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  2. Yamamotoyama (company) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamamotoyama_(company)

    Yamamotoyama (Japanese: 山本山) is a Japanese tea and seaweed manufacturer which traces its company's roots to 1690, claiming to be the oldest tea company in the world. [1] [2] The company began as a tea shop in Nihonbashi, and pioneered the production of gyokuro green tea in 1835. Yamamotoyama expanded to the U.S. in 1975. [1]

  3. Yamamotoyama - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yamamotoyama

    Yamamotoyama may refer to: Yamamotoyama (tea company), a Japanese tea company; Yamamotoyama Ryūta This page was last edited on 27 March 2024, at 02:37 (UTC). ...

  4. Gyokuro - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gyokuro

    Gyokuro is one of the most expensive types of sencha available in Japan. [1] The name was originally the product name of the tea made by Yamamotoyama. The tea was first discovered by Yamamotoyama's sixth owner, Yamamoto Kahei, in 1835 (Tenpō year 6). [17] The process was completed by another manufacturer at the start of the Meiji period.

  5. Easy Serving Espresso Pod - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Easy_Serving_Espresso_Pod

    E.S.E. pod with appropriate portafilter. The Easy Serving Espresso pod (E.S.E. pod), is a small packed coffee pod with a paper filter covering for use in a non-grinding espresso machine. The E.S.E. standard was created by Italian Illy in the 1970s and is maintained by the "Consortium for the Development and the Protection of the E.S.E. Standard."

  6. Single-serve coffee container - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Single-serve_coffee_container

    A single-serve coffee container is a container filled with coffee grounds, used in coffee brewing to prepare only enough coffee for a single portion. Single-serve coffee containers come in various formats and materials, often either as hard and soft pods or pads made of filter paper, or hard aluminium and plastic capsules .

  7. Senchadō - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sencha

    Basket for transporting Sencha tea utensils (Chakago or Teiran), made out of rattan, by Hayakawa Shōkosai I, ca. 1877–80s Chinese-style charcoal basket (sairō-sumitori) for Sencha tea ceremony, made out of bamboo, 19th century. Senchadō uses utensils which are necessary to perform tea. Some of them are used in macha tea as well.