lost as the flavour cannot be released fast enough to impart its taste on the sandwich. I made a mental note and mentioned it to the waitress and lady at the front desk. I proposed fresh mint instead, thinking that it would really make this sandwich more impressive. They seemed interested in the idea, so I'm hoping to come back and see for myself if they make the change. I was offered to talk to the owner but she seemed busy organizing an event (Sounded like a wedding dinner) with customers. I think such comments are better done in private.

The Egg Salad pinwheel was also delicious (bottom right of the lower tray). In its center was a sliced pickle creating a nice dark green circle. The pinwheel was moist and creamy. And well, I'm really a fan of egg sandwiches; I've had many and some were outrageously disgusting - how can someone mess that up?? - but not this one. Truly a beautiful and delectable little pinwheel.

Then I tried the Cheese Teapot cracker. What a cute fitting design. You could tell by the look of the surface texture that this wasn't a crumbling cracker but a flaky one.

Teapot Cheese cracker on a piece of kale

I finished with the Smoked Salmon Mousse tart. It was more creamy whipped. I must prefer the creaminess to the half-air half-product whipped version of mousse. To me, texture is everything. The creaminess was a balm on the tongue and the salmon was very tasty. I've had some smoked salmon mousse in the past and they're not all equal. Often they are even in taste as in, there's a lack of edge. This is a fish. FROM THE OCEAN. This fish tasted like it should; not fishy, just tasty with the right edge of salty ocean.

Smoked Salmon Mousse tart

By then, I was getting full. That came as a surprise as I had only had a bowl of cereals an hour before (which was my breakfast, I got up late, I've been very tired and exhausted lately, plus it's my day off, I do what I want!).

While it isn't the best scone I've had (that one was at the Queen Elizabeth in Montreal, see the 2013 December  3rd entry), but still pretty damn good. I like a fluffy scone as opposed to a too tightly packed one. That scone was a lightly sweet fluff monster and came with a side of raspberry jam - a good choice - and whipped cream. I personally would have preferred Devonshire cream because the whipped cream was mostly air, definitely not enough for such a huge scone and Devonshire cream is more traditional. I think it fits better. Even the jam wasn't enough. I would double the amount or make a smaller scone.

A monster scone

The monster's innards

Whipped cream & Raspberry jam

There are only 2 items left untouched and I'm definitely packing that scone to go.


I took a bite from the Pinkie square and I'm reminded of a pecan sugar pie - albeit not as sweet but very buttery. The top is layered with pink icing. This is a thick solid square that would definitely be filling, so I put the rest aside to enjoy home.

Pinkie square

Lastly, the 2 Lemon tarts. I liked the lightness and crispiness of the cup holding what I fancy is homemade lemon custard topped with whipped cream. The texture is almost completely smooth, sweet and tart. I liked it better than the Pinkie square, but maybe my full stomach is partly to blame as the Lemon tarts were much lighter.

Finally, let's talk about the teas. Their list seemed promising with 92 teas to select from, and as much as I'd like to sample them all, I had to choose one. I'm a little traditional when it comes to tea accompanying savoury bites, so I purposely chose the Darjeeling Castleton. I was however tempted by the Keemun Panda #1. Keemun teas being jammy (currant - blackberries) and naturally sweeter.

They only had white sugar on the table, but when I asked, they brought me honey. I wished I had been told whether my tea was ready to drink when brought, but since I fathomed it hadn't been very long between my order and the teapot being on my table, I waited a few minutes and the tea was to my liking. Ideally, being able to remove the steeped leaves would ensure an even taste, as I've definitely noticed an increase in strength and astringency by the end of my affair.

Overall, I was very satisfied with my experience. It was very positive and the staff was friendly to me. I paid $34.60 for this High Tea which is not too bad. I mean, it IS Calgary where things aren't cheap to start with. And for the amount of homemade sandwiches and other savouries I got, it was a good deal.

So next time you're in Calgary, bring a friend or go alone, it's great, but bear in mind their opening hours so you're not disappointed and you have time to relax and enjoy!

Wednesday, July 12, 2017

Yunomi Tea Reviews Club - Roasted Tea Leaf Blend with Premium Rice

Wow, it's been a while!

We ran out of mineral filters (actually they put back the minerals in the water) for my reverse osmosis water filtering system and somehow every company around us simply stopped selling them. We finally found some after many months and will order them soon.

That's partly why I started reviewing water bottles, as I had to buy them, but they're so expensive in the long run I just couldn't cup tea on a regular basis with these.

Then, the incredible happened; for the first time in my life, I developed seasonal allergies. My doc said it's the climate changes and this year he has seen a record number of patients coming in with allergies they never had before. I will never belittle the symptoms of allergies again. It's not just the stuffy nose, it's like blocked sinuses all over your face.

Anyhow, I finally received my first sample of tea from the Yunomi Review Club and I'm pretty excited!

The steeping instructions were on the package itself, and since there were no preferences as to the type of vessel used, but knew roasted stems and rice would likely make an impression on a porous surface, I went conservative and chose a small glass teapot a friend of mine bought me last Christmas. It came with those delicious and cute flower tea balls. I'm thinking of making a review about them someday, but not any time soon (sorry!).

And so here were are,

Seikoen Tea Factory's Echigo Boucha Roasted Tea Leaf Stems Blended with Premium Rice


As you can see, the stems are beautiful with a general uniformity, and a fair amount of grilled rice. The rice itself is a nice golden orange colour and looks like it was slowly roasted at a lower temperature for maximum flavour!

The dry leaves have a very pleasant aroma of lightly roasted rice and a nutty sweetness emanating from the stems.

The steeping method used is as follow:
5 grams of tea, 200ml of water at 90°C and 60 seconds steeping time in a glass teapot.

To make sure I had 200ml, and because my family decided to intrude my space work, I used a clean Pyrex measuring cup which I reused as a container for the liquid right after steeping. I made sure the vessels were all at a warm temperature as to not interfere with the taste.

The wet leaves almost smell like roasted pumpkin flesh. It's not strong or pungent, but pleasant. I thought it was a blend of stems at first, but the blend does contain some leaves. Stems range from light to medium brown and bright green while the leaves are broken and mostly dark green. The rice looks like nice little pale orange pupae.


The liquor has an almost peachy, amber hue and is partially cloudy. Roasted coffee beans, roasted rice and sweet wood notes emanated from the hot liquid. There's a certain smoothness detectable in this rising aroma.



1st steeping (一煎目)

Taste is reminiscent of black soybean tea (which I very much like, click here for more info), there's a light astringency that builds up but isn't very intense. There's a sort of light sourness at first that smoothens up, reminding me of Barley tea (Very nice as iced tea in the summer! Click here for more information.). There is a general feeling that this tea is very filling. The liquor is liquid as opposed to oily, and of course nutty with a nice roasted feeling. Even though it seems like it would, I found little to no bitterness to it. The liquor is smooth in the mouth leaving you a little woeful once the cup is empty.

2nd steeping (二煎目)

Taste is sweeter and cereal-like (corn), there is less astringency, and a warmness that fills you up physically and spiritually (hey, that's how I felt!), it had a pleasant roasted nuttiness to it.


I really loved that tea. easily a 4.5/5 rating from me. I love nutty teas and this was fantastic. I've had a few hits or misses genmaicha teas, this one didn't miss.

My only thumb down is that the title is misleading. It's really mostly stems, not leaves.

But if you love genmaicha, or nuttiness (like long-oxidized Oolongs), you will want to try this one out!