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2. Tea picking

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1st Story
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Let's go to Maikonocha |
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2nd Story
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Tea Picking |
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3rd Story
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Tea Processing |
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4th Story
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Tea Varieties
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5th Story
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Serving Tea |
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6th Story
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Tea and Health |
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(C)KYOTO SEIKA UNIVERSITY INSTITUTE FOR MANGA
STUDIES
Chie Yamada, Yui Miura, Markley Patricia |
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Two types of
tea fields: Roten-en (Exposed to sunlight / Open-air fields) and the
Ooishita-en (Shaded from sunlight / Covered fields) |
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| 1. Roten-en (Exposed to
sunlight / Open-air fields) |
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This type of open-air field is fully exposed to
sunlight; leaves from these plants are usually processed to make
Sencha. In Kyoto prefecture, this type of fields are seen most
frequently in Wazuka-town and Minamiyamashiro-village. Most tea fields
in Japan are of this type.
Because roten-en receives abundant sunlight, tea
produced from this type of field has increased astringency, and
possesses a brisk/refreshing flavor.
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Roten-en
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Exposed to sunlight → strong astringency |
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| 2. Ooishita-en
(Shaded from sunlight / Covered fields) |
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Ooishita-en are veiled as new shoots begin to
sprout in mid-April. The gyokuro and tencha (used to make maccha) are
produced from these fields. They are seen throughout Uji City and
Kyotanabe City in Kyoto prefecture. Throughout the country, this type
of field is not very commonly seen.
Cultivated under protection from sunlight, tea
produced from this type of field has limited astringency and increased
mellowness.
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Ooishita-en
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Protected from direct sunlight → weak astringency, mellow taste |
| Ooishita-en
are commonly seen in Kyotanabe City where MaikoTea is located. This
area is especially famous for the production of Gyokuro tea. |
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Which leaves
are for picking?
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Which
leaves of the plant are for picking?
Taking a good look at a tea plant you will recognize that there are two
types of leaves: the harder leaves, left from last year and the softer
leaves, which are the new shoots to be picked.
Recently, machines have replaced manual labor in
most areas of Japan; however, many tea plantations in the southern
parts of Kyoto Prefecture, known for the highest quality tea, still
choose to carefully select and pick each tea leaf (one by one) by hand,
cherishing the value of genuine tea quality.
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1.
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Niyouzumi (Isshin Niyou):
Two-leaf plucking
The two younger leaves and the bud are plucked for the highest grade of
Gyokuro and Sencha. |
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2.
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Sanyouzumi (Isshinsanyou)
Three-leaf plucking
Three leaves and the bud are plucked for high quality tea (Gyokuro and
Sencha). |
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3.
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Regular plucking
Regular teas are made from the top four to five leaves and the bud of
the tea plant. |
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Tea plucking
only once a year? |
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Commonly, tea plucking is carried out two to three
times per year, as new shoots continue to sprout even after a crop is
harvested. However, on most tea plantations across southern Kyoto
prefecture, tea plucking is done only once a year.
These are the times tea is generally plucked:
| First crop (Easter flush) (Shincha) |
Late April to end of May |
| Second crop (Spring flush) |
Late June to early July |
| Third crop (Summer flush) |
Mid July to late August |
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Tea plucking
in Kyotanabe, Japans leading Gyokuro region |
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Kyotanabe, a city esteemed for the highest quality of
Gyokuro, the traditional method of hand-plucked tea has
been practiced and preserved until today. One leaf is carefully selected at a
time.
From one kilogram of freshly picked tea shoots,
merely 150 g of Gyokuro is produced. Even the most experienced tea
pickers can only harvest about 10 kg of fresh leaves in one day which
calculates to approximately 1.5 kg of the final product.
Hand plucking tea is a truly time-consuming and
costly tedious work. Therefore, only the finest quality teas are made
from hand-plucked shoots.
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Annual
Tea-Picking Event at MaikoTea
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Once every year, we hold a tea picking event for
our cherished customers. Approximately 500 people gather each year to
enjoy the tea picking experience.
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