Okumidori Kabusecha (Shaded Sencha) 2024
The Garden
The Henta family’s organic garden sits in Kagoshima prefecture on Kyushu island, in south Japan. This is an active volcanic region, making the soils volcanic and rich. Henta-san himself prioritises the quality of the soil and has a craft approach to tea, ideal for making individual high quality teas on their organic garden. I visited them in May 2024. Henta san is on the right in the photograph.
This Batch
This tea is a Kabusecha which ranks above sencha in Japanese teas. Kabusecha is made by shading the tea plants (see photo). Shading increases the umami (savoury taste) in the leaves, giving Kabusecha its characteristic umami, which is an important flavour in Japanese cuisine.
This tea is made from one varietal of tea plant called Okumidori which tends to have a leafy, legume flavour profile. For this batch the plants were covered from the sun for 6 days before picking. The leaves were then picked and steamed in the ‘asamushi’ style (short steaming) for 30 seconds. Asamushi preserves the shape and natural clarity of flavours of the tea leaf. The heat from the steam keeps the leaves green, which is how green tea is kept green.
Tasting Notes
This is the tea to pair with your savoury brunch dishes. It’s buttery smooth with notes of leafy greens, edamame, legumes, and lots of umami. The leaves are also an excellent grade; dark green, long needles. The 2024 harvest is a particularly good one for Japan, on par with the excellent 2020 vintage.
Infuse at 6g (1 tablespoon) per 150ml (teacup size) at 40°C for 3 minutes. This is the authentic Japanese way which brings out the most umami. If you prefer, you can infuse at 60°C for 1 minute.