Sencha of the Wind

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Green Tea
Flavors
Broccoli, Broth, Lettuce, Marine, Ocean Air, Salty, Seaweed, Umami, Vegetal, Apricot, Astringent, Bitter, Creamy, Grass, Green Beans, Spinach, Sweet, Thick, Freshly Cut Grass, Peas, Smooth, Bok Choy, Cashew, Nuts, Soybean, Kabocha, Round, Savory, Squash, Vegetable Broth, Viscous, Mineral, Nutty, Rich, Zucchini, Fruity, Kale, Passion Fruit, Plum, Silky, Spring Water, Tea, Bitter Melon, Cream, Dandelion, Lemon, Floral, Green, Petrichor, Sweet, Warm Grass
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 1 min, 30 sec 6 g 10 oz / 288 ml

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25 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Another fantastic Sencha from Obubu. So smooth, sweet and with a lovely fruit note that hits the palate toward the end of the sip. Beautiful.” Read full tasting note
    88
  • “The friendly people at Obubu Tea sent me this free of charge! Included was a discount code and a lovely hand-written note; I was touched and impressed. My throat has been very sore as of late, so I...” Read full tasting note
    94
  • “A nice mix of slightly sweet and umami, with just a (nice) hint of bitter (it was present, but I barely noticed it). It was one of those cups of tea that I enjoyed as it was drunk, but it didn’t...” Read full tasting note
    82
  • “Very light tea. Rebrews 3 times. It has a nice sweetness. Not as complex as I usually like, just straightforward tasting. I used up my whole sample, I might have liked the boiling brewing, since I...” Read full tasting note
    74

From Kyoto Obubu Tea Farms

Wind brings a moss-like green into the cup, offering a notable aroma of willow bark and wet stone. With a beautifully cloudy liquor, it has a vegetal and gentle umami taste. The mouthfeel is thick and smooth. This tea is shaded from the sun for two weeks before harvest and is made from a traditional Zairai cultivar. A wonderful and mellow tea.

Taste: Umami
Body: Rich
Texture: Rounded
Length: Long
Harvest: May
Tea Cultivar: Zairai
Origin: Wazuka
Cultivation: Shaded
Processing: Lightly Steamed, Rolled, Dried

About Kyoto Obubu Tea Farms View company

It started with a single cup of tea. As the legend goes, our president Akihiro Kita, or Akky-san, visited Wazuka, Kyoto one fateful day. At the time, Akky-san was still a college student in search for life's calling. After trying the region's famous Ujicha (literally meaning tea from the Uji district), he immediately fell in love and his passion for green tea was born. He had finally found what he was looking for in that one simple cup of tea. After fifteen years of learning to master the art of growing tea from tea farmers in Wazuka, Kyoto Obubu Tea Farms was born and as they say, the rest is history. So what's an Obubu? Obubu is the Kyoto slang for tea. Here in the international department we call ourselves Obubu Tea. That's "Tea Tea" for the bilinguals. We love tea so much, we just had to have it twice in our name. Now Obubu means more than just tea to us. It means, family, friends, passion and the place we call home. More than just tea. Though the roots of Obubu stem from tea, it has become more than that over the years. Obubu is an agricultural social venture, operating with three (1) bring quality Japanese tea to the world (2) contribute to the local and global community through tea (3) revitalize interest in tea and agriculture through education.

25 Tasting Notes

85
526 tasting notes

2016 Harvest

I Haven’t done a non-puerh review in awhile.
I had last year’s harvest, and I think I liked that one more.
The leaf are long thin delicate emerald shards. They carry a sweet and inviting scent of warm grass, seaweed, and a creamy undertone, I dusted off my kyusu and prepared for brewing. I made mine thick, so I can pull more sweetness out. The brew was slightly clouded, but I bright pale jade. The taste is sweet with a lemon finish. The aftertaste presents thick umami which wipes away the citrus tone. I can catch some bitterness and harsh veggies within the body. The final finish is with raw kale; a very strong vegetal tone that strikes with bitterness. I brewed another pot (different leaves) to see if I can spot any other tones, and the brew was mostly consistent with what was previously stated; however, a slight dandelion floral tone was spotted mid sip. I liked this tea, but I do remember 2015 being sweeter, thicker, and less bitter green tones.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BMhJ7tqgpBm/?taken-by=haveteawilltravel

Flavors: Bitter Melon, Cream, Dandelion, Grass, Kale, Lemon, Sweet, Umami, Vegetal

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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88
485 tasting notes

This may be my favorite sencha I’ve tasted so far. Interestingly, the leaves looked quite similar to the aracha I drank earlier today, rather than the more fragmentary look of most of the other sencha I’ve had. I again tried two different steeping methods – one with a longer first steep and then very quick steeps with hotter temperatures immediately, and then one with a shorter first steep and keeping temps down a bit. On this one, I preferred the shorter first steep method.

I don’t know if this is just an association in my brain between the name of this tea and the taste, or if whoever named it just did a good job, but I think a good descriptor for this tea’s flavor is “breezy.” Reading others’ reviews, I had to look up the word “petrichor,” but I think it descries the aroma of the warmed leaves very well. The flavor of this tea was very sweet and grassy. The tea had a thickness to it, but it didn’t feel heavy if that makes any sense. The leaves also just kept on giving. I got five steeps and feel like I could’ve gotten at least one more decent one if I wanted to. At the third steep, the grassiness died off a bit, replaced by a sweet green floral flavor. This is what kept it going for me, that flavor was awesome and didn’t feel like it was about to give out at any point. Good stuff, this.

Flavors: Creamy, Floral, Grass, Green, Petrichor, Sweet

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 1 min, 0 sec 5 g 4 OZ / 118 ML

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75
12 tasting notes

a bit too dusty/bitter tasting for me, but it smells wonderful — flowery, sweet, and after three steepings i ate the leaves with salmon furikake (wish i had rice as well) and that was wonderful. it’s a bit too light with the 160F temperature so i went up closer to 180 for shorter steepings, which is when i got a stronger astringency and vegetal taste.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 30 sec 4 tsp 6 OZ / 177 ML

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1113 tasting notes

My best friend picked this out of the 4 samples I got from YUNOMI for sencha… unfortunately this one tasted a bit funky. I know I brewed it correctly, and twice at that, however something was off with this tea and I am unable to place it because I describe it as a sour fruit which shouldn’t find its way in a sencha. I believe this is just not as vegetable as I was hoping for a sencha nor was it as light as I like mine.
Generally I like my sencha to be like fresh dew off of a tea plant… which is what gyokuro reminds me of :)

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68
894 tasting notes

The dry leaf is long, deep green and needle like. It has a delicate smell that is a hint petrichor, and cool, wet vegetation. Much less grassy and umami than is common in a sencha.

Steeped in 60C water, the liquor is a very pale, yellow green. At one minute there was a hint of sweetness and grass, but still that hot water taste. I steeped for an additional 30 seconds and then 30 seconds again, for two minutes total. At two minutes there’s a bit of a grassier and umami note that develops, but this is still very delicate and mild, with a smooth, creamy mouth feel.

I’m not sure if I underleafed this. Yunomi’s directions say 1tsp/5g per cup, but those are not equivalent measurements. I was planning on using 1tsp, but because of the length of the leaves, I was having a hard time scooping some out of the bag. So I pulled out my scale and shook some out. 2.5g was nearly 2tsp, which is what I ended up using.

I still have a fair bit of my sample left, so maybe next cup I’ll use more leaf or try brewing at a higher temp.

Flavors: Creamy, Grass, Petrichor, Sweet, Umami

Preparation
140 °F / 60 °C 2 min, 0 sec 2 g 8 OZ / 236 ML
Lion

Hi Anlina! I recently got to sample this tea via the Obubu Tea sampler and I have found that the leaf amount that works best for me is 3g per 100ml(3.3oz) for 1 minute. I had started off much lighter on leaf as well, using 2g per 100ml and I found that many of the teas tasted incredibly light and sweet on the first infusion. I liked that at first, but the repeated infusions were ghosts in the flavor department so I tried adding more leaf the next time. You get a lot more rich umami flavors up front and sometimes a bit of natural bitterness, then the second and third infusions are more light and sweet, comparable to the first infusion done with less leaf.

Also, I used 158F/70C for the temperature and went up 9F/5C degrees for each repeated infusion. The second infusion was 30 seconds and the third was 45.

Hope that helps at all. If anything, you can definitely use more leaf.

Lion

One odd thing I noticed with the Obubu teas (which are really my first major experience with sencha) is that using more leaf actually produced less bitterness in the ones I thought tasted bitter. Maybe the umami and other flavors cover it?

Cameron B.

I generally steep my sencha (Western-style) at 175 degrees for 45s or so. Maybe the low temperature you’re using is what is causing the flavor to be too light?

Anlina

Thank you for the tips! I tried Sencha of the Autumn Moon yesterday, which I was really excited for, based on tasting notes here. I steeped it in 60C water and it was super disappointing. I tried a second steep of the same leaves in 80C water and they’d already lost most of their flavour. :(

I usually do Western style unless I have a good long time to sit and savour many steeps, and I did 2.5g in 8oz of water. I will need to try different steeping parameters.

Lion

Sencha of the Autumn Moon is one of my favorites from Obubu, but again, it takes a lot of tea to get a good flavor with that one. I use 3g per 100ml for it too for 1 min.

You are probably safe to do 80C infusions from the get-go if that helps. I’ve read that this temperature is suitable for lower/standard grade sencha and only the high grade ones need to be in the 60-70C range. I’m not sure which of Obubu’s teas, if any, qualify as high grade (I would imagine maybe only their most expensive few), but I know Sencha of the Autumn Moon is definitely low grade casual drinking tea. It’s really cheap, autumn harvested, and chock full of twigs. It has a very mellow flavor, probably the mellowest of Obubu’s if that says anything about that one. It is pretty light no matter how much I’ve used of it.

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85
306 tasting notes

I couldn’t tell you what went wrong the first time I brewed this. I am brewing it just the same way but with more leaf to water ratio than the last time. Last time I tasted some relatively strong bitterness in the finish but that is not evident at all this time, so I’m leaving a new review with a higher rating.

With the dry leaves in the warm kyusu, after a minute I uncovered them to smell them. They have a really sweet fragrance that is green and light, similar to Obubu’s “Sencha of Brightness”.

The wet leaves have an almost floral aroma, reminding me a bit of a Taiwanese high mountain oolong. The flavor is light with a good deal of sweetness and a slightly astringent finish. Strangely, the sweetness is so abundant up front that it’s difficult for me to describe the flavors, so I’ll say it’s kind of a sweet grass taste. There’s a definite umami richness with a vegetal taste and there’s a subtle honey-like smell in the cup after emptying it. There is no bitterness in the sip, but just a bit of a lasting bitterness after you swallow the tea.

Like some other sencha I’ve tried from Obubu, the second infusion has a bit of a minty hint in the finish. The tiny bitter hints are still there, so is the strong sweetness up front.

If you like a sencha that starts really sweet and finishes with a bit of bitterness, this is the one to go to. It’s the only one in the Obubu sampler that seems to have that kind of quality. It’s dynamic within the sip rather than dynamic from one infusion to the next.

Flavors: Sweet, Sweet, Warm Grass, Umami

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 1 min, 0 sec 3 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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90
2816 tasting notes

Good (late) morning Steepster!

Ugh, I am tired today, didn’t sleep too well last night and then got up at 5 am with my Sweetie who had to catch a flight. I did manage to nap for a few hours when I got home but don’t feel so energetic yet.

This is one of the samples I got from Obubu tea. So far, this may be one of my favorites. The tea liquor is light and definitely on the sweeter side, with notes of spinach and peas. There is only a very slight palate cleansing finish in the astringency. There’s something about the flavor in this that’s really nice and delicate, but not too light on impact. Recommended :)

Now off I go to apply for some more jobs… zzzz… boring!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 30 sec 2 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML

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987 tasting notes

Note: I mistakenly applied this tasting note to a different tea. It’s now in it’s right place.

It’s quite windy out, so this tea seemed like the perfect thing to try once I got home.

This is also the first Yunomi.us tea I’ve tried brewing western style (1 tsp, 8 oz, 82C, 3 mins), and I have to say that while it’s weaker in taste, I much prefer it this way – no blast of umami astringency to contend with.

It’s still a bit sharper and “greener” in taste than a Chinese green, but I think I’m going to stick with brewing my other senchas, gyokuros, and houjichas using this method.

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