Feb 9th, '12, 01:22
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by margauxmorgan » Feb 9th, '12, 01:22
hi! i've read an article where it says...
We can reuse sencha tea by using it as ingredient in our salad
is this true?
thanks a lot!

Feb 9th, '12, 01:41
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by iannon » Feb 9th, '12, 01:41
If you want to sure. I use it to feed my chickens
Feb 9th, '12, 01:58
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by margauxmorgan » Feb 9th, '12, 01:58
thanks for the reply

Feb 9th, '12, 05:05
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by Xell » Feb 9th, '12, 05:05
If you mean used tea leaves, then some people use it as a topping for rice with little bit of soy sauce. Depends if you like it, they sure are edible. I don't really like this though.
Feb 9th, '12, 11:00
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by Chip » Feb 9th, '12, 11:00
Eating used Gyokuro is more common because the leaves are quite tender and thinner. Some sencha you can, but some can be a bit tough or chewy.
I will often serve them with just a bit of soy sauce.
Feb 9th, '12, 23:07
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by margauxmorgan » Feb 9th, '12, 23:07
@zell i see... thanks for the reply though

good to know it really is edible
@chip thanks for the information

Gyokuro it is then

thanks a lot!
Feb 12th, '12, 19:54
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by sencha » Feb 12th, '12, 19:54
I didn't know anyone did this. How does it taste with soy sauce?
Feb 13th, '12, 02:22
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by margauxmorgan » Feb 13th, '12, 02:22
me too
i was really surprised
haven't tried it yet though

Feb 13th, '12, 07:31
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by Chip » Feb 13th, '12, 07:31
sencha wrote:I didn't know anyone did this. How does it taste with soy sauce?
... tastes kinda like used tea leaves with soy sauce!
Give it a try!

Feb 13th, '12, 13:25
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by aeflo » Feb 13th, '12, 13:25
i also ate used leaves sometimes.
i always add soysauce when i do it, sometimes i also add some nori flakes, sesame and bonito flakes, really tasty-stuff also as topping for rice!

Feb 13th, '12, 14:40
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by Chip » Feb 13th, '12, 14:40
... yeah, definitely on rice.
I also add it to miso soup or noodle soup as well ... or any Asian style soup.
Feb 13th, '12, 21:17
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by sencha » Feb 13th, '12, 21:17
Any need to worry about heavy metals/pesticides that would otherwise not be extracted in a water infusion?
I guess it's okay with matcha, so why not... although maybe most matcha is organic?
Feb 13th, '12, 22:06
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by Chip » Feb 13th, '12, 22:06
Wellll, seriously, I would avoid eating Brazilian sencha or gyo leaves, period. Pesticide laws, etc. are quite different in SA countries.
Feb 14th, '12, 02:32
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by margauxmorgan » Feb 14th, '12, 02:32
aeflo wrote:i also ate used leaves sometimes.
i always add soysauce when i do it, sometimes i also add some nori flakes, sesame and bonito flakes, really tasty-stuff also as topping for rice!

hmmm...sounds yummy

Feb 17th, '12, 18:48
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by Shimakaze » Feb 17th, '12, 18:48
Another idea: What about using tea leaves as compost? I'm going to try it with an indoor plant and hope that it doesn't attract bugs.