Tencha v. Gyokuro

Made from leaves that have not been oxidized.


Aug 30th, '08, 16:01
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Tencha v. Gyokuro

by edkrueger » Aug 30th, '08, 16:01

Whats the difference?

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Aug 30th, '08, 16:45
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by Chip » Aug 30th, '08, 16:45

Tencha is manufactured differently than gyokuro. Gyokuro goes through a rolling process creating more of a needle form and is often aged.

Tencha consists of flakes, leaf that has not been rolled which makes sense since if it is turned into matcha, the flakes would grind better. All stems and veins are painstakingly removed.

I am sure others can add to the differences.

I do not know what difference occurs in the varietals or the growing of the plants.
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!

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by olivierco » Aug 30th, '08, 16:45

From ocha glossary

Tencha
Green tea grown under the same conditions as gyokuro, that being under 90%+ shade for approx. three weeks before harvest. Unlike gyokuro, tencha is not rolled after steaming but is de-veined for later use as matcha. Represents 1.1% of the green tea produced in Japan


Quite rare anyway and also expensive, you can find some at Harney and son here

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