Mr Iwasaki Jr has come close to perfection with this tea. This Limited Edition Sencha will go down as another of the ‘life-list’ teas that we will remember fondly years from now. It is certainly one of the finest teas of its style that we have tasted in quite some time. Due to its high quality, strong demand among East Asian tea drinkers, and limited production, it is a little more expensive than most of the other Japanese teas this year (most of which are the same as they have been since 2018/9 ). However, it is well worth its price, especially when the cost per cup is ascertained.
This very special Tetsumi (hand-picked) sencha is made with the leaves of the Yabukita cultivar, the most widely grown tea bush cultivar in Japan. But very little of the leaf for Sencha is hand-picked these days. As this Tetsumi leaf shows, it is very different to prepare tea with leaf that has been hand-picked as opposed to the normal Japanese harvesting method of ‘shearing’. The many elements of terroir such as soil, climate, etc, the level of steaming, and the skill of the tea farmer during manufacture come into play to make any premium tea unique, however when the tea maker is starting with hand-picked, single-cultivar leaf the bar is raised significantly.
This is an expertly-made sencha with a clean, fresh flavor that is ever-so-pleasantly ‘vegetal’ without any sharpness. This tea is a beautiful, even, dark green color. Very large, uniformly-full leaves show off the hand-picking and expert handling during manufacture. The leaf is much longer than we have seen in some time and is glorious! After the first steeping the leaf still maintains its needle shape and thin profile. Following the second steeping the leaf opens a little & flattens somewhat.
Please use cool water when steeping this tea – it is traditional in style, (with its larger amount of immediately-exposed surface area) and prefers to be steeped in water that is not as hot as some tea drinkers use with today’s finer-cut, more heavily rolled and more deeply-steamed leaf. The temperature can be raised after 3 or 4 steepings if one wants to. The time-in-water can range according to personal taste, so experiment with that: from one minute to four.
The tea liquor is clear, golden-tinged green, which shows a high amino acid content. The liquor will never darken, no matter how few or many steepings are made, and the light color of the liquor may suggest a light taste, but that is not so. This is a tremendously flavorful tea!
The fragrance is fresh and lively – and brings the mind back to a sparkling early spring morning.
While Yabukita varietal often shows moderate body, this hand-picked leaf has a full body that is deep and smooth. The maturity of the flavor of this batch is outstanding, and we are more than pleased with Iwasaki Jr’s efforts at tea-making again this year. He has crafted a gem!
Those who enjoy Japanese sencha understand that Sencha is traditionally a blended tea and that the core elements of terroir including tea garden location and tea bush cultivar conspire with the factors of steaming and rolling and firing during manufacture to create the the many varied tastes of each particular sencha. However these elements are brought together in most sencha manufacture by the split-second choices made by the tea blender/buyers while tasting samples of ‘aracha’ at the tea market, because it is normally all about the blending of several different lots of leaf.
When a tea maker decides to craft his tea from a single-varietal leaf, everything changes. Local tea bush cultivars can be ‘heirloom’ varieties while others are new cultivars that have been developed by one of the Japanese government’s tea research institutes or by educated and experienced tea farmers such as Mr. Iwasaki and his son. This hand-picked leaf is from a pluck of a sub-category of 100% Yabukita cultivar that has been developed specifically to yield a delicious tea from the local terroir of the gardens in Ryougouchi. Instead of being able to adjust for the elements that it has or does not show in any given year by blending various different batches of leaf, the goal with this garden-specific 2019 Tetsumi harvest of Yabukita Sencha is to have the leaf be as perfect as possible off the bush. Then during the steaming, preparation and manufacture of the leaf, the tea maker must bring out the balanced and unique overall flavor profile of the specific bushes. This tea does that incredibly well.
One interesting aspect of this tea is that it is made with leaf picked from bushes that received damage not too many years ago and have been carefully tended by Iwasaki Jr. His goal was to revive the bushes back to their former glory and maintain the integrity of this Yabukita stock in the family gardens in Ryougouchi. We think that he has succeeded masterfully.
Background on our relationship with Iwasaki and his family:
In 2012 Mary Lou was asked to visit Japan with an international group of tea experts, on a trip to meet with a variety of tea farmers and evaluate the tea market and explore new export potentials for premium tea farmers. In Shizuoka Prefecture she met with a group of farmers who were united in their desire to grow premium tea organically and to attempt to continue to grow some of the more unusual cultivars that many farmers have ceased to maintain. Mary Lou affectionately gave these farmers the moniker of the “Four Musketeers’ of Shizuoka premium organic tea. We have developed a strong relationship with this group in the years since, and their tea has been amazing. One of the farmers in this group was Shinobu Iwasaki. He has been an organic tea farmer for many years and his son is now following in his footsteps.
For this season (2020) Mr Iwasaki, one of the original ‘Four Musketeers’ of SOTFU, wanted to show us examples of the current work of his son who has really become a masterful tea farmer. Known to his friends and colleagues as “Junior”, he is following in his father’s footsteps and will at some point be in charge of the tea garden.
The family gardens are in a region known as ‘Ryougouchi’ which is of historical importance regarding tea manufacture in Japan. This region was traditionally one of the premier locations for tea gardens, but at one point fell into disrepair. Because of the efforts of tea farmers such as the Iwasaki family this area has reclaimed its reputation as a first-class tea-growing region in Shizuoka Prefecture.
We were offered four teas from the Iwasaki family’s tea gardens this season and, on tasting them, accepted all of them without hesitation!
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