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New limited-edition Saicho sparkling tea inspired by a tiny Taiwan tea garden

Leaves from Taiwan’s Junjie Lin Tea Garden were used to make Hong Kong- and UK-based Saicho’s limited-edition Sixty Stone Mountain bottle

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Saicho’s limited-edition Sixty Stone Mountain sparkling tea was made using tea leaves harvested at tea master Lin Junjie’s organic tea garden in Hualien county, Taiwan. Photo: Saicho

Once upon a time, there was a Japanese monk by the name of Saicho. As the story goes, he was studying at Tiantai Mountain, in China’s Zhejiang province, in the early ninth century, when he encountered a drink that was said to be a meditation aid: tea.

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The monk became so enamoured by the drink that, when he returned to Japan, he brought back not only his learnings – Saicho went on to found the Tendai school of Buddhism – but also tea seeds, which he planted around his monastery.

Years later, when the Emperor Saga came to visit and sampled tea for the first time, he too was won over and promptly ordered tea to be planted across Japan.

“That was the start of Japanese tea culture,” says Charlie Winkworth-Smith, who founded a sparkling tea brand that carries the Saicho namesake with his wife, Natalie Chiu.

(From left) Saicho founders Charlie Winkworth-Smith and Natalie Chiu with tea master Lin Junjie at his tea plantation in Taiwan. Photo: Saicho
(From left) Saicho founders Charlie Winkworth-Smith and Natalie Chiu with tea master Lin Junjie at his tea plantation in Taiwan. Photo: Saicho

Based in Hong Kong and the UK, Saicho uses cold-brewed, single-origin teas in its bottles of sparkling tea, an increasingly popular non-alcoholic alternative to wine.

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The creation of the brand, which launched in December 2019, follows Chiu’s experience of feeling left out at the dinner table whenever she and Winkworth-Smith were enjoying a tasting menu.

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