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loose leaf green tea
Preparation guidelines: Allow 1 teaspoon of tea for each 1.5 dl of water and one more for the teapot. Bring the water to the boil and then let it cool down to 90°C. Pour and leave it to infuse for 1 minute. Sieve and serve. Suitable for 2-3 infusions.
Springtime Bancha from the Chiran region in Kagoshima Prefecture. The fresh green leaves create a light green infusion. In taste and aroma the tea is sweet and creamy, with a mild note of flower honey.
loose leaf green tea
Preparation guidelines: Allow 1 teaspoon of tea for each 1.5 dl of water and one more for the teapot. Bring the water to the boil and then let it cool down to 90°C. Pour and leave it to infuse for 1 minute. Sieve and serve. Suitable for 2-3 infusions.
Springtime Bancha from the Chiran region in Kagoshima Prefecture. The fresh green leaves create a light green infusion. In taste and aroma the tea is sweet and creamy, with a mild note of flower honey.
The delicious Sencha tea leaves are mixed with roasted rice (48% of content). Genmaicha has a charming, slightly sweet, nutty taste. The colour of the infusion is gold-green. Musashi is the name of Japanese most famous samurai.
The delicious Sencha tea leaves are mixed with roasted rice (48% of content). Genmaicha has a charming, slightly sweet, nutty taste. The colour of the infusion is gold-green. Musashi is the name of Japanese most famous samurai.
Bancha is distinctive for its rich taste that gradually spreads within the mouth. This variety’s name of Arashiyama translates as “stormy mountains”. The sweetish flavour it initially shows gives way to a pleasantly bitter tone at the close that is reminiscent of young walnut.
Bancha is distinctive for its rich taste that gradually spreads within the mouth. This variety’s name of Arashiyama translates as “stormy mountains”. The sweetish flavour it initially shows gives way to a pleasantly bitter tone at the close that is reminiscent of young walnut.
This Ceylon tea is a real rarity. Sourced from near Kandy, the ancient capital of Sri Lanka, it is produced in accordance with a Chinese method. Its taste conveys a sense of meadow flowers and honey, finishing with a tone of ripe fruit.
This Ceylon tea is a real rarity. Sourced from near Kandy, the ancient capital of Sri Lanka, it is produced in accordance with a Chinese method. Its taste conveys a sense of meadow flowers and honey, finishing with a tone of ripe fruit.