Samidori Matcha - Kurazumiさん Hoshino

from $40.00

TASTING NOTES

Vintage 2025

Steamed Rice. Glazed Ham. Licorice.

🏆 Awarded Producer

  • Recipient of the highly prestigious Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Prize (農林水産大臣賞).

Stone-Milled: Fresh Ground in Princeton, NJ

Size:

TASTING NOTES

Vintage 2025

Steamed Rice. Glazed Ham. Licorice.

🏆 Awarded Producer

  • Recipient of the highly prestigious Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries Prize (農林水産大臣賞).

Stone-Milled: Fresh Ground in Princeton, NJ

2025 Vintage

Kurazumiさん’s Matcha sets the standard for what Yame Matcha can be. Luscious, silky, and wonderfully milky. Taking a sip of his Samidori fills your nose with the comfort of a fresh pot of rice. Savory and full in texture, with a sweetness that lingers long after you’re done.

Ooika is thrilled to carry Kurazumiさん’s Samidori cultivar. A multi-generation true master of tea production, and a four-time first-place winner of the highly esteemed National Tea Competition (全国茶品評会), most recently in 2023 within the most distinguished category: Gyokuro.

The tea plants used to create this Matcha were grown in the field directly opposed to this year’s first-place tea in all of Japan for 2023. It can not be overstated how important this is.

Ochairinikki (御茶入日記)

Category

Green tea (お茶)

Subcategory

Oishitacha (おおいしたちゃ)

Cultivar

Samidori (さみどり)

Producer

Kurazumiさん

Terroir

Hoshino, Yame, Fukuoka, Japan

Vintage

2025

Shading Duration

Approx. 25 days

Milling

Ishi-Usu (石臼) Stone-Milled by Ooika

Harvest Time

Single Spring Harvest (一番茶)

 

Visit the Farm

OOIKA MATCHA leads the industry with the most precise souring details and transparency. Let’s visit Kurazumiさん’s farm and see where this Matcha comes from.

 

Producer Details

Kurazami Portrait

Kurazumiさん

“The sweeter and more delicious the leaves are to us humans, the more the bugs will like it too,” Kurazumiさん remarked.

“High risk, low return.” Like houses, the price is limited to the neighborhood. More difficult cultivation techniques don’t result in higher profits, and often the opposite.

Inquiring on some topics over the phone, Kurazumiさん once said to me “百聞は一見に如かず ひゃくぶんはいっけんにしかず (Seeing once is better than hearing a hundred times.)

To know Matcha is to be there, in the fields, breathing the dew and feeling the strands of spider web against your knees that bisect the bushes.

 

Samidori (さみどり)

Samidori (さみどり) is another privately selected tea cultivar.  Mr. Masajiro Koyama selected it from seed-grown trees (known as Zairai) in the 1930s. It has since become a staple in the Kyoto prefecture and a popular cultivar for Tezumi, the traditional hand-picking method.

It’s shoots are brightly colored, glossy, and have an excellent fresh fragrance. Its upright shape, together with a wide range of harvesting times, makes it easier for the Chazumi (tea pickers) to go through the tea bushes multiple times, selecting only the best leaves for that day.

The Tencha from Samidori produces Matcha with low bitterness, a dark green color, gentle sweetness, and floral undertones. Its deep, clean, and mild umami flavor will make you want to whisk another bowl. High yield and flexible harvest times means this cultivar is quite popular and affordable.

Region Details

Hoshinomura, Yame, Fukuoka, Japan

With over 600 years of tea growing, Yame is relatively new when compared to Uji’s 800 year history. Despite this, Yame has quickly become one of the finest tea growing regions of the country. This is especially true for Gyokuro, a loose leaf tea that is shaded before harvesting as Tencha (unground Matcha) is. Gyokuro is typically considered the most prestigious category of Japanese tea.

Within Yame is a mountain side is known collectively as Oku‑Yame 奥八女, which includes Kurogi, Joyo, Yabe, and Hoshino. Hoshinomura, or village of the stars, sits in the basin with the Hoshino river cutting through it. It is a pristine terroir, with waterfalls, the dense canopy of trees and thick fog. The region also holds official GI documentation for Yame Dentou Hon Gyokuro.

Tea in Hoshino is traced at least to the Muromachi period, where it is believed to have arrived from Reiganji temple nearby in Kurogi. By the Meiji Era, a local to the area brought Gyokuro production back from Uji and started production around 1904. Producers in Hoshino-muro focus primarily on Gyokuro, but some do produce Tencha (unground Matcha.) Hoshino-mura also holds the distinction of having the second old Tencha factory in Japan, owned by Kurazumisさん.

 

Field Details

Kurazumiさん’s Factory

In the rolling hills of Hosinomura, the Village of the Stars, sits one of Japan’s oldest Tencha factories. Kurazumiさん, and his two sons, operate the factory just one time a year.

The oven takes over 24 hours to “warm up”, and it produces some of the most legendary tea in the country, winning three 1st-place titles at the National Tea Competition in Japan.

 

 

Matcha Safety

Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare

As one of the healthiest nations in the world, Japan enforces exceptionally strict standards for radioactive substances, heavy metals, and pesticide residues in all food products, including matcha. Routine monitoring and targeted inspections ensure compliance with Japan's notoriously rigorous food safety regulations. Distribution of food items that exceed any limit are prohibited. You can learn more about these regulations from Japan’s Codex Alimentarius and the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare (MHLW)’s website.