This is my first Gyokuro time! Aaaah!

This review will be broken into three parts because I prepared this as Gyokuro first then read that Kabusecha is meant to be prepared like Sencha, rather, so I tried both ways. Last, I took some tips from online and made a salad from the used leaves.

PART I: KABUSECHA PREPARED AS GYOKURO
10g tea per 100ml water at 122F/50C for 2 min

The smell of the dry leaves in the warm kyusu is incredibly sweet and umami. This smells very rich and delicate. After brewing, the wet leaves smell similarly but with more vegetal notes. The brew is very thick, syrupy looking and green-yellow.

Let’s take a sip… and… what… whoa… what the… o___o < – (my face right now)

That is a pure shot of umami in the mouth. Wow. It tastes like a very rich broth. The way the flavor just stays there in your mouth for so long is really impressive. The flavor is incredibly intense and has a pretty nice little kick of bitterness to it.

At first I was thinking it was slightly disappointing that it makes so little tea for such an expensive tea, but as rich as this is… wow. I don’t think I’d want to drink much more than this tiny little tasting cup full. This is intense!

My second infusion was much shorter and produced a translucent bright yellow-green liquor that looks like Mountain Dew. It smells a little more sweet and grassy, and tasting it now it is more of a blend of umami and salt and grassy, whereas the first infusion was just straight up umami in the face.

I did a third infusion and it started to taste more like a regular sencha but with a bitter finish. On the fourth I decided to up the temperature to around 176F to try a hotter brew and bring out some of the astringency. The tea tastes quite bitter and has a seaweed flavor. There is still some umami richness though and a lingering sweetness after sipping it. At this point I think it is undrinkable, but I have done this step to prepare the leaves to make a tea salad. It is necessary to get out some of the bitterness so they will be tastier to eat.

PART II: KABUSECHA PREPARED AS SENCHA
2.5g tea per 100ml water at 158F/70C for 1 min

Flavor-wise, the result is similar to the first method of preparation but much more diluted and more like what we think of as tea, liquidy. It is really similar to Sencha but with a much more umami-rich flavor. It still has the strong trailing bitterness that comes in the later part of the sip, though the umami lingers in your mouth much longer and outlasts the bitterness.

I can really see this tea going either way as far as method of preparation. I say do what you think would suit you best. Do you want it in a small amount and really strong or more diluted with more to drink?

PART III: TEA SALAD

I just took the leaves and dressed them with a Japanese style dressing (3 parts ponzu, 1 part soy sauce, 1 part sesame oil, and some toasted sesame seeds). This is really tasty! I think I like the salad more than I liked the tea (uh-ohhhh, hahaha). I’m kind of scared of the insane caffeine rush I’m going to get from this though, but I wanted to try eating it. I’ve been known to get caffeine-induced panic attacks from matcha particularly. Consuming the whole leaf, especially with these fresh green teas, seems to pack an insane caffeine punch.

It was an interesting experience either way. I’ll have some higher quality Gyokuro reviews up soon, as I have the Kurihara sampler pack, and this was just the gateway in. Kabusecha is the ferryman between Sencha and Gyokuro, after all.

All-in-all, I’ll be honest. This was really hard for me to drink. Something about it was kicking in my gag reflex a little, maybe just the pure foreignness of this type of flavor. It is just really crazy rich and you might get a similar experience from dissolving a teaspoon of MSG into a shotglass of water and sipping it (though I don’t recommend it).

I can’t rate this tea terribly high because it was not one I’d like to drink again, but if you are an umami nut and like some bitterness, this might be one for you. My score is a reflection of how much I liked it, not on the quality of the tea.

Flavors: Broth, Grass, Seaweed, Umami, Vegetal

TeaBrat

hmm, I don’t think gyokuro should be bitter!

Steven Cook

See… On all fronts, I think I agree with you, though, the gyokuro I have had is from teavana.
It’s to much for me… Too rich.

Lion

Teabrat, it is probably because it is kabusecha, which is only grown under partial shade. Gyokuro is much more heavily shaded. I think the title of this tea is a little bit inaccurate, since from what I can tell in my reading kabusecha is not a type of gyokuro, but since it is shaded during part of the growing it is often considered to be something in between sencha and gyokuro. If I could name this tea myself I would not make any mention of gyokuro because by the strict definition of gyokuro this tea is not gyokuro. I think they include it in their gyokuro sampler as a means of showing the cheaper and more accessible entry point into the more umami rich Japanese green teas. The bitterness wasn’t overwhelming, but it was in the same sense that some sencha have a bit of natural bittnerness even when brewed at the proper (low) temperature. I will try the actual gyokuro very soon. There are 3 in this sampler. Can’t wait to try and review them!

TeaNecromancer

Oh wow, I had such a different experience with this tea than you, so fascinating! I really loved it :)

Ubacat

I tried a Gyokuro from Yunomis (my first too) and wow, was it ever deep rich. It wasn’t bitter though.

TeaBrat

Lion, ok that makes sense. I definitely remember gyokuro being on the sweet side, at least the ones I tried.

Lion

I’m curious how you all prepared it though. Did you prepare it the traditional way, which produces an incredibly concentrated, syrupy, tea? I’ve prepared three of the teas from this gyokuro sampler now, and all of them had a natural bitterness when prepared this way, some less than others. However, the very strong savory/umami flavor strongly overpowers the bitterness, so the bitter taste only comes in the end of the sip.

Here is a link of the “proper” way to brew Gyokuro:
http://everyonestea.blogspot.com/2010/10/how-to-brew-gyokuro.html

Most western drinkers are prone to brew it like a sencha, which produces a completely different result, a lighter green tea that is very liquidy and umami-rich, not nearly as bitter.

Gyokuro is typically said to have mild bitterness compared to sencha, but I think nearly any tea when brewed to this high concentration is going to have some bitterness.

Lion

You’ll notice in the traditional method of brewing gyokuro, they use so much leaf to water that you only get about 60% of the water back. It is incredibly syrupy and potent. It is intended to be sipped in such small amounts that there is barely any liquid to go down your throat in the sip. The flavor fills your mouth very strongly. Note how little tea is in the cups at the end in the link I posted above. That’s all the tea it makes with that huge amount of leaf.

TeaBrat

I brew mine more like a sencha I am sure. I should try it the potent way someday!

Lion

It is out of this world! I think I like it more prepared like sencha because the concentrated way is so insane. But I also love just how unique and different the taste is when you do it the traditional way. My western palate was not prepared for that much umami flavor!

Lion

Here’s one more resource about it if anyone is curious.
http://everyonestea.blogspot.com/2014/02/gyokuro-is-not-something-to-drink.html

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TeaBrat

hmm, I don’t think gyokuro should be bitter!

Steven Cook

See… On all fronts, I think I agree with you, though, the gyokuro I have had is from teavana.
It’s to much for me… Too rich.

Lion

Teabrat, it is probably because it is kabusecha, which is only grown under partial shade. Gyokuro is much more heavily shaded. I think the title of this tea is a little bit inaccurate, since from what I can tell in my reading kabusecha is not a type of gyokuro, but since it is shaded during part of the growing it is often considered to be something in between sencha and gyokuro. If I could name this tea myself I would not make any mention of gyokuro because by the strict definition of gyokuro this tea is not gyokuro. I think they include it in their gyokuro sampler as a means of showing the cheaper and more accessible entry point into the more umami rich Japanese green teas. The bitterness wasn’t overwhelming, but it was in the same sense that some sencha have a bit of natural bittnerness even when brewed at the proper (low) temperature. I will try the actual gyokuro very soon. There are 3 in this sampler. Can’t wait to try and review them!

TeaNecromancer

Oh wow, I had such a different experience with this tea than you, so fascinating! I really loved it :)

Ubacat

I tried a Gyokuro from Yunomis (my first too) and wow, was it ever deep rich. It wasn’t bitter though.

TeaBrat

Lion, ok that makes sense. I definitely remember gyokuro being on the sweet side, at least the ones I tried.

Lion

I’m curious how you all prepared it though. Did you prepare it the traditional way, which produces an incredibly concentrated, syrupy, tea? I’ve prepared three of the teas from this gyokuro sampler now, and all of them had a natural bitterness when prepared this way, some less than others. However, the very strong savory/umami flavor strongly overpowers the bitterness, so the bitter taste only comes in the end of the sip.

Here is a link of the “proper” way to brew Gyokuro:
http://everyonestea.blogspot.com/2010/10/how-to-brew-gyokuro.html

Most western drinkers are prone to brew it like a sencha, which produces a completely different result, a lighter green tea that is very liquidy and umami-rich, not nearly as bitter.

Gyokuro is typically said to have mild bitterness compared to sencha, but I think nearly any tea when brewed to this high concentration is going to have some bitterness.

Lion

You’ll notice in the traditional method of brewing gyokuro, they use so much leaf to water that you only get about 60% of the water back. It is incredibly syrupy and potent. It is intended to be sipped in such small amounts that there is barely any liquid to go down your throat in the sip. The flavor fills your mouth very strongly. Note how little tea is in the cups at the end in the link I posted above. That’s all the tea it makes with that huge amount of leaf.

TeaBrat

I brew mine more like a sencha I am sure. I should try it the potent way someday!

Lion

It is out of this world! I think I like it more prepared like sencha because the concentrated way is so insane. But I also love just how unique and different the taste is when you do it the traditional way. My western palate was not prepared for that much umami flavor!

Lion

Here’s one more resource about it if anyone is curious.
http://everyonestea.blogspot.com/2014/02/gyokuro-is-not-something-to-drink.html

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Hi there, fellow tea lovers.

My name’s Lion and I’m a Gongfu Cha practitioner, so I usually brew with a gaiwan for reviews unless there’s a more suitable brewing method, like using Japanese teawares for Japanese teas. I tend to stick to straight loose teas and scented teas in general, seldom dabbling in herbal and flavored teas. My favorite tea is Kenyan Silver Needle.

Aside from tea, I’m a generally creative person. I love to cook, write fiction, draw, decorate, garden, and do just about anything creative I can get my paws on.

Animals are really important to me. I’m a lion at heart, and I strive to better understand, respect, and appreciate other animals as best as I can. I advocate for better stewardship of wildlife and captive animals. We’ve still got a lot to learn.

For a long time I rated every tea I tried, but these days I don’t rate them unless they’re exceptional and deserving of a high rating. Here’s my rating breakdown for my reviews with ratings:

0 = Unpalatable, harsh
25 = Unenjoyable
50 = I’m indifferent
75 = Enjoyable, average
90+ = The best, would buy more
100 = Incredible, a favorite

Location

Kansas City, USA

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