THE VERY FIRST Kondōwase hand-picked Shincha 2026

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Unit price€80,00/100g
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Single-cultivar Shincha from Mariko, Shizuoka Prefecture — the first tea to be plucked on Honshū every year. This is the hand-picked version, material from the very first day of the harvest.

The Kondōwase cultivar carries a partly Indian genome, producing something genuinely distinctive: intense floral character — lilacs, exotic fruit, bittersweet. Oscar Brekell hand-picks this alongside the local farm team each April; the 2026 harvest arrived in Munich in late May and will be available as long as our stock lasts.

Next to the classical Sencha brewing method it also brews well in boiling water with minimal leaf: 2–3g / 200ml / 3 min. Also excellent as a cold infusion.

Origin: Mariko, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan
Cultivar: Kondōwase
Harvest: April 2026
Taste: Intensely floral · bittersweet · exotic fruit

Oscar Brekell

Tea educator, author, and founder of SENCHAISM, dedicated to promoting Japanese tea culture worldwide.

Shizuoka

(Shizuoka, Japan )

Sencha

Shizuoka Prefecture, draped across the slopes of Mount Fuji and stretching to the Pacific coast, is together with Kagoshima Japan's largest tea-producing region — responsible for roughly 30% of the country's total output. Its tea history reaches back to the Kamakura period (1185–1333), when monk Shoichi Kokushi brought seeds from Song Dynasty China and planted the first bushes in what is now the Honyama district — still celebrated as a premium growing area over 800 years later.

What sets Shizuoka apart is its extraordinary internal diversity. The prefecture sits at the convergence of four tectonic plates, creating dramatically varied soils, altitudes, and microclimates across more than 20 distinct sub-regions. Mountain areas like Kawane, Honyama, and Tenryu are known for light-steamed single-cultivar sencha with pronounced aroma and elegance. The flatlands of Makinohara and Kakegawa specialise in fukamushi sencha — deep-steamed tea that yields a bright, opaque green liquor with a round, smooth mouthfeel. The Asahina district is celebrated for gyokuro. The Yabukita cultivar, which now dominates Japanese tea cultivation nationwide, was first developed here.

Green tea is woven into daily life in Shizuoka: served in schools at lunch, offered as a health ritual in households, and central to the identity of towns like Kakegawa, whose residents are noted for exceptional longevity.