Asa vs. Chu
I never could tell the difference between an asamuchi leaf and chumushi leaf very well. How do you guys tell the difference? Unfortunately they don't have as distinctive a leaf as a fukamushi.
Jan 12th, '09, 12:03
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Asamushi seems to be more consistantly needle like in appearance. Fukamushi is generally finer and smaller particles. Chumushi seems to have more of a mix of the two and the needles are not as long, more broken than asamushi.
This is a generalization and from limited experience, albeit.
There are gradations between even these levels of steaming. One vendor mentioned to me "shikkarimushi" which was a steaming process that was longer than Chu, and shorter than fuka, a term he said was derived by the grower to describe his one sencha, which from the looks of it is pretty appropriate.
This is a generalization and from limited experience, albeit.
There are gradations between even these levels of steaming. One vendor mentioned to me "shikkarimushi" which was a steaming process that was longer than Chu, and shorter than fuka, a term he said was derived by the grower to describe his one sencha, which from the looks of it is pretty appropriate.
Yeah, that's about as good of a scaling as I could tell as well, but other questions come to mind from that.
Like how would you differentiate between an asamushi where the grower was a bit quick with the shears and cut the leaf shorter than a chumushi that's just regularly processed.
The fluid motion of fukamushi is always a dead giveaway though.
Like how would you differentiate between an asamushi where the grower was a bit quick with the shears and cut the leaf shorter than a chumushi that's just regularly processed.
The fluid motion of fukamushi is always a dead giveaway though.
Jan 12th, '09, 14:12
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Also, how does the tin of leaf react to a spoon, does it offer much resistance? Fuka seems to invite the spoon, Chu less so, and asa seems to repel the spoon.Pentox wrote:Yeah, that's about as good of a scaling as I could tell as well, but other questions come to mind from that.
Like how would you differentiate between an asamushi where the grower was a bit quick with the shears and cut the leaf shorter than a chumushi that's just regularly processed.
The fluid motion of fukamushi is always a dead giveaway though.
How dense is the leaf? Fukamushi is much denser based of volume to weight ratio most of the time. 1 teaspoon of fuka can weigh 50% more than a teaspoon of asa. So it stands to reason that chu would fall somewhere between the 2, density wise.
Hm good point about the spoon resistance. I didn't think about that since I normally don't actually force a spoon in. I normally turn the can so it piles on the spoon.Chip wrote: Also, how does the tin of leaf react to a spoon, does it offer much resistance? Fuka seems to invite the spoon, Chu less so, and asa seems to repel the spoon.
How dense is the leaf? Fukamushi is much denser based of volume to weight ratio most of the time. 1 teaspoon of fuka can weigh 50% more than a teaspoon of asa. So it stands to reason that chu would fall somewhere between the 2, density wise.
Maybe i'll have to run some density tests to put some numbers behind the differences.
Jan 12th, '09, 17:34
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Exactly as Chip said. When you have fuka leaf in a bowl you can swirl it around and it behaves very much like a liquid. Asa/Chu leaf however, the long needles intertwine with one another so much that it behaves more like a dust bunny when you swirl it around in a bowl. Another comparison would be like a bowl of sand vs a pile of toothpicks.Salsero wrote:Huh? The dry leaf?Pentox wrote: The fluid motion of fukamushi is always a dead giveaway though.
Jan 12th, '09, 17:54
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"Pick Up Sticks"Pentox wrote:Exactly as Chip said. When you have fuka leaf in a bowl you can swirl it around and it behaves very much like a liquid. Asa/Chu leaf however, the long needles intertwine with one another so much that it behaves more like a dust bunny when you swirl it around in a bowl. Another comparison would be like a bowl of sand vs a pile of toothpicks.Salsero wrote:Huh? The dry leaf?Pentox wrote: The fluid motion of fukamushi is always a dead giveaway though.

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