We are happy to announce that our popular Nozomi Loose-leaf Japanese green tea is available on Amazon. Click here to see it on Amazon.
We have created a brand new 1-minute video about this product. Please see:
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Story Behind the Tube Design
The design of the Nozomi tea package was selected by "you", yes, our own customers. (Thank you very much for your help!)
Here is a blog post about the design selection you helped us make and the result of the package design contest.
We got #1 New Release On Amazon Again!
We are excited to tell you that thanks to YOU, we got #1 New Release on Amazon again. When we released our matcha, we were also #1 (read more here), so this is the second time for us.
Buy Our Nozomi On Amazon
Click here or the image below to buy our Nozomi on Amazon.
Please make sure that you select our Nozomi, which is in the image shown above, at checkout.
If you are an Amazon Prime member, you know you get your 2-day shipping free, so please take advantage of it.
FAQs about Nozomi Kabusecha and Shaded Tea
Why is press and industry recognition important for Japanese tea brands?
Nozomi is JPCo's kabusecha (semi-shaded sencha) — partially shaded for 10-20 days before harvest, producing a flavor profile between standard sencha and gyokuro. Amazon availability makes this distinctive style accessible to broader audiences. Press features signal industry recognition and broader cultural relevance beyond the brand's core customers, helping build credibility with audiences who don't yet know the brand directly.
That said, press coverage isn't the same as quality. Some heavily-covered brands produce mediocre tea; some excellent specialty tea brands have minimal press presence because they prioritize product over PR. Press coverage is one signal among many.
For customers, press features can be a useful discovery mechanism — articles featuring tea brands often introduce readers to specialty brands they wouldn't find otherwise. The discovery value works in both directions.
How can I tell if a Japanese tea brand has genuine quality vs. just marketing presence?
Three signals. First, supply-chain transparency — does the brand disclose specific farm origins, cultivars, harvest dates? Second, product breadth — does the brand offer multiple tea types with depth in each, or just a few products with marketing-heavy descriptions? Third, customer review consistency — do customer reviews on third-party platforms (not just the brand's own site) consistently report quality?
Brands with marketing-heavy presence but thin product information are usually less reliable than brands with detailed product information and modest marketing. The information-density of the product description signals what the brand actually focuses on.
Another reliable check: how does the brand handle customer service questions about specific products? Brands that can answer detailed questions about cultivar, origin, harvest, and brewing parameters know what they're selling. Brands that respond with generic marketing language don't.
What's the difference between retail availability and brand quality?
Mass retail availability (Amazon, supermarkets) doesn't mean quality. Many specialty Japanese tea brands appear on Amazon but the products are often the entry-level versions of the brand's lineup. The premium products often stay on the brand's own website. The Sencha Lover Gift Set exemplifies this — direct-from-brand purchase typically gets the best prices on the highest-quality products.
Conversely, hard-to-find boutique-only brands aren't automatically better. Some excellent Japanese tea is widely available; some less-good tea is artificially scarce. Availability isn't a quality signal in either direction.
Practical: judge tea brands on actual product quality rather than retail-channel signals. Direct purchase from brand websites usually offers the best prices and selection; Amazon and supermarket distribution offer convenience but often limited selection.
Are awards from tea competitions reliable indicators of quality?
Awards from credible tea-industry organizations (Global Tea Championship, World Tea Awards, regional Japanese tea competitions) reflect actual quality assessment by trained tasters — meaningful signal of tea quality. Multiple awards over multiple years strengthen the signal further.
Less reliable: generic "award-winning" claims without specifying which awards. Some brands win minor awards and lean on the marketing value; some skip competitions entirely while producing excellent tea.
Practical: use awards as one input among several. A multi-year award winner is probably worth trying; a single award from an obscure competition isn't decisive. Combine with direct customer reviews, sample purchases, and your own taste preferences.
How do tea brands like JPCo balance traditional craft with modern customer expectations?
Traditional craft on the product side, modern operations on the customer side. The tea sourcing relationships, farm-direct supply chains, and cultivar selections follow traditional Japanese tea-industry patterns — multi-generational relationships, careful seasonal harvest timing, established cooperatives. The customer-facing operation (e-commerce, fast shipping, customer service, content marketing) follows modern direct-to-consumer brand standards.
This split is genuinely difficult. Brands that emphasize traditional craft sometimes have weak customer experience; brands with great customer experience sometimes source generic tea. Maintaining both requires ongoing investment in both sides.
For customers, the brands worth supporting are those that get both right — quality product from real Japanese farms plus responsive customer service and fast shipping. The combination is what makes specialty tea genuinely accessible to international audiences who can't fly to Japan to buy directly.
Related products
Nozomi - Covered Kabusecha Green Tea
Nozomi is a premium kabuse-cha, or "Covered Green Tea," shaded by a special net for about 7 to 10 days before the new sprouts emerge, creating a balance of flavors that is milder and more accessible than gyokuro, which undergoes a longer shading period. This shorter covering time increases the chlorophyll content and reduces bitterness, resulting in a tea with a mild, slightly sweet taste and a refreshing aftertaste. Cultivated using the Chagusaba method in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil and made from the Yabukita cultivar, Nozomi offers a subtle richness that makes it an ideal choice for everyday enjoyment. Available in a 3.5 oz (100g) eco-friendly resealable package that steeps 30–40 cups or as a convenient 0.3 oz (10g) single-serve sample, Nozomi brings a refined yet approachable green tea experience.
The Covered Trio Gift Set - Ceremonial Matcha, Gyokuro, and Nozomi Japanese Green Tea Set Package
This tea set features three premium Japanese green teas, all cultivated in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil to enhance their flavor and natural sweetness. Gyokuro, a prized shaded green tea, is grown under special mats for 20 days to increase caffeine and amino acid levels, resulting in a rich, sweet taste and deep mossy green color. The set also includes a luxurious matcha, crafted from carefully shaded, hand-processed leaves and renowned for its smooth, aromatic flavor, developed in collaboration with researchers from Shizuoka University to maximize the benefits of the enriched soil. Completing the collection is Nozomi, a fine Kabuse-cha or "Covered Green Tea," where young tea leaves are gently shaded just before sprouting, producing a soft, refined flavor perfect for tea enthusiasts.
The Sencha Lover Gift Set - Premium Japanese Green Tea Set Package
This tea set features three exceptional Japanese green teas, each crafted with care and traditional techniques. Issaku Reserve, a Global Tea Champion winner in 2017 and 2019, is a rare masterpiece created by Farm Master Mr. Arahata at Arahataen Green Tea Farm. Handpicked once a year from the first flush and processed with advanced methods, Issaku represents the highest-grade deep-steamed green tea, available only in limited quantities even in Japan.
The set also includes Gyokuro, a premium shaded green tea known for its rich, sweet flavor and deep mossy green color. Grown under special mats for 20 days to increase caffeine and amino acid levels, Gyokuro offers a layered, smooth taste unlike any other. Completing the collection is Nozomi, a fine Kabuse-cha, or "Covered Green Tea," carefully grown under nets to gently shade the leaves just before new sprouts emerge, resulting in a soft, rich, and refined flavor profile.
Gyokuro - Shaded Imperial Premium Green Tea
Gyokuro, also known as "jade dew" or "jewel dew tea," is a premium Japanese green tea shaded from the sun for 20 days using specially made mats, a method that boosts caffeine levels and strengthens amino acids to create a sweeter, richer flavor. This extended shading process results in dark, mossy green leaves with an unmistakable aroma and a complex taste that is layered yet balanced. Cultivated by the Chagusaba method in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil and made from the Yabukita cultivar, this loose-leaf authentic Gyokuro is offered in a high-quality, air-tight paper tube canister (chyazutsu) to preserve its exceptional freshness and flavor. Each 3.5 oz (100g) full-size package steeps 30–40 cups, and a convenient single-serve sample is also available.
Hojicha - Roasted Green Tea
Our roasted green tea, known as hojicha (ほうじ茶), is crafted from freshly harvested premium green tea carefully roasted in porcelain over charcoal to maximize flavor while retaining more catechins than typical hojicha on the market. With lower caffeine and a smoother, less bitter taste compared to steamed green tea, it is an ideal choice for evening relaxation and is gentle enough for kids and pregnant women. Cultivated using the Chagusaba method in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil, this loose-leaf authentic Japanese roasted green tea, made from the Yabukita cultivar, also pairs beautifully with oily foods. Each eco-friendly resealable package contains 3.5 oz (100g) of tea, enough to steep 30–40 comforting cups.
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About the author
Kei Nishida
Author, CEO Dream of Japan
Certification: PMP, BS in Computer Science
Education: Western Washington University
Kei Nishida is a passionate Japanese green tea connoisseur, writer, and the founder and CEO of Japanese Green Tea Co., a Dream of Japan Company.
Driven by a deep desire to share the rich flavors of his homeland, he established the only company that sources premium tea grown in nutrient-rich sugarcane soil—earning multiple Global Tea Champion awards.
Expanding his mission of introducing Japan’s finest to the world, Kei pioneered the launch of the first-ever Sumiyaki charcoal-roasted coffee through Japanese Coffee Co. He also brought the artistry of traditional Japanese craftsmanship to the global market by making katana-style handmade knives—crafted by a renowned katana maker—available outside Japan for the first time through Japanese Knife Co.
Kei’s journey continues as he uncovers and shares Japan’s hidden treasures with the world.



