Chiyonoen Tea Garden #10: Mountain-Grown Yame Sencha, Yabukita 1955 (Naturally Grown)

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Sencha
Flavors
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by Kaylee
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  • “Sipdown of the 2023 version. I definitely used too much leaf! I thought I had an awkward amount left and was just using up the last of it. Actually I mis-estimated and had fully enough for two...” Read full tasting note

From Yunomi

The Harashima family’s oldest tea field, planted in 1955, is made up of Yabukita cultivar tea plants. It is generally said that the life of a tea tree is about 30 to 35 years. The age of this Yabukita tea plantation at Chiyonoen is over 60 years.

The Yabukita variety which was planted by the 2nd generation tea farmer at Chiyonoen has a characteristic aroma and produces a complex leaf.

Product Description
Ingredients: Green Tea
Net weight: 50 grams, vacuum-packed original bag. 20 grams repacked on demand into Yunomi resealable bag.
Cultivar: Yabukita
Harvest: May
Region: Upper mountains of Yabe village, Yame District, Fukuoka, Japan. Altitude about 600 meters. Made from tea plants originally planted in 1968

About the Farm
Chiyonoen Tea Farm is a small tea garden operated by husband and wife farmers Masashi and Eri Harashima deep in the mountains of Yabe Village, Fukuoka, Japan. The 3rd generation farm specializes in high grade mountain-grown sencha and gyokuro. Established by his grandfather and the farm’s namesake, Chiyokichi.

Specifications
Harvest: First Flush (Spring)
Region: Fukuoka – 福岡県
Vendor Type: Farm, Family Business

About Yunomi View company

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1 Tasting Note

1255 tasting notes

Sipdown of the 2023 version. I definitely used too much leaf! I thought I had an awkward amount left and was just using up the last of it. Actually I mis-estimated and had fully enough for two separate brews. Honestly it came out quite good though. What I really wanted was gyokuro, but this was on top in the drawer and I didn’t feel like digging around for the gyokuro. Doubling the leaf on this sencha gave me a pretty gyokuro-like result anyway! The first steep has a thick, smooth, almost syrupy, mouthfeel. The flavor reminds me of miso soup – savory, vegetal, a bit mushroom-y, and a touch marine. The second steep came out even more flavorful with a stronger marine note. By the time I finished the second steep, my heart was racing the way it does when I’ve had too much caffeine too fast. I don’t know whether this is formally a high-caffeine tea but it’s definitely high caffeine for me!

I decided to cold brew the final steep. I’m on the fence about how it came out. I steeped it in the fridge for 24 hours but it still came out much more watery than the first two steeps. As it came closer to room temperature, the flavor opened up a bit more and I got a pleasant vegetal, salty flavor. Even the mouthfeel seemed thicker when it was not as cold. So the cold steep technically worked, but the end result was likely the same as if I had done a hot brew and allowed it to cool to room temp.

Marshall Weber

Have been working my way through some samples from Chiyonoen’s shincha from this year and I like their stuff for sure! Yunomi has some great farms that they pair with.

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