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loose leaf green tea with roasted rice
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.
Preparation guidelines: Allow 1 tsp of the tea for each 150 ml of water and one more for the pot. Pour water at the temperature of 90°C over the tea and leave it to infuse for 1.5 minutes, then strain. Suitable for 1-2 infusions.
Ingredients: loose leaf green tea, roasted rice 48%. To make this popular tea, roasted rice kernels are mixed with Sencha. Genmaicha has a charming, mildly sweet, nutty flavour. The infusion is golden green. Musashi is the name of the most famous Japanese samurai.
Low
loose leaf green tea with roasted rice
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.
Preparation guidelines: Allow 1 tsp of the tea for each 150 ml of water and one more for the pot. Pour water at the temperature of 90°C over the tea and leave it to infuse for 1.5 minutes, then strain. Suitable for 1-2 infusions.
Ingredients: loose leaf green tea, roasted rice 48%. To make this popular tea, roasted rice kernels are mixed with Sencha. Genmaicha has a charming, mildly sweet, nutty flavour. The infusion is golden green. Musashi is the name of the most famous Japanese samurai.
Low
A fine, ten-year-old Shu Pu-erh from the Jingmai District in Yunnan Province. It gives a dark brown infusion and boasts the rich aroma and taste of aged Pu-erh with a note of good Caribbean rum.
A fine, ten-year-old Shu Pu-erh from the Jingmai District in Yunnan Province. It gives a dark brown infusion and boasts the rich aroma and taste of aged Pu-erh with a note of good Caribbean rum.
This is an example of a Japanese type Sencha that is increasingly grown on Chinese tea estates. It brews to make a honey-yellow infusion.
This is an example of a Japanese type Sencha that is increasingly grown on Chinese tea estates. It brews to make a honey-yellow infusion.