Nov 4th, '10, 12:38
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by Chip » Nov 4th, '10, 12:38
tortoise wrote:sebpassion wrote:
i still have a bag of unopened YM-limited edition from o-cha in the fridge, and i hope that it'll be good like the other ones or even better!?!
You will not be disappointed.
I found the Supreme to reign supreme over the "Classic" in shincha form, but the shincha Classic was on the mild side this year. I hear the nonshincha Classic is more vibrant than the shincha.
Regardless, the Supreme is really good. Try brewing it a bit cooler, like around 153-155* for a bit longer, 60 seconds.
And per Tortoise, the YM is also really amazing warming in the preheated kyusu, so is Miyabi. Well, try this with any sencha. Put the dry leaf in a preheated kyusu and stick your nose right in there and take a whiff. This will make you sit down and settle into a an excellent sencha experience.
Nov 4th, '10, 12:44
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by debunix » Nov 4th, '10, 12:44
Chip wrote:
I believe all Ippodo sencha is asamushi.
Good to know!
(flashing asa gang sign)
Nov 4th, '10, 13:36
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by Chip » Nov 4th, '10, 13:36
debunix wrote:Chip wrote:
I believe all Ippodo sencha is asamushi.
Good to know!
(flashing asa gang sign)
*flashes sencha gang sign*
USFL. The United Fellowship of the Steamed Leaf. 
Nov 4th, '10, 13:52
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by JRS22 » Nov 4th, '10, 13:52
No essential sencha - but I'm waiting "patiently" for the OTTIs and I'm hoping to find one there.
Nov 4th, '10, 13:59
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by Chip » Nov 4th, '10, 13:59
JRS22 wrote:No essential sencha - but I'm waiting "patiently" for the OTTIs and I'm hoping to find one there.
I hope you do!
Interestingly, my essesntial sencha only makes up around 10% or less of my Japanese tea consumption. Yet I truly have a fixation on it. Yet I crave variety far more than any one sencha ...
Nov 4th, '10, 15:31
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by olivierco » Nov 4th, '10, 15:31
tortoise wrote:olivierco wrote:Kaboku sencha (Ippodo) and Ujibashi san no ma sencha (Tsuen).
is the kaboku asamushi?
Yes
Nov 4th, '10, 15:33
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by olivierco » Nov 4th, '10, 15:33
Chip wrote:
Ujibashi san no ma? Is this the aka Kirameki from O-Cha?
There is a little difference: Kirameki is the Shincha name of Ujibashi san no ma.
Nov 6th, '10, 12:56
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by Marco » Nov 6th, '10, 12:56
I have none yet. Just trying one by one. There are so many to try.

Perhaps I stumble upon one I will really crave for.
Nov 6th, '10, 13:15
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by Victoria » Nov 6th, '10, 13:15
It took me awhile, but Sae Midori from O-Cha is the only one that consistently works for me. Sometimes in the spring, Den's Sakura.
Nov 11th, '10, 15:05
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by twinofmunin » Nov 11th, '10, 15:05
I loved me some of O-cha's Sae Midori, until one day I ordered some Warashina Supreme... I was expecting it to be "worse" since it's an organic and I'd heard all the spooky things said about organics being weaker in flavour, but... it was
amazing 
. I think it qualifies as my go-to sencha now... so good.
Nov 11th, '10, 15:12
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by entropyembrace » Nov 11th, '10, 15:12
twinofmunin wrote:I loved me some of O-cha's Sae Midori, until one day I ordered some Warashina Supreme... I was expecting it to be "worse" since it's an organic and I'd heard all the spooky things said about organics being weaker in flavour, but... it was
amazing 
. I think it qualifies as my go-to sencha now... so good.
I think that today organic tea farming in Japan is developed enough that the organic teas can compete with conventionally grown teas in their own price range and come out favourably.
When ordering from O-cha I haven´t been paying much attention to if the tea I´m ordering is organic or not...I´ve ordered two organic senchas...one premium priced (Ooigawa Supreme) and the other mid-priced (Oku Yutaka) and both compare well with the conventionally grown teas in their price range that I´ve also ordered from O-cha.
Nov 11th, '10, 22:21
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by DoctorD » Nov 11th, '10, 22:21
I'm still playing the field, but if next year's asamushi Oku Yutaka from Yuuki-Cha is as good as this year's, that could be It.