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

















Andykic
07/17/2026capitalalliancebond
Reading this slowly and letting each paragraph land before moving on, and a stop at capitalalliancebond earned the same patient approach, content that rewards slow reading rather than speed is content with real density and the writers here are clearly producing work that benefits from the careful eye rather than the rushed scan.
Claytoncoern
07/17/2026newideas
Reading this prompted a small note in my reference file, and a stop at newideas prompted another, the rare site that contributes useful nuggets to my own working knowledge rather than just consuming my attention is worth the time investment many times over compared to the usual pile of forgettable scroll content.
PabloJar
07/17/2026claritymovesforward
Pass this along to anyone you know dealing with similar questions, the answers here are clear, and a stop at claritymovesforward adds even more useful material, this is the kind of resource that deserves to circulate widely rather than getting lost in the constant churn of new content online that buries good work daily.
QuincyGef
07/17/2026trustlineage
Reading this confirmed that the topic deserves more careful attention than it usually gets, and a stop at trustlineage extended that elevated framing, content that raises the appropriate weight of a subject without being preachy about it is serving a quiet but important editorial function for the broader cultural conversation about it.
Jorgevuppy
07/17/2026elitepartner
Looking through other posts here the consistency is what makes the site valuable rather than any single piece, and a stop at elitepartner extended that consistency observation, sites whose value lies in the ongoing pattern rather than in standout posts are sites I trust more deeply and this one has clearly built that kind of trust.
FranklinBoign
07/17/2026focusdrivesthepath
A genuine pleasure to find a site that publishes at a sustainable cadence rather than chasing the daily content treadmill, and a look at focusdrivesthepath confirmed the careful publication rhythm, sites that prioritise quality over frequency are rare and this one has clearly chosen the slower pace which I appreciate as a reader.
Ricoacari
07/17/2026trendlyo
Beyond the topic at hand this site reads as a small ongoing project of taking writing seriously, and a look at trendlyo reinforced that project quality, sites that treat publishing as an ongoing serious practice rather than as content production for traffic are sites worth supporting and this one has clearly chosen the serious approach.
DaxLunty
07/17/2026growthfollowsdesign
Took my time with this rather than rushing because the writing rewards attention, and after growthfollowsdesign I had even more to absorb, the kind of content that pays back the patient reader rather than punishing them with empty filler is something I look for and rarely find in regular searches lately.
Andykic
07/17/2026capitalalliancebond
Going to come back when I have more time to read carefully, the post deserves more than a quick scan, and a stop at capitalalliancebond reinforced that, this is the kind of site that rewards a slower read which is hard to find in this fast paced corner of the internet but really worthwhile.
KeatonPof
07/17/2026directionactivation
Came back to this an hour later to reread a specific section, and a quick visit to directionactivation also drew a second look, content that pulls you back rather than letting you move on permanently is the kind I want to fill my browser bookmarks with in 2026 and beyond as the open internet evolves.