I bought some rather expensive sencha and was very happy to try it. Sadly enough, I've never got it to taste anything else than slightly bitter hay. Maybe I just don't appreciate this tea, but I wonder if the tea is spoiled or if I'm doing something wrong. Anyone's got some advice? You're all having shincha ecstacy and I can't even brew Sencha
This week I tried a short brewing in 70 degrees (Celcius) and it seemed sweet and not bitter immediatly after brewing. But, when it had cooled enough to drink it was not sweet at all - and enough bitter not to be enjoyable.
I haven't got very much leaves left now. But damn it, I WILL get a decent cup of Sencha before I run out of it!!
Some would argue that sencha is an aquired taste; it's at least pretty different than most other tea with its strong grassy "green" flavor. I thought sencha was kind of bitter and unpleasant the first time I had it, but I think I started liking it more (to the point of being probably my favorite kind of tea) by buying better tea, learning how to brew it, and just getting used to the flavor. It's very different than normal (non-Japanese) green tea in many ways, and if you are like I was and try to brew it like dragonwell, it probably won't taste as good. But learning how to make it correctly with a good teapot has been very rewarding.
May 17th, '08, 22:39
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Sencha clicks for some, and for others it requires a period of aquiring the taste for it (and the methodology of brewing it correctly)
I think I knew from my very first sip of sencha that I was going to really love it. Yet still took a while to get there. There was no TeaChat then and the premium Japanese vendors were not around. I was buying out of printed catalogs.
I hope you figure it out and join the kool kidz!
But as Olivier was asking, knowing what tea it is and from where may shed some light on the subject!
I think I knew from my very first sip of sencha that I was going to really love it. Yet still took a while to get there. There was no TeaChat then and the premium Japanese vendors were not around. I was buying out of printed catalogs.
I hope you figure it out and join the kool kidz!
But as Olivier was asking, knowing what tea it is and from where may shed some light on the subject!
This Sencha is from a local store and it carried no other information than the name "Sencha". I've stopped asking questions in that store since the staff know zero about harvesting year or origin.
Thanx alot for the answers! I'll try again with less leaves and measure the time more closely. But maybe I just haven't learned to appreciate cooked hay yet
I have to admit that the only loose-leaf green teas I've had before were gunpowder and unspecified "green" from Ahmed tea. The last one was really delicius, the gunpowder still dwells in some cupboard but I will throw it away soon. I've loved some bag tea greens but that doesn't count.
Maybe I just don't understand green tea, tho I hate to admit it I may go for a tea-nerd if one doesn't look to close, but I'm nothing but a wolf in sheep's clothing!
Thanx alot for the answers! I'll try again with less leaves and measure the time more closely. But maybe I just haven't learned to appreciate cooked hay yet
I have to admit that the only loose-leaf green teas I've had before were gunpowder and unspecified "green" from Ahmed tea. The last one was really delicius, the gunpowder still dwells in some cupboard but I will throw it away soon. I've loved some bag tea greens but that doesn't count.
Maybe I just don't understand green tea, tho I hate to admit it I may go for a tea-nerd if one doesn't look to close, but I'm nothing but a wolf in sheep's clothing!
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May 18th, '08, 14:51
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May 18th, '08, 15:50
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May 18th, '08, 16:28
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May 18th, '08, 16:44
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I never buy sencha loose - green tea gets stale faster than black tea, and I think Japanese green tea gets stale faster than Chinese green tea (maybe since Japanese teas are steamed while Chinese are pan fried?)
Even at good tea shops, sencha is usually stored in big tin boxes - if you don't buy your sencha about the same day as this box is filled, your tea will be stale already when you buy it.
If you are in Stockholm, I think that the best place to buy Sencha is at the Japanese food stores where they have tea in nitrogen flushed packages marked with a best before date - JFK at Swedenborgsgatan had some good sencha last time I was there.
Even at good tea shops, sencha is usually stored in big tin boxes - if you don't buy your sencha about the same day as this box is filled, your tea will be stale already when you buy it.
If you are in Stockholm, I think that the best place to buy Sencha is at the Japanese food stores where they have tea in nitrogen flushed packages marked with a best before date - JFK at Swedenborgsgatan had some good sencha last time I was there.
Thanx again! It wasn't a grocery store, it was a tea store, but a rather small one in a galleria. Not the best place to look for tea experts...
Battra: I owe you, didn't even know of that Japanese store, tho I'm in the neighborhood very often Do you remember if you bought the Gin one or the Midori one? Both of them are so much cheaper than the one I sit with. I will go there real soon and buy some Hoija too.
Stay tuned, I'll come back in a while and ask all you cool kids how to treat this beauty
Battra: I owe you, didn't even know of that Japanese store, tho I'm in the neighborhood very often Do you remember if you bought the Gin one or the Midori one? Both of them are so much cheaper than the one I sit with. I will go there real soon and buy some Hoija too.
Stay tuned, I'll come back in a while and ask all you cool kids how to treat this beauty
The noise comes from the other side of the mirror