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Why Ceremonial-Grade Matcha Is So Expensive | So Expensive Food | Business Insider 

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The greener matcha is, the smoother and more complex its flavor. But not all matcha is the same. Matcha at its highest quality is referred to as ceremonial-grade, because of the central role it plays in Japanese tea ceremonies. And while this bright green powder takes a few seconds to dissolve in water, it takes an entire year to grow. Jintaro Yamamoto runs a 180-year-old tea farm, one of the oldest in Uji, Japan. We visited his farm to find out what makes ceremonial-grade matcha so exceptional? And why it's so expensive.
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Why Ceremonial-Grade Matcha Is So Expensive | So Expensive Food | Business Insider

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8 авг 2022

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Комментарии : 938   
@sillywilli.27
@sillywilli.27 Год назад
It's so beautiful seeing his passion for his craft. Rare to see someone who truly enjoys their occupation.
@sokha6197
@sokha6197 Год назад
what's even more amazing is he's a six generation matcha farmer, meaning the passion in the occupation runs in his family.
@CocoKoi321
@CocoKoi321 Год назад
Japan is a collectivist society and is a very know your place society Not prideboasting and greedy Individualistic society Japan basically nobody says something is out of style for example either. You focus on ehat you like and dive deeper into being that best at it Hence why aging craftsmen is a term too
@ziglaus
@ziglaus Год назад
@@sokha6197 can you imagine doing the same thing as your great great great great grandfather? i think id literally rather ki...stop existing
@WeekzGod
@WeekzGod Год назад
Its really common in Japan for people to obsess over the quality of their work.
@SilverGears
@SilverGears Год назад
@@WeekzGod when you're on a island with limited resources and space, it makes sense
@PincheBecky0Effsgiven
@PincheBecky0Effsgiven Год назад
When you take pride and combine it with joy, you get a great product. Being respectful to what is being harvested, be it plants or animal, does make a huge difference.
@thatdude3977
@thatdude3977 Год назад
Also not having your culture entirely destroyed helps too....
@PincheBecky0Effsgiven
@PincheBecky0Effsgiven Год назад
@@thatdude3977 Yes, that's where respect comes in.
@thatdude3977
@thatdude3977 Год назад
@@PincheBecky0Effsgiven lmfao yeah sure
@Itsallsotiresome
@Itsallsotiresome Год назад
Pride often blinds one to one's own flaws and attempts to excuse or justify them, but passion typically gives birth to being more critical of one self than anyone else. And that comes from a joy of self-improvement. A prideful person often hides from the 'flames of refinement' in life that tests skills, accuracy, and talent. A passionate person often seeks out the 'flames of refinement' in life that tests skills, accuracy, and talent even when no one else might care. Pride stagnates. Passion excels.
@oooo-dw7gg
@oooo-dw7gg Год назад
@@thatdude3977 you woke up and chose dick.
@morbideddie
@morbideddie Год назад
I think it's worth noting thay "ceremonial grade" isnt an official or regulated classification, any company can call any matcha "ceremonial grade". I think simply refering to it as "high quality" matcha is less misleading since most matcha sold as "ceremonial grade" isnt hand ground, first leaf or first flush. Great to see that traditional makers like this still exist and that the torch is being carried by someone so young, driven and passionate.
@based_prophet
@based_prophet Год назад
A few holds up it its craft tho n notes
@based_prophet
@based_prophet Год назад
But yea I'll sell you a bag of puppy hair n call it c xeromoney
@based_prophet
@based_prophet Год назад
Sadly ur right tho
@vv720
@vv720 Год назад
there are many special grade teas in china and japan and their flavor is similar with middle price products
@mohamedraaifrushdhy6693
@mohamedraaifrushdhy6693 Год назад
It says the Japanese public has long been familiar with that term and its distinctive features. So are you Japanese by any chance to call them out???
@aishikamitra
@aishikamitra Год назад
It’s so nice to see a young person from our generation taking such interest in a traditional business. While the trend of matcha or sake rises, youngsters seldom want to be tied to these facilities as they aren’t as fast growing as other more urban or technical jobs. Good luck to his work, may he expand to produce more specialised teas in the future. ❤️
@search5164
@search5164 Год назад
Absolutely, seeing young generations taking part in this direction is appreciated 👏👏 wish him the best for his business expansion🙏
@yourdad2917
@yourdad2917 Год назад
Bouta play Vic 2 so I can kill all the artisans and industrialize
@Hydraxia96
@Hydraxia96 Год назад
@@yourdad2917 this guy lmao
@DopinSmoke
@DopinSmoke Год назад
Our entire generation would be this way if the 2 before us hadn’t first sold off all the family businesses, and then sold off our future prosperity in exchange for a couple decades of excess. They’ve damned us all to be factory rats.
@jmd1743
@jmd1743 Год назад
@@search5164 He's taking it to a whole new level. He's making his crops into a art instead of a bulk commodity for an income. He's passionate about what he does.
@gokobe9121
@gokobe9121 Год назад
By the smile on his face you can tell he actually takes pride in what he does!
@abt_micah4544
@abt_micah4544 Год назад
I love matcha but this documentation took my appreciation of it to another level. It's so beautiful to see someone so passionate about his craft and his love and dedication to keep the tradition. 🍵🍃💚
@mymatchaaddiction
@mymatchaaddiction Год назад
matcha is truly the best!
@EricDMMiller
@EricDMMiller Год назад
It's a stupid waste of time and effort.
@user-gu9yq5sj7c
@user-gu9yq5sj7c Год назад
@@EricDMMiller Why? Then how else would you harvest only the young leaves? If you don't give a solution then don't criticize.
@Esseyx-420
@Esseyx-420 11 месяцев назад
@@EricDMMiller Why tho? its a centralized part of Japanese culture (as shown in the tea ceremonies)
@konstantinepotapov4719
@konstantinepotapov4719 Год назад
Thanks to people like Jintaro-San who continue to support traditions 💚 His work is highly appreciated all around the world 🌍
@Nullified1332
@Nullified1332 Год назад
I had a coworker gift me some ceremonial grade tea for christmas because she knew I loved tea and japan, I had no idea how much love and tradition I was holding until now. It is truly beautiful.
@modkhi
@modkhi Год назад
its so rare to see a younger person having inherited a traditional business like this and also seem so in love and enthusiastic about it outwardly that it makes me happy through the screen. a lot of people like him seem to grow to appreciate their work but they don't seem to have so much pure passion about it, like this is what they would have done anyway even if they weren't in a position to inherit the business. really cool to see
@TawnyFawny
@TawnyFawny Год назад
Jintaro's passion for his craft and dedication to quality is extremely honorable. This episode was particularly enjoyable because of the focus on him and his tea farm. This series makes me continually grateful for products after seeing the hard work put into producing them!
@zurzakne-etra7069
@zurzakne-etra7069 Год назад
if he were on tiktok, I'd binge his videos!
@magicknight13
@magicknight13 9 месяцев назад
Very well said!
@nissan_skyline
@nissan_skyline 5 месяцев назад
Very well said!
@ProfMannion
@ProfMannion Год назад
What a Beautiful farm. The plants look so healthy. I lived in Okinawa for a while and the storms were something else, I can't imagine the work put into that farm (Uji is mainland Japan so a while north, but it's still coastal and in the Pacific so they get whacked with the same storms).
@SweetCammieEyes1
@SweetCammieEyes1 Год назад
I lived in Oki 6 years. I was there when the typhoon knocked down the Blue Seal sign on 58!
@ProfMannion
@ProfMannion Год назад
@@SweetCammieEyes1 I remember having to wear a flack jacket and kevlar to go outside at all, one MRE a day. One of the barracks was shut down and they had a firewatch there 24/7 (to make sure no one was partying there or getting pregnant), and walking he probably 5 city blocks length between barracks was really something, you felt like low crawling the whole way there. I have never missed another place I have been other then Home and Oki. Worst part is a hard drive crash made me lose all my photos and videos from back then (I bought one of the first good digital cameras out there and have nothing left, back up your files). I have like 5 photos total from my entire time in.
@amevaio92
@amevaio92 Год назад
@@SweetCammieEyes1 same me too for 6 years until 2016. I still remember the Blue Seal on 58 main road. Also don't forget the unlimited refill of root beer xD
@passiveaggressiveflamingo6851
“Get whacked”😂 Thank you for that and thank you for your service to a few of you in the replies!
@thelostremainunfound
@thelostremainunfound Год назад
Even before he said it, he radiated love for his profession and business. So glad to see someone love something so much and put so much pride in their work. Coming from a country that looks down on farming and labor work, it's really something to see so much respect put into the work he does.
@someoneelse2106
@someoneelse2106 Год назад
That man deserves every yen he gets. He truly has a love for what he and his employees do.
@TooLittleInfo
@TooLittleInfo Год назад
The work ethic and artisanship of the Japanese is truly unparalleled. I remember watching a video of a chef who specialises in hand made soba---he doesn't even look at what he's doing, he is doing everything by feel, it's instinctive for him at this point. It was absolutely beautiful. I must visit Japan one day and experience this for myself.
@minimalistmomo8687
@minimalistmomo8687 Год назад
we tea masters have nothing but pure appreciation and gratitude to these farmers that brought us our ceremonial teas to enjoy and share. Thank you. May you all be well and happy.
@boszwollocks9557
@boszwollocks9557 Год назад
Jintaro needs to be protected at all costs. Working hard but always good sprits and smiling
@livewellwitheds6885
@livewellwitheds6885 Год назад
I had the absolute privilege of experiencing a matcha tea ceremony in a temple in Japan once. it was absolutely incredible
@raerae734
@raerae734 Год назад
I lived near Uji for many years, and bought Uji matcha a few times/enjoyed it at tea ceremony, but I never visited Uji itself...I'll fix that next time I visit Japan! Matcha at tea ceremony is so good and was the first way I tried matcha. Anything flavoured with matcha, like cake and icecream, tasted awful and sickly to me when I tried it, so I think I was ruined for matcha-flavour by trying ceremonial matcha first! Try it if you get the chance. 😄
@mymatchaaddiction
@mymatchaaddiction Год назад
That's awesome, I', super jealous! I agree that some of the best matcha comes from Uji. Visiting Japan is on my bucket list for sure
@pilotswife06
@pilotswife06 Год назад
My grandmother is from Japan, and so I grew up drinking green tea and matcha. I cannot stand matcha flavored things! Just plain hot matcha is all I need.
@watrgrl2
@watrgrl2 Год назад
It would be so awesome to be able to experience this man’s ceremonial Matcha. Ive had regular matcha in sweet milk tea and deserts like Vanilla matcha ice cream but I’ve never seen ceremonial matcha in the western US. I heard they dont export it because it’s so dear cost wise and not made in quantities enough to meet the demands in Japan. I love the taste of green tea especially iced and with toasted rice it’s exquisite.
@someone-uz4mi
@someone-uz4mi Год назад
Not sure if what I had was ceremonial matcha, but I do know some Japanese culture festivals have tea ceremonies open for anyone to participate in. That's how I found out about matcha in the first place.
@lid6963
@lid6963 Год назад
you can definitely order some off of amazon. Its not cheap but its worth experiencing. It has such a beautiful natural sweetness. I don't like to use it in blended drinks. But if i do use it in blended drinks i try to go light on the sweetness. the color is beautiful and again its worth trying.
@Gersberms
@Gersberms Год назад
I've never had it in foods that I recall. I've had ceremonial matcha prepared for me by a Japanese girl, in Europe. It was a simple, enjoyable and mindful experience. The Japanese have mindfulness embedded in their culture and they appreciate simple things more often than we do.
@JustiaFiat
@JustiaFiat Год назад
@@lid6963 Amazon matcha is shit. You can order directly from Marukyu Koyamaen and many other traditional Japanese producers though. It will probably even be cheaper than rip off 'ceremonial' Amazon matcha.
@lordgarion514
@lordgarion514 Год назад
@@JustiaFiat You realize that you can buy that brand on Amazon, right?
@harithavallipinisetti
@harithavallipinisetti Год назад
They say ‘when you are fully satisfied with your work, you can’t do better ‘. Jintaro san literally living on that principle. Love the way he respect his work and at the same time he’s always willing to improve his work than the last time. That attitude really inspired me. Thank you Jintaro san.
@ollysombrero8427
@ollysombrero8427 Год назад
I feel like a cup of his handmade matcha a day is the key to immortality.
@frozendroplet6868
@frozendroplet6868 Год назад
I wish I had like 10% of his work ethic lmao
@samsonsoturian6013
@samsonsoturian6013 Год назад
He's just making tea but he's clearly having fun...
@sansserif2559
@sansserif2559 Год назад
Ceremonial grade also varies with the retailer. I've found my local specialty tea shop let the quality slide. The best place I've been able to get decent matcha outside of Japan was by being or knowing someone who was a student of a tea school like Urasenke buying through them and drinking matcha in class. The distribution to these schools is a long standing relationship with growers and where the term "Ceremonial " is truly applicable.
@MrMikkyn
@MrMikkyn Год назад
His passion for matcha is so beautiful. So much joy in the simplicity of the beautiful flavour of ceremonial green tea powder. Joy in the little things.
@orboakin8074
@orboakin8074 Год назад
As I watch this, I cannot help but be reminded of Deaimon recipe for happiness. I get the same vibe of balancing the old and the new i.e. the younger generation embracing the traditional methods and practices of their families and forebears while also refining them with modern methods and sensibilities. Jintaro as the new generation owner of his family's tea business reminds me of that. Japan really excels at showing that societal progress can be made while respecting tradition and keeping it alive for future generations.
@BostonRobb
@BostonRobb Год назад
Its an art, but also, there is an art to his joy in producing this matcha. May have been more fascinating to watch the joy of matcha.
@LL-bl8hd
@LL-bl8hd Год назад
This video was beautiful. It really shows how matcha is an art and a craft as well as a natural product. Seeing Jintaro's devotion was truly inspiring.
@richardxu7251
@richardxu7251 Год назад
While ceremonial matcha is expensive, it isn't overly so since you use very little each cup. $40/oz is $1.4/g. I tend to use 2g per cup for thin tea, which makes a cup of matcha $3. That's even cheaper than a tall latte at Starbucks :)
@jasminecontreras7341
@jasminecontreras7341 3 месяца назад
what brand?
@peacefulpie9660
@peacefulpie9660 Год назад
I grew a couple of matcha plants and one time I tried making high quality matcha, it took a lot of commitment but I did it. It most definitely didn’t taste as good as the professional’s matcha but it was still fun to try!
@pauldangvu9720
@pauldangvu9720 Год назад
It’s absolutely crazy how so many things in Japanese culture are expensive. Kudos to Japanese people who work their butts off to produce high quality products.
@gibsonflyingv2820
@gibsonflyingv2820 Год назад
This makes me so happy as a big fan of matcha ceremony and traditional Japanese arts and crafts in general. I've always wanted to see a matcha production episode on this series! I've been waiting. So glad to see this given the respect it deserves.
@johnster02
@johnster02 Год назад
0:33 look at the first few frames of the title sequence. once you see the letters come in you never unsee it
@anat01
@anat01 Год назад
you can tell her is quite happy with his work, proud even if he isn't 100% pleased with the tea watching this video has certainly helped me appreciate matcha even more- would love to one day taste a cup of ceremonial matcha
@DeanRyan0241
@DeanRyan0241 Год назад
I can feel the passion transmitting to me with joy from the way he describing his work. How lovely, would love to experience his farm one day!
@francescapaolaplicato4875
@francescapaolaplicato4875 Год назад
Matcha is not really my cup of tea (pun intended), but what I saw in this video makes me appreciate so much working with this product every day, now I'm more aware of what it is and how precious it is. Thank you for sharing this
@cornbeef
@cornbeef Год назад
I find the Japanese language so beautiful to listen to, I really wish I could speak it! I really hope his business does well and that one day he achieves his perfect matcha. I made myself a cup to drink whilst watching this :)
@acidset
@acidset Год назад
Never too late to learn
@cornbeef
@cornbeef Год назад
@@acidset I’ve been trying, definitely a lot harder now I’m older! Need to keep at it
@jenm1
@jenm1 Год назад
What we find beautiful is just based on who’s in power honestly.
@tomatodo375
@tomatodo375 Год назад
To my Japanese ears too, his speech sounds beautiful because of his elegant Kyoto-accent and his own positive character.
@idontneedaname318
@idontneedaname318 Год назад
@@tomatodo375 I was wondering what kind of accent that was it sounded different somehow
@vulcanprincess1584
@vulcanprincess1584 Год назад
i'm sad he felt pressured into the family business, but happy he seems to love what he does. i wish the rest of the world would adopt some of the values places like his business has
@altair5072
@altair5072 Год назад
it makes me happy to see someone who genuinely cares about their craft
@TylerClow
@TylerClow Год назад
He seems like such a genuinely sweet person, and the matcha looks delicious!
@dafish5306
@dafish5306 Год назад
My grandma is a Japanese ceremonial instructor and I can confirm that the level of complexity higher quality matcha brings is worth its price 👍
@SilverGears
@SilverGears Год назад
Never satisfied, yet always striving for his perfect ideal, what a craftsmen, so much love.
@aishikamitra
@aishikamitra Год назад
I can almost smell the plants, this makes me want to visit Darjeeling and stay there for long. Also, the cover method is quite similar to how betel leaves are grown here in India.
@aishikamitra
@aishikamitra Год назад
@Glurp puffloid Sadly, I don’t really enjoy flower-based teas. Yes, there was once a henna plant in the backyard of my grandmother’s house. She used to pick some leaves every month and dry the leaves to turn into mehendi to be applied to the hair. Dried henna truly smells marvellous. As for tea plants, yes, the smell of them varies based on the place they’re grown. I have felt the difference between the tea gardens. Someday I would indeed like to visit Japan and get some bags of matcha. :P
@archeofutura_4606
@archeofutura_4606 Год назад
Darjeeling produces the best black teas in the world imo. I want to visit there so bad. Also if you're interested in covered green teas, the Uji region produces some of the finest. Kabusecha and the way more expensive Gyokuro are honestly some of the best green teas one can find
@Rich77UK
@Rich77UK Год назад
Brilliant to see such love and passion to produce a high quality product. I wish this guy and his business the very best of future imaginable.
@DemstarAus
@DemstarAus Год назад
It's fascinating to me that all tea is one species of plant. There are thousands of species of coffee trees bred for flavour, size, yeild, pest resistance, drought resistance, and a number of other factors. Tea ends up differently due to picking, timing, and processing. Both are very complex across the scope of results but for different reasons.
@LoveAndSnapple
@LoveAndSnapple Год назад
"What a strong and spirited young man! He must be a strapping 22 years of age!" "I've been in the tea business for 18 years." @_@
@redbutterfly88
@redbutterfly88 Год назад
Japan really can make everything artfully. Im amazed by the diffrence of plastic netting to wide straw shed. Wow
@tessiepinkman
@tessiepinkman Год назад
What a wonderful man! Every word he speaks seeps of love and respect for his profession.
@heavencooki6817
@heavencooki6817 7 месяцев назад
I enjoy ceremonial macha a lot, I love how calming it is and how your hand moves and how it just looks overall in a cup, it’s just so calming and when you drink it. I just imagine myself laying on the grass in a middle of a farm field
@Nunu_12
@Nunu_12 Год назад
This was so beautiful to watch. He seemed lit from within as he showed us his passion for his craft.
@sarahferguson0
@sarahferguson0 Год назад
I have so much respect for Japanese culture. They are willing to go to great lengths to produce amazing quality. ❤️
@gpeddino
@gpeddino Год назад
I like how they left the "itadakimasu" in the subtitles (8:11).
@m.orionyt
@m.orionyt Год назад
I love this matcha man, I’d spend hours just listening to him talk about his work
@turobot8803
@turobot8803 Год назад
I'm always happy when cultures cross around the world through food.
@robbieaulia6462
@robbieaulia6462 Год назад
I love how just how happy he is with his work
@richhoward7050
@richhoward7050 Год назад
This was well done. I’ve imported tea for several years, toured the fields and production facilities around Uji and surrounding area, and can say this was well researched and presented. Most “ceremonial grade” matcha does not come from this calibre of farm and producer
@m-z-nzedjali4043
@m-z-nzedjali4043 Год назад
man this proves when you put time in somthing from heart and care about details it makes the difference.
@eerielconstantine5051
@eerielconstantine5051 Год назад
His outlook is so driven yet peaceful
@starksenterprises
@starksenterprises Год назад
I now fully appreciate the price I pay for a 30g tin now... especially if it comes from such a process including grinding 40g for 1hr via hand mill. Dare I say, I'd be under-paying... surely his method is among the higher priced! Informative vid.👌🏾
@edwardkay3193
@edwardkay3193 Год назад
Dude was on his way to bat when you guys called him for an interview.
@diegogarcia-serna9773
@diegogarcia-serna9773 4 месяца назад
It's incredible seeing this farmer's dedication to the quality of his product. Inspirational.
@lepidolite2009
@lepidolite2009 19 часов назад
Jintaro seems so happy. he just find pleasure in putting out a quality product. nice
@arthurwittmann6242
@arthurwittmann6242 Год назад
it's exceptionally wide spread on the south most state of Brazil. So much so, the drink, chimarrão, is a common substitute for coffee on the workplace.
@alissonvert3552
@alissonvert3552 Год назад
but chimarrao isnt green tea(camellia sinensis) it's yerba mate(ilex paraguariensis)
@desumichan6191
@desumichan6191 Год назад
That ain't a green tea.
@sophroniel
@sophroniel Год назад
Love this narrator. She matches the tone of the video so well
@magicknight13
@magicknight13 9 месяцев назад
Wow, he is so incredibly passionate and dedicated. Super inspiring and really makes me appreciate matcha even more!
@simonsaysism
@simonsaysism Год назад
I love this guy, so cheerful and hardworking, proud of his craft yet always wanting to improve
@joshuabeech-maher5924
@joshuabeech-maher5924 Год назад
I bought some low grade matcha from the store once and man, it was bitter but it goes great with cardamom, a very small amount of sugar and salt, clove and orange blossom. Potion 🤤
@teaformeplease
@teaformeplease Год назад
Thank you for highlighting tea producers. One thing to note is that matcha doesn't actually dissolve. It's a suspension. 😊🍜
@pandalover555
@pandalover555 28 дней назад
Such a beautiful and complex process, thank you for sharing this craft! 🍵 I’m happy to see Jintaro continuing this tradition and having so much passion!
@ScrewyDriverTheMan
@ScrewyDriverTheMan Год назад
He's so polite and well spoken, and a great explainer too. What an interesting process and tradition, so much hard work! And his dedication and his own sense of high expectations is what is creating the incredibly high quality, which is awesome for us John Q Public consumers!!!
@kornelweber5879
@kornelweber5879 Год назад
About increasing the market during the years... I have to agree as a Polish, a citizen of a country where the amount of natives that destinguish a good Matcha you can count on fingers of a retired carpenter. Why do I tell that? Quite a silly reason, since the markets started to introduce matcha-flavored products (Polish can recognize the Chocolate that was introduced in Biedronka discount market like 1-2 years ago).
@moyamatcha
@moyamatcha Год назад
Hi! We agree that matcha is not very popular in Poland. We recommend checking out our website and social media accounts as we are one of the first matcha brands in Poland. Our matcha also comes from Uji, Japan and it's organic. We try to educate people about this amazing tea and how important it is to try good quality product.
@jai6954
@jai6954 Год назад
Business Insider : why is it so expensive Me : Is it from Japan..??
@florians9949
@florians9949 Год назад
Because it is a century old art that takes years to master?
@zohaibtariq7351
@zohaibtariq7351 Год назад
Because everything in japan is quality??
@UMADBRO64
@UMADBRO64 Год назад
@@florians9949 Growing tea takes years to master? Damn dude, truly there must be a mastery to putting plant in ground, watering plant, picking leaves, drying leaves, and grinding them into powder.
@florians9949
@florians9949 Год назад
@@UMADBRO64 not realy, more a general statement. Everytime this chanel has a video about Japan, you can be sure that the sentence “this is a century old arts that takes years to master” is going to show itself.
@tember7825
@tember7825 Год назад
Its so cool seeing this guy work, he loves his job and that makes the product even more satisfying
@lanceslance2930
@lanceslance2930 Год назад
This guy has great passion for what he does at least on camera. He almost seems excited each batch.
@Nurg1982
@Nurg1982 Год назад
Is there a way to purchase his matcha directly? We buy ceremonial grade matcha, but I'm keen to try his specifically. I went to his/their website, and it's seems he only sells in a physical store type of manner
@AsuraOmni
@AsuraOmni Год назад
"Physically it is very hard, but mentally it is fun." 2:00 As a person with chronic illness and pain, I'm both jealous and so happy that there are people out there that are able to experience that feeling. What a blessing for him, I hope he has nothing but success.
@Jade_Coeurl
@Jade_Coeurl Год назад
I want to buy all my tea from this company! Jintaro is so joyful and wise in what he does!
@imacuser101
@imacuser101 Год назад
Love the main guy in this video! Super happy guy and full of energy hope he never changes!
@dreamcatcherpone
@dreamcatcherpone Год назад
In a few more years, that furnace will be 100 years old, and turn into a Tsukumogami. THEN he'll be satisfied with the flavor
@lindseyloo6619
@lindseyloo6619 Год назад
What a wonderful person🥺 i bet you can taste the love he pours into those plants
@arelendil7
@arelendil7 Год назад
It’s beautiful to see his passion for the job! Maybe he can turn the straw of the top shade into a fertilizer for the soil later on!
@iamabread9614
@iamabread9614 Год назад
I'm Japanese and my grandma came from a rich family. She was thought so many things including doing a proper tea ceremony. When I was young she'll be hired to fo tea ceremonies and she brings me with her. I tasted her tea and I was shocked by the taste but now 28 went around the world tasted so many things, imagine tasting something so delicious that whenever you eat a food similar to it just taste worse, that's what happened to me. Now whenever I taste Macha it was never the same because it reminds me of my grandma and her dedication in doing it. Plus it was so good like I was in a grass field sleeping and feeling the wind, yeah I was like goddamn did I just did a food war.
@WormBurger
@WormBurger Год назад
I love the baseball like uniform buddy is wearing. lol
@ZuraJura
@ZuraJura Год назад
I'll always criticize expensive food without great taste like caviar, truffle and gold food. But things like this enhance the taste I will always respect it.
@memeworksanimations2689
@memeworksanimations2689 Год назад
Truffle tastes amazing tho
@SHOPETSY
@SHOPETSY Год назад
What a charming, quietly peaceful little corner of our amazing world. So great to see the beauty and tradition.
@kvibes7714
@kvibes7714 Год назад
What a beautiful video. Jintaro you are amazing and an inspiration to the nation! Thankyou for your effort and labour of work, you truly are appreciated 😇
@treetop2842
@treetop2842 Год назад
If I was into making movies, how great would it be to have a story like this to inspire a story about defending what is sacred, with good winning? A humble farmer has people jealous of his technology and work, covering his machine, and he successfully defends it from the envious... I dunno seems like an overdone story but the /visuals/ of the movie would be unique and respectful to Japanese humility and culture. 🤔
@nnnnnn496
@nnnnnn496 Год назад
High?
@melvinsaji2805
@melvinsaji2805 Год назад
Wonderful 😊
@02b6a4
@02b6a4 2 месяца назад
We are witnessing a young matcha master in the making! I was in Uji last year and brought back some ceremonial grade matcha, which has been such a treat. Will definitely go back for another visit this charming town.
@watrgrl2
@watrgrl2 Год назад
Business insider you are such an awesome channel! And I love the narrator! Her voice is so soothing and easily understandable.
@no_just_relax
@no_just_relax Год назад
Business insider: its expensive Me: no its Japanese
@jacintaschneider4145
@jacintaschneider4145 Год назад
Do they ever show how to buy the products in these videos? I wpuld love to try some of this matcha!
@westsidesmitty1
@westsidesmitty1 Год назад
Yes! I would love to know the name brand. I treasure my current ''go-to'', but am always looking to try one grown and prepared with so much tradition and love.
@fullahrhada1153
@fullahrhada1153 9 месяцев назад
Love this insider video about matcha!
@BubbleTeaKristin
@BubbleTeaKristin 27 дней назад
This was a wonderful video to watch! ❤ Thank you for making it!
@anmnou
@anmnou Год назад
I would greatly appreciate a Matcha brand recommendation! I bought what I thought was a decent, more expensive one but I cannot get over the algae taste. I even bought the little whisk and would love to try making it again and actually enjoying it.
@jessiec668
@jessiec668 Год назад
Koyamaen is good if you are looking for high-grade matcha. They are the tea of choice for several tea ceremony schools. However, it is quite pricey and probably not something most people could afford to drink on a daily basis. For more affordable tea, my husband (who is really into matcha) buys from Den's Tea quite often.
@ArtTheSinger
@ArtTheSinger Год назад
I wish they would’ve made it easy to buy on the website. They should’ve known that when it aired in the US that people would want to buy the product.. They probably lost thousands in sells.
@Whocaressss333
@Whocaressss333 6 месяцев назад
I love how passionate they are with what they do🤍✨
@raphaeldienzo9514
@raphaeldienzo9514 Год назад
Now I want to work as a farmer on his farm! I really love matcha since schoolgrade! When I was in 5th grade, that was the first time I taste it. And it was such a delightful taste, that bitterness and aroma filled my tounge.
@ZOCCOK
@ZOCCOK Год назад
Most of the Japanese stuff in this series has futile and meaningless reasons for being expensive and don't even seem worth half their price (Bamboo Salt, Mango, etc). But this one is one of the few Japanese features in this series that seems worth their price ❤️ No futile efforts done in order to make the product seem rare or exclusive and no meaningless health or taste reasons for it's expense. Just pure quality and results ❤️❤️❤️
@minjeonglee3953
@minjeonglee3953 Год назад
Bamboo salt is Korean, Just clearing that up ^^ But I agree its pretty pricey
@mafinalmessagechangedaworl7131
And I assume your Are the types of person to push for modernist architecture over historical or classical buildings all for your so called “function”
@nadheem420
@nadheem420 Год назад
@@mafinalmessagechangedaworl7131 yes modern exteriors are worse than licking feaces but to make mango 10 times a normal mangos price just for the right colour or shape is just too much to even watch
@peanutbutterpirate314
@peanutbutterpirate314 Год назад
@@nadheem420 wtf are you talking about ?
@Sohailali1
@Sohailali1 Год назад
Omg I agree 💯 percent
@BakaNeBaka
@BakaNeBaka Год назад
These videos don't even need to be any longer than the time it takes to say 'Japan' since it is instantly logical that a Japanese product will most certainly be pricey since the tiniest of details would be paid attention to and that totally justifies the price tag for whatever it may be...
@nazo7090
@nazo7090 Год назад
I agree Japan's work ethics are just the best, while brutal and tiresome, but for people who love their job makes the hard parts of the work not that bothersome and the easier parts all the more enjoyable. (That goes for any job really)
@williamclaflin7863
@williamclaflin7863 Год назад
Quality over chinas quantity in tools you can really tell the diffrence
@rahmadrenaldi2624
@rahmadrenaldi2624 Год назад
@@williamclaflin7863 if it's engine or electrical component I would agree, quality it the priority. But if its a food product that waste too much resources to produce a tiny amount of goods just because someone made an arbitrary standard, then just made a subpar quality product if its mean that it would use less resources.
@lkc404
@lkc404 Месяц назад
This guy seems genuinely happy about his profession and I envy it
@fumomofumosarum5893
@fumomofumosarum5893 Год назад
Kintaro seems so passionate about his calling, it's amazing. Very impressive. I wish everyone could feel like this about their work. : )
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