A Warning: Den's Shincha Houryoku
The description claims: "... Shincha that is steamed longer than Shincha Kunpu. It gives a thick emerald liquid full of herbaceous flavor." The picture show big full leaves. The statement is misleading and the picture is not at all accurate. Kunpu is pretty lightly steamed, so one might expect a mid/light steamed tea. The size of the leaves in the picture reinforces this notion. The truth is that this tea is death steamed and the leaves are only a little larger than a Konacha. The liquor is not emerald, it is a dark opaque green.
I noticed the same thing with Shizuokatea, they sold fukamushi that was konacha, too small almost square leaves, fukamishi has small needles, preferably the leaf should break in two along the vein, I never ordered from them again, there are so many great japanese tea merchants.
Who sell lower quality tea will stand no chance against an experienced tea drinker.
Who sell lower quality tea will stand no chance against an experienced tea drinker.
Jun 14th, '09, 13:25
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So darker than white means grey, not black?edkrueger wrote:Deeper than asa means chu. The picture was inaccurate.
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Jun 14th, '09, 14:18
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I have Houryoku open currently and am looking at it as I post, the photo is fairly representative of what I have, lots of broken down needles and the pieces that broke away. Perhaps the wording should have clearly stated in the item description that it is Fuka, which I have always expected Houyoku to be, and Kunpu is Asa ... and up is up and down is down.Den's 2009 Shincha report wrote:On that day, I was searching for Fukamushi (deep steamed tea) that would produce a nice cloudy cup for blending Houryoku. I mainly visited the tables of the regions called Toyoda, Fuji and Hatsukura where Fukamushi teas are mainly produced.
But needles are clearly present. Looking at the photo of Fukamushi Maki, those leaves are much further broken down and not what my Houryoku looks like.
Fuka is going to have smaller pieces along with the broken needles as the steaming breaks down the leaves into finer particals. The areas between the veins will crumple while the veins tend to stay more intact.
I do not see any misrepresentation with what I have.
As last year's, this is more astringent and has a tad of a bitter bite to it compared to other shincha fuka I have tried. I think this is what Den is looking for instead of sweetness. His balance has a bite to it.
Last edited by Chip on Jun 14th, '09, 14:23, edited 2 times in total.
Trying to get lightly-steamed sencha from Shizuoka is like trying to drink whiskey from a bottle of wine. 
I do have to agree with Oni, though. Good fukamushi is not completely dust. There should still be some needle-form there. They might be broken needles but it should not be a bag of tea dust.
I do have to agree with Oni, though. Good fukamushi is not completely dust. There should still be some needle-form there. They might be broken needles but it should not be a bag of tea dust.
Last edited by Ed on Jun 14th, '09, 14:25, edited 1 time in total.
Jun 14th, '09, 14:22
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Jun 14th, '09, 14:30
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I guess I have to agree, a lot of great fuka comes from Shzuoka including Fukamushi Supreme from O-Cha and Fuka Maki from Den's.
Den's has 3 good asa, Kunpu and Zuiko and the next level down.
Also, and a bit off topic, Shizuoka is purported to have very good high grown organics ...
Den's has 3 good asa, Kunpu and Zuiko and the next level down.
Also, and a bit off topic, Shizuoka is purported to have very good high grown organics ...
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!