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  2. Uji tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uji_tea

    Uji tea (宇治茶, Uji-cha) is a common name for all Japanese green tea produced from Uji, Kyoto. The three main types of Uji tea are Matcha , Sencha and Gyokuro . Japanese tea is originated from the Tang dynasty of China, which is during the Heian period of Japan when Chinese influences were at its peak.

  3. Senchadō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sencha

    Basket for transporting Sencha tea utensils (Chakago or Teiran), made out of rattan, by Hayakawa Shōkosai I, ca. 1877–80s Chinese-style charcoal basket (sairō-sumitori) for Sencha tea ceremony, made out of bamboo, 19th century. Senchadō uses utensils which are necessary to perform tea. Some of them are used in macha tea as well.

  4. History of tea in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_tea_in_Japan

    The method of steeping loose tea leaves in hot water came to be known as "boiled tea" (煎茶, sencha), and it soon led to a new way of producing green tea that would work well with this technique. In 1737, an Uji-based tea grower named Nagatani Sōen developed what is now the standard process for making leaf teas in Japan: tea leaves are first ...

  5. Green tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Green_tea

    Gyokuro tea is associated with the Uji region, the first tea-growing region in Japan. It is often made using smaller-leaf cultivars of the tea plant. [70] Hōjicha (焙じ茶) This type of tea is made by roasting sencha or bancha leaves with kukicha twigs. [71] Kabusecha (かぶせ茶) Similar to gyokuro, kabusecha is shaded for only a week ...

  6. Sencha - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sencha

    Among the types of Japanese green tea prepared by infusion, sencha is distinguished from such specific types as gyokuro in that it is shaded for a shorter time or not at all, or bancha which is the same tea but harvested later in the season. It is the most popular tea in Japan, representing about 80 percent of the tea produced in the country.

  7. AOL reviewed: Would you pay $40 a month for snacks from Japan?

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/bokksu-review-193525679.html

    All in all the box contained a good mix of cake, cookies, snack chips, candy, and tea. I especially appreciated the care with which each of the snacks was packaged. The one-bite sesame mochi ...

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