🎄 (Notice 1/2) 🎄 Happy Holidays! We will not be shipping orders between 12/28-1/13 for the holidays and moving into a bigger warehouse next January. Come back from time to time for chances to win discounts for 2025 totalling a million yen! CLICK HERE TO LEARN MORE (Starts 12/28)

☀️ (Notice 2/2) ☀️ As we wind down the year, only products with actual units in-stock will be purchasable. Out-of-stock sample sizes, multipacks, procure-on-demand bulk sizes, etc. will be buyable after our warehouse move in January.

#0834.T2 Shishikui Kancha from Tokushima Prefecture - Handpicked by Farmer Akemi Ishimoto

レビューを記入
JPY ¥500
税込 レジでの決済時に配送料を算出。

Size

配送と送料について

Shipping fees vary by country, courier, and method. Place items into your inventory and go to the CART page to see the shipping estimate calculator. For some countries, we may need to manually calculate fees after purchase.

YUNOMI.LIFE'S DELIVERY GUARANTEE: We guarantee delivery for all orders shipped by airmail with a tracking number. (Conditions apply. Exceptions when notified.) Occasionally, orders may require additional customs processing for import. We will aid you to the fullest extent of our ability. If your order does not arrive within ONE month from shipment due to no fault of your own, we will replace or refund your order at no extra cost. We reserve the right to refuse shipment if we think delivery to your address may be difficult. This guarantee does not apply if recipient neglects or refuses to pay customs fees & import taxes, neglects to retrieve an order held at a post office or distribution center, or if the order is not deliverable due to a wrong address. Yunomi.life's Delivery Guarantee does not apply to wholesale purchases.

Shopify Planetを使用したカーボンニュートラルな配送
注文すべてでカーボンニュートラルな配送

Kancha from the mountain village of Kuo, Shishikui in Tokushima Prefecture, is a long-loved bancha, a folk tea that is made specifically in the South of Tokushima Prefecture.

For decades, tea farmer Akemi Ishimoto has been trying to preserve this regional bancha. She founded the Shishikui Kancha Production Association roughly 35 years ago to bring together farmers in the region to help with kancha harvesting and production.

In this region, they have always harvested mature and coarse tea leaves in the winter time as opposed to a spring harvest because the people believe it makes for more delicious and mellow tea.

Due to depopulation and aging; today, Kuo village only has a population of about 10. Now, at 87 years old (in 2024), Akemi-san is the only one who is keeping the kancha tradition alive. Due to the hard labor of tea harvesting and processing, she is the only one that is making the tea from start to finish (e.g., her friends, elementary school children, and tea lovers may help her with harvesting here and there).

Akemi-san says that she has never met a person who loves kancha more than herself and she also says every year that this will be her last year making kancha.

Kancha Processing

As with many banchas, kancha is made from mature, large leaves. What makes kancha unique is that the leaves are harvested in the cold winter months. The way Akemi-san’s kancha is made follows this process:

  1. She handpicks mature winter tea leaves (about 10 cm in length) starting on January 1st (and makes multiple batches until March 10).
  2. She then boils the leaves for 25 minutes to soften them and stop oxidization. 
  3. The leaves are then massaged first by machine then hand-rolled by Akemi-san for the finishing touch (note: previously, it was all hand-rolled).
  4. Then, the leaves are left in a barrel overnight.
  5. They are then brought to Akemi-san’s greenhouse (across the river), removed from the barrel, and spread out to dry for 2-5 days depending on the weather.
  6. Lastly, the leaves are taken outside to sundry on sunny days. Akemi-san says the last sun drying step is a very important in her kancha making process. There is something special about receiving energy from the sun.

Product Info

  • Ingredient: Green tea
  • Harvest: Cold winter months (January 1st ~ March 10th).
  • Region: Kuo Village, Shishikuicho, Tokushima Prefecture
  • Cultivated: without use of pesticides 
  • Region: Kuo Village, Shishikui, Tokushima Prefecture

支払いのセキュリティー対策

支払い方法

  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Google Pay
  • JCB
  • Mastercard
  • Shop Pay
  • Visa

お支払い情報は安全に処理されます。当社はクレジットカード情報を保存したり、お客様のクレジットカード情報にアクセスしたりすることはありません。

Akemi Ishimoto

#0834.T2 Shishikui Kancha from Tokushima Prefecture - Handpicked by Farmer Akemi Ishimoto

下限 JPY ¥500

Kancha from the mountain village of Kuo, Shishikui in Tokushima Prefecture, is a long-loved bancha, a folk tea that is made specifically in the South of Tokushima Prefecture.

For decades, tea farmer Akemi Ishimoto has been trying to preserve this regional bancha. She founded the Shishikui Kancha Production Association roughly 35 years ago to bring together farmers in the region to help with kancha harvesting and production.

In this region, they have always harvested mature and coarse tea leaves in the winter time as opposed to a spring harvest because the people believe it makes for more delicious and mellow tea.

Due to depopulation and aging; today, Kuo village only has a population of about 10. Now, at 87 years old (in 2024), Akemi-san is the only one who is keeping the kancha tradition alive. Due to the hard labor of tea harvesting and processing, she is the only one that is making the tea from start to finish (e.g., her friends, elementary school children, and tea lovers may help her with harvesting here and there).

Akemi-san says that she has never met a person who loves kancha more than herself and she also says every year that this will be her last year making kancha.

Kancha Processing

As with many banchas, kancha is made from mature, large leaves. What makes kancha unique is that the leaves are harvested in the cold winter months. The way Akemi-san’s kancha is made follows this process:

  1. She handpicks mature winter tea leaves (about 10 cm in length) starting on January 1st (and makes multiple batches until March 10).
  2. She then boils the leaves for 25 minutes to soften them and stop oxidization. 
  3. The leaves are then massaged first by machine then hand-rolled by Akemi-san for the finishing touch (note: previously, it was all hand-rolled).
  4. Then, the leaves are left in a barrel overnight.
  5. They are then brought to Akemi-san’s greenhouse (across the river), removed from the barrel, and spread out to dry for 2-5 days depending on the weather.
  6. Lastly, the leaves are taken outside to sundry on sunny days. Akemi-san says the last sun drying step is a very important in her kancha making process. There is something special about receiving energy from the sun.

Product Info


Size

  • 10g / 0.35 oz / Winter Harvest (Due to bulkiness extra shipping fee may be required even if order qualifies for a shipping promo rate. Please inquire if this is a concern.)
  • 50g / 1.76 oz / Winter Harvest (Due to bulkiness extra shipping fee may be required even if order qualifies for a shipping promo rate. Please inquire if this is a concern.)
  • 500g / 1.1 lbs / Winter Harvest (Due to bulkiness extra shipping fee may be required even if order qualifies for a shipping promo rate. Please inquire if this is a concern.)
商品を表示