Premium first harvest tea leaves are picked and carefully crafted into our Teahouse Edition, giving it an exceptionally smooth flavor profile best appreciated when sipping as traditionally prepared tea.
We were impressed with the body and sweetness of this tea. These desirable traits come from the umami found in the young tea leaves. The tea is fixed green, rolled and dried in ovens to preserve the sweetness.
Origin: Uji & Kagoshima
Cultivars: Okumidori, Kanayamidori, Sayamakaori, Samidori, Yabukita
Typical Serving: 1tsp (~4g) with 1cup (~250ml) of hot water (158-176F), brew 60sec; about 25 servings in this 100g size product

















Nelsonbluts
07/11/2026baznora
Reading this in segments because the day was busy, and the post survived the fragmented attention well, and a stop at baznora held up similarly under interrupted reading, content that can withstand modern distracted reading patterns rather than requiring a perfect block of focused time is increasingly the kind I prefer.
ShermanHit
07/11/2026chipbrick
Time spent here today felt productive in the way that good reading sessions sometimes do, and a stop at chipbrick extended that productive feeling across the rest of the morning, the difference between productive reading and merely passing time is real and this site is consistently on the productive side for me lately.
ElliotnoK
07/11/2026nudgelynx
Just wanted to say this was useful and leave a small note of thanks, and a quick visit to nudgelynx earned a similar nod from me, the small acknowledgements add up over time and represent the real economy of trust that good content runs on across the open and increasingly fragmented modern internet.
Wendellephef
07/11/2026modrivo
Quietly the post solved something I had been turning over without quite knowing how to phrase the question, and a look at modrivo extended that quiet solving, content that addresses unformulated needs is content with reader insight and this site has demonstrated that insight at a high rate across the pieces I have read recently.
EverettImpug
07/11/2026masonotter
Closed the laptop and walked away thinking about the post for a good twenty minutes, and a stop at masonotter produced similar lingering thoughts, content that survives the closing of the browser tab is content that has actually entered the mind rather than just decorating the screen for the duration of the reading.
DonaldAbimb
07/11/2026directiondrivesmotion
Glad I clicked through from where I did because this turned out to be worth the time spent, and after directiondrivesmotion I had a fuller picture, the kind of content that earns its visitors through delivering value rather than chasing them through aggressive advertising or constant pop ups appearing everywhere on the screen lately.
Deanexcat
07/11/2026byrdbush
A piece that did not try to be timeless and ended up reading as durable anyway, and a look at byrdbush extended that durable feel, content that stays useful past its publication date without straining for permanence is content that ages well and this site has the kind of evergreen quality that I value highly today.
Jonahneshy
07/11/2026holdax
Took the time to read the comments on this post too and they were also worth reading, and a stop at holdax suggested the community quality matches the content quality, when the conversation around a piece is as good as the piece itself you know you have found a real corner of the internet.
Henryinsus
07/11/2026actionforwardnow
Honestly this hits the sweet spot between detail and brevity, no rambling and no shortcuts, and a quick visit to actionforwardnow kept that going across the related pages, the kind of place that respects your attention without trying to grab it through cheap tactics or attention seeking design choices that get tired fast.
Leonardhig
07/11/2026ideaflowengine
Took a quick scan first and then went back to read properly because the post deserved it, and a stop at ideaflowengine kept me reading carefully too, the kind of writing that earns a slower second pass rather than getting skimmed and forgotten is something I value highly when I happen to find it.