Type | Nokcha (green tea) |
---|---|
Country of origin | Korea |
Ingredients | First-flush tea leaves |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 우전 |
---|---|
Hanja | 雨前 |
Revised Romanization | ujeon |
McCune–Reischauer | ujŏn |
IPA | [u.dʑʌn] |
Alternative name | |
Hangul | 첫물차 |
Hanja | 첫물茶 |
Revised Romanization | cheonmul-cha |
McCune–Reischauer | ch'ŏnmul-ch'a |
IPA | [tɕʰʌn.mul.tɕʰa] |
Ujeon (우전; 雨前; lit. "pre-rain"), also called cheonmul-cha (첫물차; lit. "first flush tea"), [1] refers to nokcha (green tea) made of young, tender leaves and buds hand-plucked before gogu ("grain rain", 20–21 April). [2] [3] The delicate tea has sweet, soft, and subtle flavor profile, [4] and is best steeped at a temperature of 50 °C (122 °F). [5]
Korean ujeon is equivalent to Chinese mingqian ("pre- Qingming") and Japanese shincha ("new tea"). [6]
Type | Nokcha (green tea) |
---|---|
Country of origin | Korea |
Ingredients | First-flush tea leaves |
Korean name | |
Hangul | 우전 |
---|---|
Hanja | 雨前 |
Revised Romanization | ujeon |
McCune–Reischauer | ujŏn |
IPA | [u.dʑʌn] |
Alternative name | |
Hangul | 첫물차 |
Hanja | 첫물茶 |
Revised Romanization | cheonmul-cha |
McCune–Reischauer | ch'ŏnmul-ch'a |
IPA | [tɕʰʌn.mul.tɕʰa] |
Ujeon (우전; 雨前; lit. "pre-rain"), also called cheonmul-cha (첫물차; lit. "first flush tea"), [1] refers to nokcha (green tea) made of young, tender leaves and buds hand-plucked before gogu ("grain rain", 20–21 April). [2] [3] The delicate tea has sweet, soft, and subtle flavor profile, [4] and is best steeped at a temperature of 50 °C (122 °F). [5]
Korean ujeon is equivalent to Chinese mingqian ("pre- Qingming") and Japanese shincha ("new tea"). [6]