Aroma
3/5Clear aroma
With origin story
Hinata is Japanese matcha with Miyazaki as the clear region in the catalog. This makes it interesting when origin matters to you alongside taste.
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Flavor profile
Use the flavor profile as a quick impression of the matcha. Aroma, umami, bitterness and color help you compare whether a matcha is better suited to hot water, latte or recipes. The final taste depends on dosage, water temperature, preparation and ingredients such as milk, sugar, cream or batter.
Clear aroma
Mild umami
Clear bitterness
Clear green color
Hinata is practical Japanese matcha for anyone who wants origin and use to matter together. The taste is approachable enough for latte, desserts and creative recipes, while the Miyazaki reference gives extra context to your choice. For hot water preparation, a softer drinking matcha is usually the better choice.
Hinata has an approachable taste that works well in latte, desserts and creative recipes. With only hot water, it is less soft than our premium drinking matchas, but in milk or sweet preparations the Japanese matcha taste remains recognizable. The Miyazaki reference also gives extra origin context to your choice.
For Hinata, Miyazaki is the region that is mentioned. That gives extra origin context if you want to discover Japanese tea regions, while the choice stays practical: this matcha is mainly intended for latte, desserts and creative recipes.
Hinata fits you if you are looking for Japanese matcha for latte, desserts or creative recipes and find Miyazaki as a region interesting. You choose it for practical use, with extra origin context in your product choice.
Whisk Hinata smooth first with a small amount of hot water at about 70 to 80 degrees Celsius. Then add milk, ice or dessert ingredients for a Matcha Latte, Iced Matcha or sweet preparation. You can also try it with hot water only, but Hinata mainly comes into its own when mixed with other ingredients.
Hinata is interesting when you want practical matcha with a recognizable Japanese region reference. The Miyazaki reference gives extra context, while the use stays clear: Matcha Latte, desserts and creative recipes.
Hinata fits you if you want Japanese matcha with a recognizable region reference and mainly want to use it for latte, desserts or creative recipes. Choose Hinata when Miyazaki appeals to you and you also want a practical matcha for preparations with milk, ice or sweet ingredients.