Oh. Warming leaves smell like bacon. I was not expecting this. Okay, little one, let’s go.
Black olives on the nose. Argh, there is something else really familiar here and I can’t place it. The taste is wholly umami and smoked meat and vegetables. Smoked, but moist and soft. This is so good.
I learned 122-140 degrees is the temperature range for gyokuro; the lukewarm temperature might be nice in summer, even though the flavors here are big and cozy. My first steep was actually 135, and I bumped up to 140 for the second — just those 5 degrees changed the profile so much. Amazing.
A little bit of sauteed celery, toasted sesame seed in the second.
Third steep brings sweetness on the nose. Not honey, like fruit-sweet. Tastes like okra chips, those packages by salad bars that say “air fried” but taste of indulgent browned oil. OH, MAYBE THAT’S IT… that smell I couldn’t place earlier, it might be roux. There’s some crunchy mushroom here, too — not earthy, not fresh — like oily roasted shiitakes.
Notes are lighter as the session moves on — celery seed and minerals on the nose, cucumber and light nuttiness in the mouth.
Wheat germ and pretzel, slick with just a hint of drying. Steeps remain nicely drinkable and tea-ish with smooth minerality, but the flavor burst is pretty well gone by steep six or so.
I’ll have to source some more black gyokuro at some point (this was part of an LP Hookup and doesn’t appear available to order), as well as some classic gyokuro, which I’ve never had, and see how they compare. LP kinda blowing my mind the past couple days, jeezo.
Flavors: Celery, Cucumber, Meat, Mineral, Mushrooms, Nutty, Olive Oil, Olives, Roasted, Salt, Sesame, Smoke, Sweet, Toasted, Umami, Vegetable Broth, Wheat
We’re overcast down here, too. Cozy.
I just ordered some green gyokuro; it was fun to revisit the black vicariously!