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

















GusRoofs
07/13/2026modmixo
Will be sharing this with a couple of people who care about the topic, and a stop at modmixo added more material worth passing along, the kind of site that is generous with quality content and does not make you jump through hoops to access it which is appreciated more than the team probably realises.
Marshallrat
07/13/2026vincavessel
Felt no urge to argue with the conclusions even though I started the post slightly skeptical, and a look at vincavessel maintained that pattern, writing that earns agreement through clarity of argument rather than rhetorical pressure is the kind I find most persuasive and the kind I want to read more of these days.
Rodolfomut
07/13/2026curlbyrd
Liked everything about the experience, from the opening through to the closing notes, and a stop at curlbyrd extended that into more pages, finding a site where the editorial vision shows through every choice rather than feeling random is an increasingly rare experience and one I am glad to have today during this particular reading session.
Ernestceage
07/13/2026urbanvo
If you scroll past this site without looking carefully you will miss something, and a stop at urbanvo extended that mild warning, the surface of the site does not advertise its quality loudly which means careful attention is required to recognise what is being offered here which is itself a kind of editorial signal.
Jamestug
07/13/2026muscatneedle
Thank you for keeping the writing honest and the points easy to verify against your own experience, and a stop at muscatneedle reflected the same approach, no exaggeration just steady useful content that I can take with me into my own work without second guessing every sentence I happen to read here.
Haroldwaync
07/13/2026platenavy
Felt like the writer was speaking directly to someone with my level of curiosity, neither talking down nor showing off, and a stop at platenavy kept that comfortable matching going, finding writing that meets you where you are rather than asking you to climb up or stoop down feels great every time it happens.
Emanuellit
07/13/2026nexzaro
Found the use of subheadings really helpful for scanning back through the post later, and a stop at nexzaro kept that reader friendly approach going, navigation is something many blog writers ignore but small structural choices make a noticeable difference for someone returning to find a specific point again days or weeks later.
Yalegried
07/13/2026cartcab
Now thinking I want more sites built on this kind of editorial foundation, and a stop at cartcab extended that wish into a broader hope, sites built on substance and care rather than on metrics and growth are the kind of sites I want to see more of and this one is a small example worth supporting.
Jacksonplait
07/13/2026ponymedal
Now appreciating that the post did not try to imitate any other style I might recognise, and a stop at ponymedal continued that distinct voice, content with its own register rather than borrowed from elsewhere is content with real authorial presence and this site has clearly developed that presence through what feels like patient editorial work.
Milesendap
07/13/2026shopzaro
Reading this in segments because the day was busy, and the post survived the fragmented attention well, and a stop at shopzaro 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.