Obukucha

A Food Green Blend from

Rating

73 / 100

Calculated from 2 Ratings
Tea type
Food Green Blend
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Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Grass, Plum, Salt, Seaweed, Spinach, Sweet, Tart, Umami, Vegetal, Broth, Evergreen, Fruity, Marine, Pine, Savory, Thick, Mineral, Silky, Dry Grass, Floral, Grassy, Hay, Soap
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Not available
Typical Preparation
Use 10 oz / 288 ml of water
Set water temperature to 165 °F / 73 °C
Use 8 g of tea
Steep for 1 min, 0 sec
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4 Tasting Notes View all

“Sipdown! (1 | 1) First sipdown of the year with a New Year tea! Happy New Year, tea friends! This is Obubu’s version of obukucha, or good fortune tea. It’s a tea traditionally drunk around the...” Read full tasting note

Description

Obukucha is a traditional tea drunk to celebrate the New Year, and is made from dried plums, konbu seaweed tied into a ribbon, and a dash of gold flakes for good fortune.

Obukucha includes:
8 Dried plums
8 Konbu seaweed ribbons
20 grams of Sencha of the Wind
Gold flakes for 8 cups

The dried plums represent long life, and the seaweed ribbons represent tying together (creating) relationships and happiness. Combined with gold flakes for good luck and the delicate Sencha of the Wind, this is how to celebrate the New Year Kyoto-style.

Instructions

1. Using a toothpick, separate out gold flakes to be used for the number of cups you plan to make

2. Prepare tea cups for yourself and family, and pour hot water into it (95-100ºC/203-212ºF). Let the water warm the cup for about 30 seconds, which also cools the water.

3. Place the 5g of tea leaves into your tea pot (there are 20g included, so that is 1/4 of the included tea leaves, also about 1 tablespoon)

4. Pour the water from the cups into the tea pot and steep the tea for 30-45 seconds.

5. While the tea is steeping, place a dried plum and a seaweed ribbon into each cup.

6. Pour the tea into each cup a little at a time to evenly distribute the tea.

7. Place gold flakes into each tea (yes, we do drink the gold flakes for good luck!)

8. And we are finished! Happy New Year!

About Kyoto Obubu Tea Farms

It started with a single cup of tea. As the legend goes, our president Akihiro Kita, or Akky-san, visited Wazuka, Kyoto one fateful day. At the time, Akky-san was still a college student in search for life's calling. After trying the region's famous Ujicha (literally meaning tea from the Uji district), he immediately fell in love and his passion for green tea was born. He had finally found what he was looking for in that one simple cup of tea. After fifteen years of learning to master the art of growing tea from tea farmers in Wazuka, Kyoto Obubu Tea Farms was born and as they say, the rest is history. So what's an Obubu? Obubu is the Kyoto slang for tea. Here in the international department we call ourselves Obubu Tea. That's "Tea Tea" for the bilinguals. We love tea so much, we just had to have it twice in our name. Now Obubu means more than just tea to us. It means, family, friends, passion and the place we call home. More than just tea. Though the roots of Obubu stem from tea, it has become more than that over the years. Obubu is an agricultural social venture, operating with three (1) bring quality Japanese tea to the world (2) contribute to the local and global community through tea (3) revitalize interest in tea and agriculture through education.

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