Thés du Japon

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Recent Tasting Notes

85

7g / 200ml glaspot @ 100C
3 Infusions: 1m/1m/2m

First infusion was a bit to strong. 45s is enough.
This tea is very spicy. I think ill try brewing it a bit thinner next time. Since im about to run out :)

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec

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85

This time i conducted a small experiment.

I did two simultaneous brewings.
1: 180ml banko-yaki kyushu
2: 200ml glass teapot

I used 7g / 180ml 100C water in preheated pots.
3: infusions 45s/1m/2m

The differance in taste was clearly noticable.
The banko-yaki had a much softer mellower taste, with somewhat stronger aftertaste. The liquid was a bit more foggy aswell.

The glasspot tasted a bit sharper more fruity but with less aftertaste.

My conclusion is that banko-yaki isn´t a very suitable material for brewing black teas.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 45 sec

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85

Strong! Full of flavor yet only a little bit of astringency.
Not as complex as other japanese blacks but full of spicy flavor.
The dry leaf is small and mostly broken so it infuses quickly.

I use a 200ml banko-yaki kyushu so i usually do only 3 infusions. But this tea should be able to manage atleast 4-5. The first 2 inusions were VERY strong. the third only slighly less so.

I used 4g/100ml
1. 45s
2. 1m
3. 1m45s

Good in the morning and during the day. Abit much as an eveningtea.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 45 sec

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97

Sipdown!
I´ve been dreading the day! All is gone, to maybe never return again!

Since it´s valentine and i´m single I thought i´d treat myself to something special :)
Kobiwako Kyusu
1m/1m/2m @ 100C

Still the best japanese black i´ve tried, full of cinnamon and minty aftertaste. almost no astringancy yet it manages a solid body with complex flavours dancing around in my mouth! I want MORE :)
Will be on the lookout!

Flavors: Cinnamon

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec 10 g 6 OZ / 190 ML
Terri HarpLady

I was single for a long time on Valentine’s day. I treated myself to flowers, good food & tea, etc. It was my mid thirties, & I learned to be my own best friend. Now that I’m in love again (for 13 or 14 years…I can’t remember how long, LOL), I’m still my own best friend. Tony is my other best friend :)
Be good to yourself!

Dag Wedin

Thank you Terri, i will! :)

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97

10g / 180ml kobiwako
1m/1m/2m @ 100C

Ah, going all out since its sunday! Been at my brothers place for his birthday. The family is no teadrinkers. So i thought i would make me some of this awesome tea! Sweet minty cinnamon. Very full body, perhaps a faint bit of wood. Almost no astringancy.
noticed ivé only got enough for one more pot. :/

Been drinking alot of tea earlier today but didnt take the time to log. Looking forward to harvest! Been trying alot of different kinds of tea the last year. Now i know what i like better and will focus on trying more varieties.

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec

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97

10g / 180ml kobiwako kyusu
1m/45s/2m @ 100C

Superb as always! Really do hope i get a chance to restock!
Today i recieved my order from yuuki-cha. I´m looking forward to trying escpeically the Koubi-Shiage oolong as it is supposed to be somewhat like a japanese Da Hong Pao. Unfortunatly they packed my order wrong so i got another bag of hime-fuki instead of Hime-hikari. oh well. will try that next time. :)

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec
Terri HarpLady

Ooh, the koubi-shiage does sound interesting! I’ll look forward to your review. :)

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97

10g / 180ml Kobiwako kyusu
Four infusions: 1m/1m/1:15m/2m @ 100C

This is by far my favorite japanese black tea. It is shockful of flavours. Cinnamon, mint, even a very slight note of citrus. Very low astringancy.
And the effect of the brand new Kobiwako clay pot is marvelous. The tea recieves strong body AND aftertaste. Mr Hojo really did hit spot on with this new clay. Beutiful. Will post a pic @ a later tasting note.

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec

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97

This is one of my favorite black teas. A very clean powerful taste typical of japanese blacks. A bit of sweetness, mint, without any astringency.
Big beutiful leaves with a strong fragrance after wash.

I used 10g of leaves in a 200ml banko-yaki kyusu. The large leaves filled the pot to the brim.
Did 3 infusions.
1. 60sec 100c
2. 45sec 100c
3. 120sec 100c

I got 3 powerful cups. The last infusion was a bit long. I think 5 infusions won`t be a problem. perhaps. 60/45/60/75/90.
A wonderful high quality tea.

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec

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86

Thank you to TeaEqualsBliss for sending me a bit of this tea.

This is a really pleasing Sencha … as I sit here, sipping on it, I am trying to recall the last time I consumed a pure Sencha, and I can’t do so. I’ve had so many other green teas, primarily flavored, in the past weeks, but, I haven’t had a pure Sencha like this in a while. It’s a nice change … very refreshing.

The aroma of the dry leaf initially reminded me of seaweed, but after the package had breathed for a moment, I noticed more of a freshly cut grass kind of smell.

The brewed tea smells a bit more like mild, steamed vegetables … reminding me a bit of the broccoli that I steamed last night, only this is a bit more on the “grassy” vegetable side, smelling a bit more like spinach, I think. The flavor is not spinach-y though, or even broccoli-ish. It is sweet, grassy, and crisp. There is a very fresh, vibrant sort of taste to it. Very smooth. Nice.

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90

Yup! Dry…this smells like Chestnuts! Wet…it smells like a Buttered Veggies with a nuttiness to it! Yum! Yum!

This has a light and fluffy sort of taste to it – especially since the aroma was so intense – this sort of surprised me. As it cools it does have a peppery taste to it too!

I really like this green!

Geoffrey Norman

Oooo! Kamairicha! I’m jealous.

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80

This smells like pure spinach.

The product description says this is “pure” and “mellow”…well, I disagree with the MELLOW description…I think it’s very hardy…it’s grassy-green, vegetal, and gives a pretty powerful punch.

I, do, however, really like this…I think it’s a good green…as far as the grassier greens are concerned.

I’m grateful I was able to try it!

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86

This is a fine tasting sencha!

The post-infused tea-liquor is a earthy-lime-green with a little bit of texture/floaties.

The vegetal Flavor is mellow and there is a mysterious maltiness trying to hide in the middle of the sip. As it cools it becomes a bit more grassy, but it’s a good grassy flavor…and not distracting either.

I like this one, too!

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89

One of my favorites — every time I drink this tea, I can’t believe I’m drinking a japanese green. I’ve only had these flavors in tightly rolled, high mountain Taiwanese oolongs.

I save this one for special occasions. A true treat!

Preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 1 min, 15 sec

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86

This is really wonderful!

It smells like pan fried spinach but it tastes like lima beans. After cooling at room temp for a moment it turns a little bit sweeter. But from start to finish – it’s savory and crisp-green! This is a sturdy Sencha and I think it’s GRAND :)

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95

What I guessed would be a particularly unique sencha in the same vein as a few others I’ve reviewed from Thes du Japon, has actually felt a little more like ‘coming home’ to a familiar tea.

If I were to name one sencha that I really enjoy, have had more than others, and is always appreciated, it would be Sencha Zuiko from Den’s Tea. It’s a classic light-steamed sencha, from Honyama. But, I don’t love the fact that it only comes in 2oz packages, rather than 100g…anyway…

This tea has the very same dry leaf smell (once put into the warm teapot, they become very sweet and bakey-like), and the very same aroma from the liquor, a nice mix of nori, bakey, bitter, and sweet. I don’t know for sure, but I think this tea had these qualities and felt familiar because it is also made from the Yabukita cultivar.

What made it unique and distinct, however was a delicious, sweet, flower tone that lay underneath these other, familiar flavors. The sweetness, maybe like honeysuckle, was really good, and most apparent on the first two steeps.

This distinct floral aroma becomes less sweet, but more clear as floral, in the aftertaste. No, it’s nothing like the orchid taste of oolong, nor is the aftertaste a strong sweetness that remains in the throat for a long time. Instead, it is a very refreshing, subtle aroma that is more clear after the other, typical sencha flavors have disappeared.

I was most surprised by the fact that this aroma only grew stronger after additional steeps! Most senchas I find I’m done at 3-4 steeps… this one seems to get a real second wind at the 4th and easily goes 5… maybe more.

If you like standard, quality, light-steamed sencha, this tea is a good fit—with a delicious twist.

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 1 min, 15 sec

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94

I am so glad I got this tea!

I’ve never had this cultivar before, so it was fun to notice the similarities and differences to others. I asked Florent (one of the owners) which of two Kabusechas to recommend, and he said this one. This isn’t technically a true Kabusecha, but the lines are very blurred (the leaves were shaded 1 week prior to picking).

As the description states, the tea is machine harvested, so the leaves are small. However, there are very little tiny bits of leaf like you would find in a fukamushi; instead, they are very consistent, dark, twisted leaves. When brewed, they open up very nicely as well.

Amazingly (for a Japanese green), the liquor is very consistent in color from steep to steep. Typically, I expect the first to be clearer, and the second to be quite dark and full of little bits of leaf. Instead, this tea is a very pleasing, bright, yellowish-green, every single time.

I’m going to have to keep cupping this to get a good description/idea of all the various aromas present, but it is definitely like fresh green beans, flowers, and has a sweet, delicious, noticeable aftertaste.

Once I had tasted the first sip, I was so thankful to know I’d have it around for a while!

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 1 min, 15 sec

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90

Out of curiosity, this was the only tea I requested as a sample in my recent order (Thes du Japon generously throwing in 3 more!). This tea was a real surprise!

I have enjoyed Chinese green teas before, but for the most part, I prefer the effect steaming has on green teas, as opposed to pan-frying (typical Chinese method to prevent further oxidation). But, I had to try this tea, because it is so unique for a Japanese green, and must be more similar to the original teas that came over to Japan from China.

The opened (sample) pack smelled like chocolate, maybe like chocolate raspberries, and slightly earthy. The dry leaves were very similar in shape to Mellow Monk’s ‘Top Leaf’ or Den’s Tea’s ‘Guricha’ … but once they had been steeped several times, they opened up to be huge. You would never have guessed.

I was expecting the tea to be interesting, but not so delicious! The aroma is probably one of the best parts, faintly like stir-fryed snap peas, but as the description says, exactly like smell of roasting chestnuts. I knew that is a nice smell and all, but I never expected it to be so irresistible!

Finally, the flavor wasn’t (as I had been predicting) completely unlike regular sencha. No, this is definitely still a (unique) sencha. I was expecting a very Chinese-like, pan-fried, green tea. Instead, I got a nice union of the two – warming and tasty chestnuts, followed by a faint, but deliciously sweet bitterness.

I might have rated this higher, but it didn’t keep such a strong flavor or aroma for more than 2 infusions. The 3rd and 4th were still good, but didn’t have the same punch. However, I am definitely interested in trying more!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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96

This tea is similar to Thes du Japon’s “Sayama-kaori” micro-fermented (or oxidized) sencha. However, while that tea is very much like a green oolong (losing most of its sencha characteristics), this tea is a nice balance.

As seems to be the norm with Thes du Japon, at least the teas they carry produced by Mr. Hiruma, the leaves of this one are a mix of sizes, with a good percentage being very long, beautiful needles (1" – 1.5").

I’ve brewed it for the recommended lengths of time (40s, 50s), but have found I enjoy it on the longer end (50s or 1 minute).

At first, it is refreshing, slightly astringent and earthy, its sencha-like qualities coming through. Unique and fun though, is that oolong qualities follow – a pleasant, flowery aroma.

The best part though is at the end — it leaves an intense and deliciously sweet (and flowery) aftertaste… and remains for a good while (I noticed it still present at least 10-15 minutes later).

I’m glad I chose this one, it is excellent.

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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89

So now to the first of the teas I actually bought from Thes du Japon, rather than one sent as a free sample…

Before I say anything else, I’m definitely going to have to drink more of this to really get a good idea. But, the first several cups have impressed me.

For a fukamushi—the leaves (like the other micro-oxidized sencha produced by Hiruma san I recently reviewed), were surprising. While the leaves were broken up, I’d say nearly half of them were still long, fine needles. Some as long as 1.5"!!

Brewed, the leaves looked very dark, as if they had been shaded for a little while. Perhaps this is not the case, but they did remind me of the color of brewed gyokuro.

What I also did not expect (since it was not in the tea description), was that this tea is also very slightly oxidized. This shows on the brewed leaves (and buds), as some have brown edges, or (for the buds) completely brown.

The result was a very unique fukamushi. Instead of the neon green, strong, forceful liquor, which could be considered a soup, you get a soft (not weak!), fruity, and subtle cup.
Normally, I read the words ‘soft’ and/or ‘subtle’ to mean, ‘weak’ or ‘too complicated for my palate’. But, now I think I understand what people mean when they use these words.

This tea is also similar to a green oolong/sencha cross… except instead of flowery oolong like the other Hiruma sencha, this has all the fruit-like flavors. I think my favorite time was when it came out tasting very similar to cherries, or actually, like marzipan. You may hate marzipan, but for me it was amazing. If you hate marzipan though, don’t fear, I don’t think that would be a way many would describe it.

I look forward to (God willing) many more good cups of this, and to get a better idea of what it is like. So far it is certainly not what I expected, but in a delicious way.

Preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 0 min, 45 sec
Cole

Everything from Thes du Japon sounds utterly exquisite, and like nothing we’ve tasted before. I am so sad that I didn’t go halfsies on this order!

Shinobi_cha

Don’t worry – they just came out with a $6 shipping method! (Or, did I say that already?) You can choose up to 5 teas, and while it isn’t insured and takes probably 7-8 days instead of 2-3, it’s good enough I’m very likely to order from them again some time.

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94

I had this for the first time yesterday; yet another of the free samples that Thes du Japon included in my order.

Wow! I mean, I knew from the description that it would taste or be reminiscent of an Oolong, but wow. The dry leaves filled the whole mini-package full of a flowery ali shan or tie guan yin aroma. The leaves were also very much intact, some as long as 1" (before infusion!).

I was a little intrigued by their infusion directions – 158F, 40 seconds, 3-4g per 70ml (2+oz), because it looked like they were for a fukamushi sencha. But, I heeded them.
And, this tasted just like a green oolong up front (flowery), followed by the nice refreshing bitter-sweetness of sencha.

I am very impressed… I just kept taking sips couldn’t believe this was a Japanese green tea! The fragrance and flavor were very strong and pleasant.

Interestingly, the wet leaves opened up huge to show mostly whole leaves, and many of them had a lot of browning along the edges, as a result of the withering/partial-oxidation process.

What a fun experience! This is an awesome, unique tea, and I look forward to comparing this sample, to the other micro-oxidized tea that I actually bought from them.

Preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 0 min, 45 sec
sherubtse

Good to have your comments on Florent’s teas. They will help when I place my own order.

Best wishes,
sherubtse

Shinobi_cha

Cool! Well, I’ve got 5 more to review, the 4 I ordered, and the last free sample they included (that wasn’t a duplicate, that is).

sherubtse

I look forward to your reviews!

Best wishes,
sheubtse

Cole

Whoa! How COOL! Take some pictures of the leaves if you get a chance sometime :) How many infusions were you able to get out of the leaf? I can usually get 7-10 gaiwan cups out of some good tie guan yin, but you know how Japanese greens love to expel their goodies.

Can’t wait to hear how the other micro-organized teas fare!

Shinobi_cha

I think I was able to get 3 excellent steepings with very little flavor lost, and the 4th and 5th were slightly weaker, but still great. In terms of longevity for Japanese greens, this (and one or two others I’ve had from Thes du Japon but have not yet written about) definitely stands out!

Shinobi_cha

Pictures of the leaves have been posted on teachat – go check them out!

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95

This came as a free (unexpected) sample, in my first order from Thes du Japon.
(Actually, they included 3x this tea, and 4 others!). I love free samples. But, I guess, who doesn’t?

Not surprisingly, this tea reminds me very much of ‘Fukamushi Sencha Yame’ from Den’s Tea. It has that familiar, slightly-roasted aroma and flavor, that I love so much. This tea is apparently light-steamed, though the leaves are more broken up than what I’ve come to expect from a typical asamushi (ie from Uji or Honyama, etc.). Anyway, perhaps it’s on the ‘deeper’ end of light-steamed teas.

The aroma continues to be strong, and very enjoyable through three steepings. As their description states, I think anyone new to green teas, who likes a strong flavor, would enjoy this. It doesn’t have any of the typical bitterness that can turn people off of green tea.

For a first impression, this is definitely a good one. So far, I like teas from Yame, the extra ‘hi ire’ that seems to be typical of their Sencha (I think that’s the word for the roasting) is unique, and I just happen to really enjoy it.

Preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Cole

Just got a bag of 2011 Fukamushi Sencha Yame from Den’s, and I have to agree — there’s something special about teas from Yame! Sounds like this one didn’t let you down :)

sherubtse

I have been thinking of ordering from Thes du Japon. What do you think of their service, shipping, etc, Shinobi_cha?

Thanks.

Best wishes,
shrubtse

Shinobi_cha

They have great service. Florent, one of the owners, is also active on Teachat, and was quick and helpful in answering my questions (via email and TC). Also, they sent 3 free tea samples (multiple packs of each; when all I requested was just one!)
They just added a new shipping option too, which is much cheaper (only $6, instead of $20). Now I’m very likely to order from them again. I haven’t broken out anything from my order yet (except this sample), but will be doing so soon.

Shinobi_cha

Cole – yep, so far everything I’ve had from Yame has been great. That tea from Den’s is one of my favorites. I’d like to try gyokuro from Yame sometime, too, because they’re apparently famous for it.

sherubtse

Thanks for the response, Shinobi-cha.

Best wishes,
sherubtse

P.S. I hear that O-Cha has a great Yame gyo.

Shinobi_cha

Cool! Good to know. I like them, so I will keep that in mind.

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