Yamama Masudaen
Edit CompanyPopular Teas from Yamama Masudaen
See All 2 TeasRecent Tasting Notes
I love that this smells like puffed wheat cereal. I’m a weirdo – that is one of my favorite cereals :)
I didn’t really notice the matcha dusting visually in the leaves.
Wow, the flavor. This is not like any tea I have had so far. Bizarre… I don’t dislike it but I am puzzled. First I am hit with a nutty puffed wheat flavor. Then a little bit of green then… metal? I am tasting a kind of light tin flavor. Imagine chewing on tin foil and then having, not that initial burst, but an aftertaste of that. I feel it right at my gumline behind my teeth… so weird. Even weirder is, I don’t dislike it. Weird… weird weird weird.
More sips.
Now I can kind of taste that matcha. It’s faint. I get more of it if I kind of do the wine tasting thing and incorporate air with the sip (aka “slurping”).
Tin flavored tea. I honestly have no idea what I think of this. I’m still drinking it and it’s interesting.
Preparation
The name on this was one was very tiny so I didn’t realize it had matcha in it. I did notice the leaves were a little dusted, but it wasn’t a shocking green like Teavana’s Gyokuro Matcha. I’ve only had a couple genmaicha’s and this one is by far my favorite. Yes at first it tastes like burnt popcorn, but this gets really smooth and buttery and its just very yummy. In fact I based my dinner on it, ramen with roasted veggies and soy crisps. Resteeped well a second time. Yum. Thanks Amanda!
I got this at my local Japanese grocery store. I want to love it because it seems so “authentic” as it is straight from Japan and has pretty much no instructions or tasting notes written in English. It’s a very finicky tea to make – if you brew at too high a temp, too much leaf, or too long, it will be undrinkably bitter. After numerous attempts I finally got it right – low temperature, 45 second steep, and about 1/2 tsp of leaf. It’s has thick texture, veggie taste with marine-y notes. I like.
Preparation
As Genmaicha teas go, this one is very tasty and authentic. When you look at this tea you will see it has green leaves, brown rice (really just roasted white rice) and popped rice that are white and look like little popcorn puffs (try one- it is delicious!). “Gen-mai” means the roasted rice, and “cha” is tea. When getting teas like this it is a good idea to go to asian distributors and markets because these places carry the “real thing,” what Japanese people themselves drink. Finding a label on the bag that says “imported by Yamama Matsuden Co. Ltd.” or “Made in Japan” is very important so as to not get fooled.
Japanese green teas are meant to be steeped for shorter times and at lower temperatures than black teas or red teas. Don’t steep it for more than 5 minutes- and much shorter than that is best. For stronger tea, use more tea leaves instead of brewing longer, because if you brew green tea too long it turns brown and develops a bitter taste. When making it iced, which you can very well do, you must use more tea leaves and brew for much longer, however. With ice water, a good brew time is 10 minutes. You want the tea to be a pretty and mellow green color, same as when it it hot. Judge when the tea is ready by the color, not the time passed. This is a surefire way to get tasty tea, every time.
Preparation
I had iced genmaicha at a Korean restaurant near my school and finally now that I have a giant bag of genmaicha, I can make it at home. I may have to not let it steep for 16-17 hours next time because it’s somewhat strong, but it tastes pretty good!
I’ve been wanting a genmaicha with matcha, so when I went to this big international supermarket today, I found one! They had some kind of gyokuro too, I wanted it so badly but they had expiration dates of next month. Not paying $12.99 for 4 ounces of tea that they can’t sell. I’ll try a more Asian-focused store next time. Actually I should have stopped there first since it was on the way. Oh well.
$3.99 for 7 ounces of tea is kind of awesome. While this isn’t amazing by any means, it’s decent…I like it better than the Adagio one I have. The matcha adds sweetness, and gives it a lot more color. I love sweet and savory combinations so I definitely enjoy this.
And seriously if anyone wants some, let me know. There’s no way I will finish this ever.