I tried Sencha Overture today

Made from leaves that have not been oxidized.


Feb 6th, '09, 20:22
Posts: 86
Joined: Dec 26th, '08, 19:18
Location: Central NY USA

I tried Sencha Overture today

by shardy53 » Feb 6th, '09, 20:22

I tried the Sencha Overture from my Adagio Green Tea Sampler. First I was surprized by the looks of the tea leaves, but I thought nothing of it. Then I noticed that the infused tea was oily and looked and smelled like stale chicken broth. This was quite a turn off but I finally held my breath and tried it anyway. Now I realize that everyones tastes are different but I can not understand how anyone can drink this tea. It was positively the most disgusting tea experience that I have ever had. I can't even begin to describe what this tea tasted like. I almost threw up.

The good part is that it was so bad, that it was funny afterwards. I then washed the taste out of my mouth with some Adagio Green Pekoe so all is well!

Steve

User avatar
Feb 6th, '09, 20:33
Posts: 727
Joined: Dec 22nd, '07, 21:02
Location: the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the galaxy

by Sydney » Feb 6th, '09, 20:33

How did you prepare it? The instructions on the tin are not to be trusted.

Although sencha overture isn't considered exactly an ultra-premium sencha, it's still not prepared in any way similar to most green teas you'll meet on the street.

User avatar
Feb 6th, '09, 21:35
Posts: 20891
Joined: Apr 22nd, '06, 20:52
Scrolling: scrolling
Location: Back in the TeaCave atop Mt. Fuji
Been thanked: 2 times

by Chip » Feb 6th, '09, 21:35

Overture is second flush sencha, should not be anything offensive about it. I have it here and did not notice the oily issue. I tend to brew it semi English style and also use it for blending a lot. How are you brewing it?

BTW, the Sencha Premier is shockingly good this year. I am on my second 5 ounce tin. This is a real step up in quality from previous years imho. If I was to change something, it would be the packaging. 5 ounces is a lot and makes for an expensive purchase. I am used to buying 2, 4 ounces ... or 50 or 100 grams. 5 ounces defies convention a bit.

If they would package 4 ounces in a heat sealed mylar bag, that would do the trick. This bag could be nicely placed into the existing tins. The tea would be preserved better, though I have not had an issue with freshness.
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!

User avatar
Feb 7th, '09, 00:17
Posts: 411
Joined: Jul 22nd, '05, 16:48

by bambooforest » Feb 7th, '09, 00:17

"stale chicken broth"

Major Lulz

User avatar
Feb 7th, '09, 03:26
Posts: 727
Joined: Dec 22nd, '07, 21:02
Location: the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the galaxy

by Sydney » Feb 7th, '09, 03:26

Some generic sencha brewing notes: http://wikicha.com/index.php/Sencha#Brewing

Feb 7th, '09, 07:54
Posts: 86
Joined: Dec 26th, '08, 19:18
Location: Central NY USA

by shardy53 » Feb 7th, '09, 07:54

I prepared it English style with 180 degree water for three mins. I see from the instructions on the other web site that I should infuse it for only 1 1/2 mins. I will try that. It might well be thatI just don't l;ike the taste of this kind of tea, but I don't understand the weird smell, or the oily look that I got from my first cup. It was indeed bitter, but I guess my three min. infusion would account for that. I guess I will try it again and see what happens.

Steve

User avatar
Feb 7th, '09, 07:59
Posts: 734
Joined: Jan 27th, '09, 09:52
Location: Alice's Tea Party

by woozl » Feb 7th, '09, 07:59

Try 160 or less for 90 sec. Make sure the pour is done by the 90 sec. time.
“Take some more tea,” the March Hare said to Alice, very earnestly.
“I’ve had nothing yet,” Alice replied in an offended tone: “so I ca’n’t take more.”
“You mean you ca’n’t take less,” said the Hatter: “it’s very easy to take more than nothing.”

User avatar
Feb 7th, '09, 09:01
Posts: 727
Joined: Dec 22nd, '07, 21:02
Location: the uncharted backwaters of the unfashionable end of the western spiral arm of the galaxy

by Sydney » Feb 7th, '09, 09:01

Yes, even the 180° F for 90 seconds makes a rather strong brew.

You could easily go as low as 160° for 45-60 seconds.

Sencha is fussy stuff compared with many other teas, but can yield some fantastic tea when you get it just the way you like it.

User avatar
Feb 7th, '09, 10:02
Posts: 20891
Joined: Apr 22nd, '06, 20:52
Scrolling: scrolling
Location: Back in the TeaCave atop Mt. Fuji
Been thanked: 2 times

by Chip » Feb 7th, '09, 10:02

Generally around 3-4 grams (I usually use 4-7 grams for first flush sencha) per about 7 ounces is what I use. A little warmer for this one, 170* and approaching 1.5 minutes, but I can play around with this one w/o much harm done. Sencha can be picky, this one is fairly easy as long as you do not overbrew with temp or time.

I tend to like this one "lighter" compared to first flush, which is common for 2nd flush sencha for me.
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!

Feb 8th, '09, 11:58
Posts: 508
Joined: Apr 1st, '08, 12:43
Location: united states IL.

by silvermage2000 » Feb 8th, '09, 11:58

Hm I may considering trying sencha sometime. I never thought tea would smell like chicken broth. But I will know that if I do buy some to not steep It very long. Congrats on the tea.
My name i's ashley I am a female and 21 years old.

Feb 8th, '09, 18:31
Posts: 4
Joined: Feb 3rd, '09, 16:13

by Xerxes » Feb 8th, '09, 18:31

I decided to try the sencha overture today, also. Boy, that first cup was just bad! I did as the my package said, 180 for 3 min. The smell and taste is of fish, I just couldn't believe it! I actually went on this forum to see what other are saying about this. I then re-steeped it, this time at 170 for 45 seconds and what a change - I actually really enjoy it! lol

I'm very new to world of loose tea, and know I have a lot to learn about these subtle changes in brewing.

Oh, and wiki CHA rocks! Thanks, el padre, for the link!

Feb 9th, '09, 07:46
Posts: 86
Joined: Dec 26th, '08, 19:18
Location: Central NY USA

by shardy53 » Feb 9th, '09, 07:46

I still can't get myself to try it again. Maybe next week after the memory fades a little. :shock:

Steve

User avatar
Feb 12th, '09, 10:48
Posts: 522
Joined: Apr 10th, '08, 16:39
Location: Sweden
Contact: Beidao

by Beidao » Feb 12th, '09, 10:48

With a new Sencha I always start at 30 secs and then go for longer if it's not strong enough. Three mins sounds lika a really bad idea but still I guess it's not the best tea.
The noise comes from the other side of the mirror

User avatar
Feb 12th, '09, 14:34
Posts: 117
Joined: Jan 5th, '09, 23:13
Location: NY

by danibob » Feb 12th, '09, 14:34

Just my 2 cents here.. I got a sample of this sencha to see if it would be good as a cheap, everyday sencha. I've had success brewing it at 165-170 degrees for 1.5 minutes in a pot like the ingenuiTEA (I have teavana's version). I only filled it halfway, which is about 8oz. I think I used a level teaspoon, so 4 grams maybe?

Everyone's advice here is very good. You should really try it again, you'll taste the difference!

+ Post Reply