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Arhetyp — Specialty Coffee
Gyokuro — umbrit UjiLot limitat

Uji, Japan

Gyokuro — umbrit Uji

  • Shade-grown three weeks under traditional reed screens
  • Uji terroir: mineral-rich soil, fourth-generation growers
  • Brew at 50°C for concentrated umami complexity
  • Marine sweetness with kelp and dashi character
  • 50 grams yields 30+ infusions properly brewed
  • Umami·
  • Marin·
  • Alge dulci

Crescut la umbră timp de trei săptămâni înainte de recoltare — rezultatul este un ceai verde profund, savuros, aproape ca un bulion.

Gramaj
50 g loose leaf
Preț114 RON
1

În stoc · Pleacă în 48h de la prăjire

02 — The Story

Gyokuro represents the apex of Japanese tea cultivation—a methodical departure from sunlight that transforms leaf chemistry into liquid umami. Three weeks before harvest, Uji growers cover their tea plants with reed screens and straw mats, reducing photosynthesis and forcing the plant to produce chlorophyll and L-theanine at the expense of astringent catechins. The result tastes less like tea and more like oceanic broth: sweet kelp, mineral salinity, a finish that coats your palate like dashi.

Uji's terroir—mineral-rich soil along the Uji River south of Kyoto—has produced Japan's most prized teas since the 13th century. This specific lot comes from fourth-generation growers who maintain the *hon'zu* shading tradition: handwoven reed structures that filter roughly 90% of sunlight. The labour is absurd. The flavour is worth it. Leaves emerge a vivid, almost synthetic green, tender enough that water temperature becomes critical—too hot and you'll extract bitterness that shouldn't exist.

Brew this at 50°C with a 1:20 ratio for 90 seconds. Yes, 50°C—barely warm to the touch. Higher temperatures break the delicate amino acid structure that creates gyokuro's signature sweetness. Use 5 grams in a small kyusu or gaiwan with 100 grams of water. The first infusion yields concentrated umami; the second (same temperature, 30 seconds) turns sweeter and more floral; the third reveals the tea's green, vegetal backbone. You can push a fourth infusion at 60°C if you want to see where the tannins hide.

This is not morning tea. Gyokuro contains more caffeine than sencha but delivers it alongside L-theanine in ratios that produce alert calm rather than jittery focus. Drink it mid-afternoon when you need to reset your palate or your attention span. It pairs improbably well with oysters, aged Parmigiano-Reggiano, anything with natural glutamates. Some customers brew it cold overnight—6 grams per 500ml in the refrigerator for 8 hours—which produces a sweeter, even more marine infusion that drinks like seawater filtered through silk.

This is for the customer who already owns a thermometer. Who understands that the best things require specific conditions and won't apologize for that. Who wants tea that tastes like the ocean without ever being near it.

03 — Brewing

How we brew it.

Method

Traditional hot (kyusu or gaiwan)

Dose
5 g
Water
100 g
Time
90s first / 30s second / 45s third

50°C water—use thermometer or let boiled water rest 15 minutes. Three infusions minimum at same temperature. Each pull reveals different character: umami, sweetness, vegetal backbone.

Method

Cold brew overnight

Dose
6 g
Water
500 g
Time
8 hours refrigerated

Room-temperature water in sealed container, refrigerate 8 hours. Produces sweeter, more marine infusion with less astringency. Strain and drink within 24 hours. Tastes like seawater filtered through silk.

04 — FAQ

Questions, answered.

Why brew at 50°C instead of boiling?+

Gyokuro's shaded cultivation produces high levels of sweet amino acids (L-theanine, glutamate) and low levels of bitter catechins. Boiling water extracts bitterness that shouldn't be there. 50°C pulls umami, sweetness, and marine salinity without astringency. Use a thermometer or let boiled water rest 15 minutes.

How many infusions can I get from 5 grams?+

Three quality infusions minimum, four if you raise temperature slightly on the last. First infusion (50°C, 90 seconds) is concentrated umami. Second (50°C, 30 seconds) turns sweeter. Third (50°C, 45 seconds) shows vegetal backbone. Fourth (60°C, 60 seconds) extracts remaining tannins.

Can I brew this in a standard teapot?+

You can, but a small vessel (150-200ml kyusu or gaiwan) works better. Gyokuro uses a high leaf-to-water ratio and low temperatures—conditions easier to control in smaller volumes. Standard teapots make temperature management difficult and dilute the concentrated umami that defines proper gyokuro.

What does 'hon'zu shading' mean?+

*Hon'zu* refers to traditional reed-and-straw shade structures handwoven to filter approximately 90% of sunlight for three weeks before harvest. This labour-intensive method (versus modern synthetic nets) creates specific light diffusion patterns that influence leaf chemistry differently. It's the difference between filtered complexity and simple darkness.

How should I store this after opening?+

Gyokuro oxidizes faster than roasted coffee. Store in an airtight container away from light, heat, and moisture. Refrigeration extends freshness but requires airtight seal—tea absorbs odours aggressively. Consume within 8 weeks of opening for optimal umami character. The marine sweetness fades first.

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