Gyokuro

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Green Tea Leaves
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by sherapop
Average preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 1 min, 45 sec 4 g 17 oz / 502 ml

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  • “I decided to compare the Tazo Collection Gyokuro to the Superior Sencha this afternoon because I was struck by the similarity in price between the two. Usually gyokuro is much more expensive than...” Read full tasting note
    88

From Tazo

Grown alongside decorative flowers, strawberries and mandarin oranges, this Gyokruo (translated “jade dew”) is a super-premium first-flush Japanese green tea. Gyokuro gains additional depth and complexity from the practice of shading the bushes. Deprived of the sun, the plant pours higher levels of essential nutrients into fewer leaves, giving the finished tea a deep jade-green color and a sweeter, less astringent flavor. This particular Gyokuro was made in the Fukamushi (or deep-steamed) style, resulting in more broken leaves and a cloudier cup—as well as a fuller body and more intense flavor.

About Tazo View company

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1 Tasting Note

88
1737 tasting notes

I decided to compare the Tazo Collection Gyokuro to the Superior Sencha this afternoon because I was struck by the similarity in price between the two. Usually gyokuro is much more expensive than sencha, even ichiban sencha, so it seemed like a good opportunity to test out my hypothesis that haute sencha eventually converges with gyokuro.

What I found, to my surprise, was that I actually preferred the ichiban sencha to this gyokuro. This is good, no doubt, but for some reason the sencha tasted more delectable to me today. It was slightly salty, but it is also possible that I was craving more of a sencha taste, and this gyokuro has a subtler, less vegetal flavor as well. It also seemed slightly thinner and less full than the sencha.

The liquor was very pale greenish yellow, and there was less particulate matter and cloudiness in this brew than in my side-by-side preparation of Superior Sencha. I was fairly painstaking about keeping the parameters the same, but it is possible that I steeped the gyokuro for slightly less time than the sencha. Anyway, I’m still happy to have a large bag of this gyokuro from the Tazo Collection sale still in progress chez Starbucks.

From a business standpoint, it was probably a mistake for Starbucks to make tea-lovers go to the Starbucks website to buy their loose-leaf tea. They should have kept the tea-selling business of Tazo at the Tazo website. Let’s face it: the people who frequent the Starbucks website are much more likely to be hardcore coffee drinkers, and people who are focusing on tea will go first to a tea-only site such as Teavana before attempting a lengthy and often fruitless search through the difficult-to-navigate Starbucks.com website in search of good tea. Some of it is still there to be found, but it will not be there for much longer, it seems.

(Blazing New Rating #46)

Preparation
155 °F / 68 °C 1 min, 45 sec 4 g 17 OZ / 502 ML
SimpliciTEA

I appreciate how you compared gyokuro with ichiban sencha, I also have wondered which one I would like more, as both have interesting qualities and both seem to be expensive (in the $8/oz – $12/oz range).

sherapop

They can seem very similar to me. In this case I also preferred the second infusion of the ichiban to the gyokuro.

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