Event Overview
Yame city, Fukuoka prefecture. This area is known for its highest quality of Gyokuro. At this event, we will serve Yame Dentou Hon Gyokuro which has won the award of Ministry of Agriculture at National Tea Competition for 16 consecutive years. The color, taste, aroma, shape of tea leaves are all top tier of the Japanese tea industry. There is only a small amount that can be produced, thus, little is seen in the market.
We will prepare hot tea and have guests experience the ever changing taste of the tea through the first extraction to the third extraction. We will also prepare “Ice-brew” which will have no bitterness or any other unpleasant tastes.
In addition, we will suggest some food pairing ideas that make great combinations with Yame Dentou Hon Gyokuro. Once you sip this tea, your taste buds will feel a rich umami and sweetness. But the after taste will remain clear and elegant. You may not even believe that it’s tea! There has been years of research and experiments by artisans that led to this marvelous rich tea.
We also are going to offer prime Roasted tea and Genmai tea from Yame. These two teas have rich and crispy aroma, clear after-taste and soft sweetness which are the perfect drinks to warm you up in the Autumn season. Tea is not only limited to being a daily beverage. This event is a chance to enjoy the real authentic taste of luxury Japanese teas which are produced by traditional craftsmanship and technique.
What is Yame Dentou Hon Gyokuro?
Cultivating gyokuro tea is not only detailed and specific, it also requires consummate skill and years of experience, plus a knack for reading the future. You need to have fortune on your side too. That’s why fewer and fewer places grow the tea anymore.
But Yame remains Japan’s leading producer of gyokuro, accounting for more than 50 percent of the country’s output and setting the gold standard for quality. Gyokuro is grown in mountain valleys where there is little sunlight, and the bushes are not pruned but left to grow naturally. To protect them from the sun, the entire field is covered with screens. This increases the content of theanine― the amino acid that gives green tea its distinctive taste ― and thus yields the sweet, full-bodied flavor characteristic of gyokuro. In Yame, when 1-1.5 new shoots appear, woven straw screens are stretched over a framework of concrete pillars and pipes to cover the plants.
Today, synthetic fiber is used almost everywhere elsewhere gyokuro is grown, but Yame’s farmers adhere to traditional methods, despite the extra effort involved, because synthetic fiber raises the temperature in the field too much. In fact, Yame is the only tea-producing region in Japan where such screens are still made of straw, and only here are machines for weaving them still found. At first the plants are 85 percent shaded; then, during the ten days before harvesting, the farmer gradually sprinkles straw over the framework while observing subtle changes in the tea leaves and noting the temperature and weather, until finally the field is 98 percent shaded.
Putting the plants under moderate stress by blocking the sunlight stimulates translocation of nutrients and causes the young shoots to develop slowly. They strive to grow upward, and that striving is the source of the tea’s excellent flavor. Having been cultivated with such painstaking effort and loving care, the gyokuro is then harvested. Again an unusual technique is used.
Once four or five leaves have opened, just the uppermost section of the stem is picked with the two accompanying leaves, a task that can only be accomplished by hand. During actual picking the back of the stem is slowly bent with the ball of the finger until it gently snaps, and then carefully placed in a bamboo basket.
With the finest gyokuro, attractiveness of appearance is also important. The harvested leaves are then steamed to halt the action of the enzymes and thus prevent any further change in the compounds contained in the leaves. Fine adjustments must be made during the steaming process so that the tea turns out just right, and that too takes experience and intuition. Having been steamed, the leaves are then separated, rolled, and finally formed into an attractive needle shape by seasoned craftsmen.
Thus Yame Dentou Hon Gyokuro is special in every regard. Its beautiful appearance, deep, complex flavor, and distinctive aroma are the product of the finest craftsmanship backed up by the dedication, passion, meticulous care, and extensive experience of the people who produce it.