Japanese Green TeaHome >> Experiences
I know a lot about Chinese tea but very little about Japanese tea. How many times did the Japanese borrow an idea from their continental neighors and turn it into perfection? That's what I wanted to find out - could high class Japanese tea taste even better than top Chinese Oolongs or Pu-Erh? Paul and Junko, two of my precious little Japanese friends, recommended I visit Cha Cha Noma in Tokyo for an introduction in high quality Japanese gourmet tea. We were welcomed by one of the youthful tea waiters who showed us a long list of Japanese green teas, each adorned with a multidimensional graph to gauge its taste on various dimensions. After we ordered, he came back with an impressive cart with all the gear he uses to perform his craft in front of clients.... I ordered iced green tea, expecting to receive some tall glass like in Japanese fast food joints. Instead the tea waiter starts his dance, warming the cup, then pouring a handful of delicate, brittle tea leaves in a zhong. We are way beyond Lipton here, with the minuscule tea leaves steeped in a minuscule amount of hot water before being covered in ice cubes. The result is intensely bitter with a highly complex leafy taste. A really interesting taste although it would have benefitted from a little sugar in my eyes. But pull out a bag of sugar in a fine tea shop in Japan or China and you'll end up in the wontons just like if you had put ice cubes in a glass of Bordeaux in France. Proper tea is done in petite cups and pots. Washing them in hot water is essential in controlling the temperature, but these guys take it to a whole new level - what's Japanese for tea juggling? I discover that the second green tea I ordered is served by the teaspoon - literally. The tea waiter places the tea leaves in a small saucer, then wets the leaves with a trickle of water and serves you about 2 teaspoons worth of tea in a small glass. Amazing tea, for sure, but not the one to order if thirst-quenching is a priority. But I'll admit that among all the things I've done for you guys, my beloved readers, this was a refreshing break from the more caloricious episodes. For the more adventurous, the shop provides a Japanese pickled tea that will bring you back from the dead 10 times out of 10. But as soon as you swallow, you'll wish you stayed dead. Similar to Burmese Lahpet, with a touch of that elusive smell of sauerkraut you'd have forgotten all summer long in the rear of your car. In America, before serving me such a tea, they would have made me sign a consent release form the length of Dante's Divine Comedy. But this is Japan, a country of simple elegance and impeccable manners. The gentleman retrieves a black teapot and proceeds to warm it up with hot water, ... ... then steeps the leaves for a few seconds to cleanse them, then steeps them again, by which time yours truly is increasingly looking at his watch and moving, inches by inches, towards the exit. But they catch me before I escape and finally, under the pleasantly distant gaze of the shopping attendants, I took a sip. Vinegary, but not overly unpleasant. Might work fine with a salama da sugo perhaps. I very much recommend a visit to this shop, located in a nondesript building close to a rather posh shopping area in Tokyo. The day I visited, the shop seemed to do most of its business with luscious giant green tea ice creams served to hordes of lively Japanese high school girls who did not seem to have come to ponder the intricacies of Maccha tea. Cha Cha Noma
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86 Comments
- #1
- Comment by Diane
Fab pictures as always! I'm impressed by that water pouring, it's been captured really well! I'm not a huge fan of green tea but you've made me want to explore some more! I've got a friend who used to rave about it - and having seen the skill of the pourer I can see why!- #3
- Comment by Rosa
Very interesting! Thanks for the great post!Cheers,
Rosa
- #5
- Comment by Rowena
[...pull out a bag of sugar in a fine tea shop in Japan or China and you'll end up in the wontons]This is why I had no other choice but to vote for you. Fabulous post -- you never fail to amaze (and I'm new here!). Btw, you are right. Graukase is definitely note for the faint of heart (or nose) but we couldn't resist bringing some home. Keep up the great posts!
- #7
- Comment by Jason Sandeman
Exceptional post as always. Thing about Japanese people, is they focus on one aspect, then perfect it. I feel you are truly lucky to have experienced the tea dance. I will make a point to go there when I go to Japan next.- #9
- Comment by Donna Barr
A soothing breakfast is plain hot rice with hot green tea poured over it (in amounts sauce to soup, your choice). It sounds like an option for the "sauerkraut tea."- #11
- Comment by Joyce
Beautiful as always! I forwarded the link to several people, tea lovers and photo lovers, pointing out the individual drops of water, amazing. My vote for you was never in question.Now, we just need to find a publisher for you. This site should be in hard copy. I never tire of looking at them. (I click the links too, hoping that will help keep you doing what you are doing)
- #13
- Comment by Eurie Yeo
Very interesting and informative. I love green tea and trying different kinds!- #15
- Comment by ZioBob
As much as I like your videos, I really prefer your still photography. Maybe we could enjoy both.You have a wonderful site and I look forward to it arriving in my inbox.
- #17
- Comment by Traci
Nice Pictures (as always)!- #19
- Comment by Danielle
Thank you for such a fun article! This may be nit-picking, but "Maccha" or "Matcha" was not actually what you had here. This term is used specifically for the powdered green tea that is used in Tea Ceremony (while this was full of ceremony, this was not actually Tea Ceremony!) and is also used to make other products, like noodles, green. It is also very healthy as you are actually consuming the entire leaf, rather than an infusion. Reportedly, one cup has the same amount of Vitamin C as a bushel of oranges! The flavor is definitely an acquired taste, having most new drinkers compare it to fresh grass clippings. Tea Ceremony and matcha is delicious and beautiful, and quintessentially Japanese. There are hundreds of variations, and even the most basic way will take at least 20 minutes or so to complete. If you would liek to know more, I could go on! I studied Tea Ceremony for 4 years whilst growing up in Japan. What you had here would more appropriately be called "Nihon-cha" - literally "Japanese Tea".- #21
- Comment by foolishpoolish
Fantastic pictures. I've never witnessed a japanese tea ceremony but have had (and tried to learn to make) the chinese equivalent many time (with a whole set of it's own procedures dependent on type of tea etc. etc.). It's been years since I got my tea set out - this has inspired me. Thanks for posting this!FP
- #23
- Comment by thuan
superb photos, again, but you already know this. thanks for sharing all these culinary gems- #25
- Comment by Geoff Ball
Excellent images and adventure. Thank you for sharing and inspiring us :)- #27
- Comment by barbara
Thank you for the laughs. The photos are terrific, not only the drops of water but also the water pouring from the black teapot into the glass jug, with all its reflections.Well, just off to make a pot of green Christmas tea from Tekoe. Not quite as exotic but it tastes good.
- #29
- Comment by Vijayan N.Pandala
Japanise Green Tea preperation is wonderful.Hello FX-
Excellent article and btw- your blog is FAR and away the best compared to those in the running for the best food blog by whoever is making the decisions. Which means you probably won't win!
Next time in Japan visit a tea house for the tea ceremony and if they let you take pictures.....Merci once again for a delightful post.
- #33
- Comment by Sterling | TeaThis
How fun. The tea preparation looks like a performance. Love the high-def photos. This experience was quite different from the traditional Japanese tea ceremony I was expecting.- #35
- Comment by Ouroboros
Not that I don't enjoy a nice cup of tea here and there...And I may be jumping the gun just a bit, FX...but...
Bring on the Kobe beef!...if I were ever to be lucky enough to visit Japan, a high-end steakhouse would be the first stop on the journey.
You're just teasing us, aren't you?
As always, good stuff. New camera for the pics, or just a different resolution?
O
- #37
- Comment by michael
It never fails to amaze me that the worst tasteing tea (in my opinion!)is drunk in tea producinng countries! like in India or Kenya - the tea is stewed for hours with the milk & sugar, and served usually with a skin formed on top! (it's making me gag just by writing about it!)I enjoyed your (as usual) intersting & well produced article.
- #39
- Comment by Joel Cohen
Love the tea tour. The palate is a delicate thing. The bitterness of green tea is not easy to enjoy. I temper the taste, using Gen-Mai. Amix of green tea and roasted barley ( and quite good when iced). Do keep up your work, and spce it with your humor. Perhaps, we should stick to hot chocolate. Joel- #41
- Comment by lotsofcravings
What kinda settings do you use on your camera to get that pouring water effect? it is so clear? do you use multi shot?- #43
- Comment by macha
Danielle is correct, Macha is powdered. What you had there looks like sencha 煎茶, though I'm no expert on it. The one on the picture there is called Goishi 碁石茶 from Shikoku island. If you have the chance you should go to a shop where they roast the tea (which looks interesting and smells like sweet, warm hay)- #45
- Comment by Sara
Dear M. Francois-Xavier,What a fascinating article! And again what a lovely site you have. I do have one question though: how do you like Iron Goddess tea from China? I have a superb specimen which is a second harvesting. (The first is the best, but in the store the first and second seemed comparable, so I chose the cheaper one.)
I find Iron Goddess to be like a very subtle and well-blended perfume. Here is a desription if you like (based on a perfumer's analogy): The first steeping results in top notes of fresh green and bitter leafiness with a thick vanilla undertone. The middle notes, after several quick steepings (as these are steeped in very little water and drunk quickly in the traditional manner) consist of strong but not cloying sweet gardenias and a subtler green, and the base notes, if you continue steeping for a total of nine or ten times, mellows into a very soft and subtle pear fruit with whiffs of vanilla and a complimentary mellow green.
If you are interested in a packet, I would gladly send it to you in Switzerland. And although you would not have the traditional equipment you can use any small cup with a ready supply of hot water.
Yours,
Sara
- #47
- Comment by Luci
FX, What beautiful photographs...Thanks again for a wonderful photo essay.- #49
- Comment by Joseph
Although it is Japanese green tea, the tea kit set and the way to make tea are totally Chinese. Japanese don't really make tea in this way.- #51
- Comment by Foodista
Wow! Your photos leave my breathless! That was some performance!- #53
- Comment by sets
That's exactly what I thought. (@49) Not the way we serve at our homes, anyway. Born Japanese and raised by a tea ceremony instructor I have never seen anything like it, neither in form nor philosophy. I think the owner is purposefully defying tradition: why not -- if it's entertaining and serves good tea.- #55
- Comment by Jay
I just want to second the suggestion to try genmaicha, green tea with toasted rice. It has such a nice nutty flavor from the rice which nicely compliments the grassiness of the green tea. In fact, it's the only green tea I enjoy without sugar or honey, so I'd say it's definitely worth a try.- #57
- Comment by helene
Just one feedback. That is not a traditional way of preparing Japanese tea, but it is very close to how Chinese prepare their tea with Japanese green tea and tea utensils. And, ice is not a part of Chinese tea preperation or in Japanese tea ceremony at all (there is no frige back then). This process you described looks very fusion to me, and perhaps it is a very trendy thing to do in Japan. P.S. Love your site!!!- #59
- Comment by sets
Let me add to #55: the ice method is becoming popular nowadays even among traditional tea sellers in Japan, a summer delicacy with newly picked tea (shincha) or the gyokuro type tea. The gyokuro is considered to be among the highest quality, and when prepared properly, has absolutely no bitterness at all, a full round body that rolls on your tongue with a hint of sweetness. You would never dream of adding sugar to that one. The water temperature is crucial here -- you need to bring it down to near lukewarm. Another point is stillness -- stirring only brings out the bitterness. Take that a bit further and you have the ice infusion. Cover your leaves with ice (but no hot water) and let it sit there until the ice melts.BTW I hear they grow and process Japanese green tea in the Alps. It's thrilling to imagine tea bushes somewhere among the beautiful pastures you have covered in this site.
- #61
- Comment by thinsurface
Your pictures capture a beautiful art form, I can almost smell and taste the bitters of the exquisite green tea variations. You could derive a lifetime of health benefits from just going "tea tasting" a few times a week!! Thanks for the elegant tour of Japanese tea preparation! It in itself was a wonderful treat!- #63
- Comment by GunnCat
Excellent article FX. I take it that the Japanese make an excellent tea, but perhaps not on par with the mighty Pu-Erh.- #65
- Comment by shanghaiedflip
Very nice article FX. It'd be interesting if you were to make a trip to China to try some of the teas here. In some provinces and rural areas individual families grow and prepare their own teas in their farms/gardens, so there's a crazy variety of teas here. Personally my current favorite is Tiekuanyin. Have you ever tried this one?According to the lady at my usual tea shop, most Chinese tea drinkers tend to end up drinking Wulong teas or Pu Erh teas after getting starting off with green tea.
- #67
- Comment by Josh
Francois,I did not see a post about you being nominated for best food blog!
Well, I voted for you and I think you did pretty well, right?
Well maybe you didn't get 30,000 votes, but you sure should have.
- #69
- Comment by Enlargement
I am amazed with it. It is a good thing for my research. Thanks- #71
- Comment by parshu.narayanan
Yes, as Oubros says, Indian tea is a variation of the milk shake, not of tea. The tea our proletariat drink is often called "khadi chamach" chai - or "standing spoon" tea, tea which has so much sugar and milk in it that a spoon you stir it with will stand without support in the liquid ( apocryphal). Tea brewed in whole milk ( I kid you not)is known in Hindi as Speshal Chai ("special" tea). Tea is also made with ginger to clear a stuffy nose or with spices such as cardamomm or cloves to warm you better in winter. Ladakh in the far North has Yak-butter tea, definitely an acquired taste That said, India is a tea-addicted country and the chattering/polite classes have legions of connosieurs of the perfectly brewed darjeeling or delicately strained-through assam from our eastern plantations, served, as we learnt from the now-packed-up-and-gone-home colonial overlords, in Royal Daulton or some similar china.- #73
- Comment by Nate
You really liked getting those action shots of water pouring! Now I think I have to go pee.Have you ever seen the Malaysian-style teh tarik ("pulled tea")?
- #75
- Comment by Fabiola
When i first arrived in Japan I could not understand and join the others in the pleasure of tea serving/drinking. After 5 years, I am a devout lover of japanese tea and the entire process and I am sure that if you insist a little bit you will convert just like i did.Great pictures. Lovely tea waiter.
;)
- #77
- Comment by sooishi
Superbe billet vraiment bien illustré !Tes photos sont très vivantes, j'aime beaucoup...
Merci pour l'adresse, je la garde précieusement pour mon prochain voyage à Tokyo.
Ps: Je viens de voir que tu es Suisse, moi aussi :)
- #79
- Comment by kenko1
FX-enjoyed reading about a tea shop in my home city here. it does look like gong-fu Chinese style tea ceremony, more than chanoyu or sencha tea..I will have to visit and try it.
have you ever tasted a stem tea made of orchids? called 'crab leg tea' it is from parasitic orchid plants which grown naturally on the ancient tea trees in yunnan province. the orchids embody the essences of the tree. not purchaseable, only naturally found and harvested. I've had some which are 50 years old or so. quite an amazing flavor . wish to learn more about it.
thanks for the great post.
kenko
- #81
- Comment by pixen
Interesting tea procedures... I do agreed with Kenko1. It's obviously to the style of Gong fu tea. I see that you knew Mdm Tseng Yu Hui of Maison de trois thés... :-) I'd been visiting her tea house since the former place.I knew few friends who travelled to China purchasing tea from the factories. I was invited to join them but it's difficult for me knowing that... long journey to villages on the borders, hills & mountains, food, lodging and sanitary options :-P I have few quality Pu Erh and Yixing teapots. One day I may post them in my blog :-)
What Nate said about Pulled Tea or 'Teh Tarik' from Malaysia is quite similar to Indian style of tea/chai. Hot tea is mix with Sweetened Condensed Milk or Evaporated Milk and the mixture is pour into 2 large mugs or containers. The 2 mugs are alternately pour into one another at certain heights to allow bubbles to form and cool down the tea before serving. It's a kind of national drink in Malaysia from road side stalls to hotels as well :-D Competitions were held yearly to judge for best performance of tea pouring.
Malaysia has their own tea plantation, most well known and existed since colonial time is BOH Plantation in Cameron Highlands and some local producers around the region.
The tea mentioned by Kenko1 is Crab's Claw or Feet of Crab tea which is mixed with Green Pu Erh tea leaves. Another name for it is Unicorn Grass (not to be confused with Juncaceae or Rush, a garden plant). It grows mainly in ancient tea trees and highly regard for its medicinal properties. It's also the emblem of the Ancient Tea Tree region of Jing Mai.
Just beware that some unscrupulous factories/sellers only cover the outer layer of tea disks with this orchid stems. It's better to find which is mix thoroughly inside out with the stems. If not mistaken, some factories like Menghai produced such tea. It has a crab logo in the centre of the tea wrapper.
Hope this helps... I will try to find this tea from my supplier friends.
- #82
- Comment by Donna
Just to say ..... You are very much missed !Your site is among my all-time favorites, &
I have shared your articles & information
with many others. As well, you as a person
strike me as having many qualities which I
admire: integrity, curiosity, love for life,
& an abiding interest in others. Just felt
I wanted to share this, as I have received so
much enjoyment from all that you have contributed
over the years. I wish you All Good Things in the
New Year .... Bonne Annee, a friend in Ohio.
- #83
- Comment by Chineseteas101.com
Interesting read. I like the photos, I wish I can capture the water pouring that well. The Japanese have indeed perfected many ideas they borrowed from the Chinese, however in my humble opinion, they emphasize too much about the preparation not enough for the drinking of teas.- #84
- Comment by Eric
Bonjour FX,Tout d'abord, felicitations pour vos superbes photos et vos experiences extraordinaires au Japon! Je fais partie d'une agence de voyage Japonaise et viens de decouvrir Cha Cha Noma grace a vous. J'aimerais la proposer a nos clients, cependant le site de Cha Cha Noma n'a pas de photos de cette "performance". j'aimerai vous demander l'autorisation d'utiliser une (ou deux) photos de votre experience a Cha Cha Noma, dans un de nos itineraires pour nos clients.
Au plaisir de vous lire,
Merci
Eric
- #86
- Comment by Marjana
I was looking for best shops in Istanbul Spice Market and found your interesting blog. Too bad that there are no shops in Spice Bazar recommended in your blog. There are many cheaters; if not cheap, I want to buy good spices. I have visited Spice market in Isanbul and Dubai many times but I have never bought anything. I am going this September again and I would like to buy a lot of spices, dry fruit and nuts. I wonder if spices sold like that have any flavour left. Aren't nuts wet?I don't eat meat so I was glad to find your recepie for fish borek. I will try to make it and I intend to go to Balikci Sabahattin.
I was surprised to see your pictures about making tea in Tokyo. I don't know the place. I have been living in Japan for 40 years and I learned sado (tea ceremony) so I can tell you that that is not Japanese but Chinese tea ceremony.
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