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Sakurayu

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Japanese sakura tea sakurayu


Sakurayu (Japanese: 桜湯), Sakura-cha (桜茶), lit. "cherry blossom tea", is a Japanese infusion created by seeping pickled cherry blossoms with boiled water. This combination becomes a type of herbal tea, and has been enjoyed in East Asian culture for many generations.

Contents

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Sakurayu cherry blossom tea


Preparation

Sakurayu Sakura Tea Tasting Cherry Blossoms Bois de Jasmin

The main ingredient, cherry blossoms petals, are harvested when the cherry trees bloom from mid to late spring. After the calyxes are removed, the petals are then pickled in plum vinegar and salt and the product subsequently dried. The dried cherry blossoms are then stored or sealed in tea packets and sold.

Sakurayu httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In order to produce sakurayu, a few such dried, salt-pickled blossoms must be sprinkled into a cup of hot water. Once covered in hot water, the collapsed petals unfurl and float. The herbal tea is then allowed to steep until the flavor reaches its desired intensity. The resulting drink tastes slightly salty.

When sakurayu is served

Sakurayu Japanese Cherry blossoms tea cherry petals of tea SAKURACHA

There is a Japanese expression "ocha wo nigosu." "ocha" is tea, and "nigosu" means to make unclear. So the term itself will literally translate to to make the tea cloudy. However, the meaning of this expression is to "be evasive," "be vague," or "non-committal." This denotation is why green tea is not served at weddings, but "Sakura-yu" is served as it represents "beginning," which is most appropriate for a wedding.

Sakurayu Cherry blossom captures the flavor of spring The Japan Times

References

Sakurayu Wikipedia