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- Description
- Tasting Notes
A treasure for any tea connoisseur, Mizuba's gyokuro is a sublimely sweet brew with very little astringency. Crafted by one of the top producers of the region, Mizuba's gyokuro is shade-grown for 21 days in an ideal climate of clean air and water, and rich volcanic soil (known as shirasu). Part of the deep, mellow umami and strong concentrations of L-theanine comes from Kagoshima's famous fog, which shades the trees from any harsh morning sun and protects the leaves from freezing temperatures. Truly a tea to savor each and every sip!
Brewing gyokuro is also a unique and engaging process - each successive steep brings out progressively different and distinct flavor experiences. Note the use of very low temperatures and small amounts of water. No shortchange in your cup here - albeit a small portion at first, gyokuro tea is one of the most concentrated flavor experiences you'll ever find in tea!

Make Iced Tea: our gyokuro is fantastic for both slow ice-steeping and cold brewing.
Learn 3 different methodologies to make iced tea here.
Aroma: sweet pear, melon, light citrus.
Flavor: a very well-rounded, satisfyingly syrupy brew, with layers of pear, baked peach, and sweet pea.
Store in a cool, dark location. Best consumed within 3 months.
Organic Gyokuro
Brew Guide

50ml

5g (1.5tsp)

105ºF (40º C) water. Cooler water is the way to go here!

60- 120 seconds

Small sips, massive umami:
What is Gyokuro?
Ah, gyokuro! The deep, satisfying sigh you hear after someone sips a cup of gyokuro? That happy human is experiencing one of the richest concentrations of umami you can experience in tea. Translating to "jade dew," gyokuro is made from Camellia sinensis leaves which are steamed and rolled like sencha, though a gyokuro can only be called so if the leaves have been shaded.
First crafted in 1835, a producer initially covered their tea plants to protect from frost. Lo and behold, when they brewed the covered leaves they found the delicious taste of gyokuro! Shading styles and duration vary depending on the farmer and the region. Still, the tea must be shaded enough to spur the plants to build a concentrated amount of sweet L-theanine — gyokuro's hallmark. A special tea indeed, gyokuro comprises less than 0.3% of Japan's tea production.
Tea Details:
Location: Kagoshima, on the Kirishima mountain range.
Harvest Season: Spring
Cultivar: organic Saemidori
Process: tea leaves grown in volcanic soil are shaded about 3 weeks prior to harvest (just like tencha!). Shade-growing concentrates the sweet amino-acid L-theanine in the leaf, providing a deep and rich flavor and virtually no astringency.
When brewing: For subsequent steeps, increase water quantity by 10ml and water temperature by 10º each steep. You may also try hotter temperatures for shorter periods of time. You'll experience a range of flavors. Using the guide above will give you a sweeter cup, while the hot/short brew method will extract more vegetal notes. Experiment!
Tea for two? Try 10g of our tea with 100 ml of 104ºF water, and brew for 60-90 seconds.

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