Hi there,
I've bought some matcha and shincha from O-Cha before and have been really impressed with their quality and delivery time, so I'd like to try some gyokuro from the O-Cha range. I've never had gyokuro, but really love Japanese greens. Anyone here have any recommendations for which O-Cha gyokuro to start with? I'd probably rather not start with the most expensive one just yet:)
Cheers,
Eric
Jun 24th, '09, 21:54
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ericnicolaas
Best Gyokuro from O-Cha?
http://teafinelybrewed.com - A website celebrating the world's finest beverage.
Definitely the Yame gyokuro. It's a great starter gyokuro that is high quality. The brewing parameters are different so be prepared to give it a few tries. Once you get it down you will love it.
As far as the best the Tsuru-Jiru-Shi is new and supposed to be the highest grade currently available. My lack of experience has kept me from trying it though. Don't rush your way to the top
As far as the best the Tsuru-Jiru-Shi is new and supposed to be the highest grade currently available. My lack of experience has kept me from trying it though. Don't rush your way to the top
Jun 24th, '09, 22:44
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You can try 50 grams of the previous best gyokuro for under $28 plus shipping. It is incredibly good and not the most expensive either.. Kame Gyokuro
+1Chip wrote:You can try 50 grams of the previous best gyokuro for under $28 plus shipping. It is incredibly good and not the most expensive either.. Kame Gyokuro
Jun 25th, '09, 21:59
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Joined: Jan 16th, '09, 22:03
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ericnicolaas
Thanks for the suggestions! I'm looking for something to start with, so not too expensive but still a good quality. Sounds like Yame Gyokuro might be the way to go. Have any of you tried their Organic Gyokuro? It's organic and cheaper, which would usually indicate to me that it's of inferior quality as well.
http://teafinelybrewed.com - A website celebrating the world's finest beverage.
It's my understanding that it's difficult to find organic japanese greens of high quality. The fact that it's both organic and cheaper, to me, means it's probably far less quality indeed. I have not tried the organic gyokuro so I cannot say for sure, but it just wouldn't add up otherwise.ericnicolaas wrote:Thanks for the suggestions! I'm looking for something to start with, so not too expensive but still a good quality. Sounds like Yame Gyokuro might be the way to go. Have any of you tried their Organic Gyokuro? It's organic and cheaper, which would usually indicate to me that it's of inferior quality as well.
Jun 27th, '09, 17:56
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Olivierco recommending that I try this stuff is how I learned what gyokuro was all about. I had fooled around with some others, but this is the real thing.olivierco wrote:+1Chip wrote:You can try 50 grams of the previous best gyokuro for under $28 plus shipping. It is incredibly good and not the most expensive either.. Kame Gyokuro
Jun 28th, '09, 22:40
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Joined: Jan 16th, '09, 22:03
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ericnicolaas
Thanks for the advice everyone! Now to decide... 
http://teafinelybrewed.com - A website celebrating the world's finest beverage.