Tea: |
Hojicha Uji -
Japanese Roasted Tea
(Japanese Green Tea) |
Manufacture Type: |
Steamed
and roasted green tea |
Cup Characteristics: |
The
roasted green tea takes
on a full bodied
character with almost
cinnamon toast-like
notes. Delicious
character that many tea
drinkers enjoy |
Infusion: |
Deep
orange red with golden
notes |
Information: |
Most
Japanese teas are made
from well handled leaves
and much of their
elegance and style is
due to the processing:
steaming immediately
after plucking and then
air drying. Bancha or
Sencha are the everyday
green tea drinks of
Japan. Ban 2 GO is one
of the highest grades of
Bancha. The leaves to
produce Bancha are
generally plucked after
the new season and tend
to be somewhat more
coarse. This however
gives the tea its unique
character and visual
appearance. Since the
leaves used to make
Bancha are more coarse
and contain some stalks
and stems the resulting
tea generally contains
less caffeine or tannin
then the finer grades of
Japanese tea. Also the
cup tends to be somewhat
milder. Because of the
proceeding factors
Bancha is often give to
children.
Japanese tea gardens
look quite different
from tea plantations in
other parts of the
world. The bushes are
cultivated in long rows
and trimmed so the row
has the appearance of a
long dome. In Shizuoka
Prefecture it is said
that the tea gives the
impression of smooth
waves of green,
undulating over the
landscape. This curved
form of the tea bush
gives the largest
plucking table (the area
where the new shoots
used in high quality tea
production grow is
called the ‘plucking
table’ - not only in
Japan but in other parts
of the tea growing world
as well). It is on the
long regularly shaped
plucking table that the
pickers take the leaves
and the new buds. In the
early season plucking is
only done by hand, but
once the first few weeks
pass, mechanical
plucking is the
preferred method. The
Japanese have been very
innovative in this
aspect by developing a
curved machine that is
handheld but clips the
tea bush with automatic
scissors that look like
electric hair clippers.
Tea has always had a
place in Japanese life.
It has been used to show
respect to honored
guests, as a medicinal
drink to aid digestion
after meals and in the
“tea ceremony” whose
rules were laid down by
Rikuyu. Recent research
has revealed numerous
chemical and mineral
components in green tea.
Japanese green tea
contains the following
components: Theanine,
Catechins (polyphenols),
Flavonoids, Vitamins C,
B1, B2, Niacin,
Caffeine, Amino Acids
and Minerals F, Zn, Mn,
Cu, and Se
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Brewing Instructions: |
Hot Tea Brewing Method:
When preparing by the
cup, this tea can be
used repeatedly (à la
chinoise)- about 3
times. The secret is to
use water that is about
200’ or 90’C. Place 1-1
1/2 teaspoons of leaves
per person in a teapot
and let the tea steep
for 30 seconds to 1
minute. Pour and begin
to enjoy a cup of
enchantment - do not
remove the leaves from
the pot. Once the water
level is low - add more
water, and so on - until
the tea flavor is
exhausted. Milk or sugar
are not recommended.
Look at the pattern of
the leaves - they
foretell life.
Iced Tea Brewing Method:
(Place 6 teaspoons
of tea into a teapot
or heat resistant
pitcher. Pour 1 1/4
cups of freshly
boiled water over
the tea. Steep for 5
minutes. Quarter
fill a serving
pitcher with cold
water. Pour the tea
into your serving
pitcher straining
the leaves. Add ice
and top up the
pitcher with cold
water. Garnish and
sweeten to taste. [A
rule of thumb when
preparing fresh
brewed iced tea is
to double the
strength of hot tea
since it will be
poured over ice and
diluted with cold
water.]
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