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Pat's exact ratio for this lot. Cold water for sweet, hot for savory.
Umami-forward and naturally sweet, with almost no astringency. If you've found green tea bitter before, this is the one that changes your mind.
Yame produces less than 3% of Japan's tea, but punches far above its weight in quality. This lot comes from a single family-run garden Pat has visited personally.
I've spent the last decade chasing the green tea I drank at a tea ceremony in Kyoto in 2014. This is the closest I've come. The umami is wild — almost like a perfect dashi. Will buy again.
Bought the sample first. Couldn't believe how smooth it was. Now I'm on my fourth 100g bag and don't miss coffee at all. Pat's brewing video is what made it click.
$33 felt steep until I did the math — 25 cups, ~$1.30 each, and these are cups you'll savor. The packaging keeps it fresh for ages.
First brew was good, second brew (60 seconds, slightly hotter water) was outstanding. Took me a couple tries to dial in. Don't sleep on the third infusion.
Sencha is grown in full sun. Kabusecha is shaded for ~10 days before harvest, which slows photosynthesis, traps amino acids in the leaf, and produces more umami and natural sweetness. Less bitter than sencha, less intense than gyokuro.
Yes — and it's incredible cold. 1 tablespoon per 16oz of cold water, refrigerate 4+ hours. Smooth, sweet, no bitterness.
We seal nitrogen-flushed within 30 days of harvest. Keep sealed and refrigerated: 12 months. Once opened: 6 weeks at peak. After that it's still drinkable, just less vibrant.
No. Any small ceramic or glass teapot works. A kyusu (side-handle Japanese pot) is ideal because the mesh strainer catches the deep-steamed fine leaves.
60-day Genki guarantee. Keep the tea, get a refund or a different variety. No questions.



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