Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel

Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel

(Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu Sencha Fizz)

(0 Bewertungen)
Portionen
2
Portionsgröße
Ein hohes Glas (300 ml)
Vorbereitungszeit
20 Minuten
Kochzeit
2 hr 10 Minuten
Gesamtzeit
2 hr 30 Minuten
Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel
Land
Schwierigkeitsgrad
Stimmen
0
Seitenaufrufe
177
Aktualisieren
Dezember 02, 2025

Zutaten

Nährwerte

  • Portionen: 2
  • Portionsgröße: Ein hohes Glas (300 ml)
  • Calories: 80 kcal
  • Carbohydrates: 0 g
  • Protein: 0.6 g
  • Fat: 0.1 g
  • Fiber: 0.3 g
  • Sugar: 17 g
  • Sodium: 12 mg
  • Cholesterol: 0 mg
  • Calcium: 18 mg
  • Iron: 0.4 mg

Anweisungen

  • 1 - Rinse and chill water (optional bamboo charcoal):
    Rinse the bamboo charcoal stick under running water, then submerge it in your filtered water for a few minutes to soften edges and lightly smooth the water’s taste. Remove, pat dry, and reserve.
  • 2 - Make bamboo leaf simple syrup:
    Combine 40 ml hot water with 40 g sugar and 1 small pinch dried bamboo leaves. Stir to dissolve, steep 5 minutes, then strain and cool. Refrigerate to chill quickly.
  • 3 - Set up Kyoto-style bamboo drip:
    Place sencha in the drip filter (use a fine mesh or paper). Load the tower: ice/water reservoir on top, dripper adjusted for 1 drop/1.5–2 seconds, filter with tea in the middle, carafe below.
  • 4 - Slow-drip the sencha:
    Add 600 ml cold filtered water (use the charcoal-treated water if used) with a few ice cubes to the reservoir. Start the drip at 1 drop every 1.5–2 seconds. Let it extract undisturbed for about 2 hours to yield a clear, sweet sencha concentrate.
  • 5 - Prep Glasses and Garnish:
    Chill two tall glasses. Curl cucumber ribbons inside the glass walls. Lightly slap shiso leaves between your palms to awaken aroma. Prepare yuzu twists and a small pinch of sea salt.
  • 6 - Build the Breeze:
    In each chilled glass, add ice. Add 20 ml bamboo leaf syrup and 15 ml yuzu juice. Pour 120 ml cold-dripped sencha concentrate over the ice.
  • 7 - Top and finish:
    Top each glass with 150 ml sparkling water. Add a tiny pinch of sea salt if using. Lightly dust a pinch of sifted matcha over the top or rim. Express yuzu peel over the glass and drop in.

Mehr über: Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze Yuzu-Sencha Sprudel

A sparkling yuzu-sencha mocktail slow-dripped through bamboo, cucumber-cool with a whisper of matcha—Kyoto technique distilled into a refreshing, zen glass.

Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze: The Story in a Glass

The Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze celebrates the elegance of Japanese slow-drip technique and the crystalline freshness of green tea. Built on a base of Kyoto-style cold-dripped sencha, it layers yuzu’s bright citrus, a whisper of herbaceous bamboo-leaf sweetness, and sparkling water for lift. The result is a serene, zero-proof drink that tastes like a cool breeze moving through a bamboo grove—clean, floral, and quietly complex.

Why Kyoto Drip?

Kyoto-style drip (sometimes seen in dramatic glass towers) traditionally prepares cold brew coffee by allowing water to fall in a slow, steady cadence. Applied to sencha, the method coaxes sweetness with minimal bitterness, preserving fine top notes: steamed greens, spring flowers, and nori-like umami. Unlike immersion cold brew, the dropwise extraction minimizes agitation, resulting in striking clarity and a satin texture—perfect for delicate citrus accents like yuzu.

Ingredients That Sing

  • Sencha: Choose a fresh, vibrant lot—look for deep green needles and a sweet, grassy aroma. Gyokuro yields a silkier, umami-rich profile if you prefer more depth.
  • Yuzu juice: Its perfume bridges lemon, mandarin, and floral notes; a little goes a long way. Bottled 100% yuzu is fine when fresh fruit is unavailable.
  • Bamboo leaf simple syrup: Infusing simple syrup with dried bamboo leaves creates a transparent, green-herbal sweetness that complements tea without overshadowing it.
  • Sparkling water: Moderate carbonation keeps the mousse gentle, supporting aromatics rather than blasting them away.

Technique Tips

  • Drip rate: Aim for 1 drop every 1.5–2 seconds. Too fast yields thin, under-extracted tea; too slow can dull aromatics. Adjust the valve as the reservoir warms.
  • Water choice: Soft, low-mineral water allows sweetness to shine. An optional quick soak with bamboo charcoal can subtly smooth the mouthfeel.
  • Chill everything: Cold glassware and ice preserve the tea’s perfume. Clear ice minimizes dilution and maintains visual clarity.

Flavor Architecture

This drink balances three axes: delicate tea, high-tone citrus, and faint sweetness. The bamboo-leaf syrup adds roundness versus overt candy sweetness; yuzu contributes aroma first, acidity second. A tiny pinch of sea salt heightens perceived sweetness and pulls forward hidden floral notes in sencha—use sparingly so the effect is invisible yet transformative.

Variations and Substitutions

  • Tea: Try gyokuro for plush umami, or a light-roasted hojicha for a toasty, nutty twist (expect a deeper bronze color).
  • Citrus: Substitute Meyer lemon and a touch of grapefruit zest when yuzu is scarce.
  • Syrup: If bamboo leaves are unavailable, infuse simple syrup with lemongrass or green shiso for a related green-herbal lift.
  • Sparkle: For a dryer, aperitif-style profile, swap sparkling water with a light tonic; reduce syrup accordingly.
  • Boozy option: Add 20–25 ml gin, rice shochu, or a crisp junmai ginjo sake per glass for a subtle, botanical cocktail.

Serving and Presentation

Layer cucumber ribbons along the glass to echo bamboo’s slender elegance. A dusting of matcha reads as a mountain mist over a green valley—use just a hint so it perfumes without clouding the drink. Expressing yuzu peel at the end adds a dazzling aromatic pop.

Cultural Notes

Kyoto’s refined culinary culture prizes restraint and seasonality. This drink nods to that heritage: a minimalist technique, premium tea, and a focus on texture and aroma rather than overt sweetness. The bamboo motif—both symbolic and literal—stands for resilience, simplicity, and harmony with nature.

Make-Ahead and Scaling

  • Drip concentrate keeps 48 hours refrigerated in a sealed bottle. Make a larger batch for gatherings, then build each glass to order with syrup, yuzu, and sparkle.
  • For speed, an immersion cold brew (1:50, 6–8 hours in the fridge) is acceptable, though the Kyoto drip’s clarity and finesse are unrivaled.

Final Thoughts

Kyoto Bamboo Drip Breeze is a meditation in motion: patient drip, restrained sweetness, and an aromatic finish that invites another sip. It’s a modern, zero-proof expression of Japanese craft—quiet, precise, and deeply refreshing.

Bewerte das Rezept

Kommentar und Rezension hinzufügen

Benutzerrezensionen

Basierend auf 0 Rezensionen
5 Stern
0
4 Stern
0
3 Stern
0
2 Stern
0
1 Stern
0
Kommentar und Rezension hinzufügen
Wir werden Ihre E-Mail-Adresse niemals an Dritte weitergeben.