Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Mellow Monk ranks high on Martha Stewart radio tea judging

Mellow Monk came in 2nd place out of six teas judged in a live, on-air tea judging on Whole Living, a show on Martha Stewart Living Radio.


The tea tested was our Top Leaf, whose quality truly reflects the dedication and passion of the tea artisans who make it.



Top Leaf, far right, holds his own against the competition and does the Monk proud.


—Mellow Monk


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Friday, January 22, 2010

Sayonara, Master's Roast

Many customers have asked why Master's Roast, our roasted green tea, or hojicha, has disappeared from our lineup. Is this change permanent? you have asked.


The unfortunate answer is yes, and the reason, in a word, is consistency.


The grower who had been supplying Master's Roast roasted the tea manually, and he had warned us before that it wouldn't come out exactly the same every time. But after a while, this grower, who is a real stickler, decided that the variation in roast between batches just too great — even if each batch, on its own, was a wonderful brew.


It probably would have been easier to achieve greater consistency if he had roasted the tea heavily, as most tea estates do, but he thought that took away too much flavor and had been striving for a lighter roast, which I and a lot of customers did indeed like, but being the craftsman he is, he said he couldn't in good conscience sell that tea to his customers anymore.


I am sad to see Master's Roast go, but at the same time proud that we can offer teas from such dedicated tea artisans.


And after all, everything in this world is transient — even teas.



Our late, great Master's Roast.


—Mellow Monk


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Friday, December 25, 2009

Have a merry and mellow Christmas, everyone







—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, December 24, 2009

Old Japanese Christmas illustration




—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, December 12, 2009

Mellow Monk's tea-buying trip to Japan: grand finale

Here it is, the final segment of "Kyushu, Where Japan's Green Tea Grows," a European documentary in which a Mellow Monk tea procurer is prominently featured. (When watching the video, there will be no doubt as to which one is him.)


We have more videos at YouTube, too. You can also watch this video at Vimeo.





—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, December 08, 2009

The Monk is listed ... again

Once again, Mellow Monk is listed in Green America's directory of green businesses, the Green Pages.



Click to join Green America and get your copy of the Green Pages. You can get one with a donation of only $20, and that gets you other membership benefits, too.


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, November 19, 2009

Mellow Monk's radio

Check out some mellow Hawaiian music on our Pandora station.


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, November 05, 2009

Our tea reviewed on Tea Finely Brewed

Tea Finely Brewed has reviewed our Monk's Bliss green tea.





—Mellow Monk


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Monday, October 19, 2009

Chicago Potter reviews our Top Leaf green tea

Chris Chaney, a.k.a. the Chicago Potter, writes the kind of thorough review of one of our teas that only a true tea lover could.


Thanks, Chris.



Our pride and joy. One of them, that is.


—Mellow Monk


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Wednesday, September 09, 2009

World of Tea's review of our genmaicha

World of Tea has posted a review of our genmaicha.





—Mellow Monk


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Sunday, August 30, 2009

Another donation to Kiva

Mellow Monk just made its second microloan through Kiva, this time for Peruvian dairy farmers and cheese makers Gaudencio and Hilda, who are going to use the funding to buy fertilizer and feed.


You too can join the Mellow Monk lending team to support this most worthy cause.


Learn more about how Kiva.org works here.



Getting milk to make some of their famous cheese.


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, August 20, 2009

World Tea News spotlights Mellow Monk!

World Tea News has run a story about Mellow Monk, focusing on a documentary made for French TV that features our primary supplier, a tea master in beautiful Aso.



The director himself took this shot of Koji, husband of Miho, hard at work at harvest time. (The tea being harvested in this picture awaits you at Mellow Monk.)


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Two new teas!

Mellow Monk is mighty proud to announce two new additions to the family — Matcha-Style Powdered Green Tea and Blissful Buds™ Silken Pouches.


Both teas represent a fusion of Japanese tradition and technology. Our matcha is made by tenderly nourishing yabukita plants and gently harvesting the leaves, then using an ultrafine granulation process. The result is a soft, silky green tea powder that dissolves completely even in cold water and won't foam excessively in hot water, like traditional matcha does.


Similarly, Blissful Buds™ Silken Pouches combines our ultra-luscious Blissful Buds™ green tea with ultra-modern nonwoven silken mesh infusion pouches. The optimal mesh size keeps the tea inside while letting the hot water flow in and out freely, so that the leaves can swirl around unfettered in the cleverly engineered pyramidal pouch.


I couldn't be more proud of our two new babies. And it's nice to know that no matter how big they get, they'll never roll their eyes at us on karaoke night.



Sumptuous matcha-style powdered green tea, perfect for brewing hot or cold or for "greening" your everyday cooking.


—Mellow Monk


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Friday, August 07, 2009

Gongfu Girl makes Mellow Monk shinobicha

Over at Gongfu Girl, Cinnabar blogs about making shinobicha with Mellow Monk's Top Leaf Green Tea.


Shinobicha is tea brewed cold and slow: Ice cubes are placed onto the dry tea leaves, after which you can either sip the cold, brisk brew a sip at a time, as it slowly steeps, or wait a while until all of the ice has melted.


"Shinobi" means patience or endurance, which is what one obviously needs to brew tea this way.


Because if you thought waiting for water to boil was frustrating, then try waiting for ice to melt.


Then again, some things are worth waiting for, and shinobicha is a special treat that definitely is.



A cup of post-melt shinobicha.


—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, July 25, 2009

New Sigg water bottle

We have ust released a new Mellow Monk-branded Sigg water bottle. With one of these, you can sip your green tea in style while you're on the go. The Mellow Monk logo will silently prove your green tea cred.



With one of these in your hand, you won't just be sipping. You'll be sipping with style.


—Mellow Monk


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Wednesday, June 03, 2009

Mellow Monk featured on European TV—again!

Last year Mellow Monk was featured in a German-French TV network's documentary about green tea in Kyushu.


Well, that show was so well received that this year, a crew from France's TV 5 went to film one of the same growers for a French TV documentary.


Below are some photos taken by the program's director:











—Mellow Monk


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Sunday, May 31, 2009

Special offer for blog readers

If you read our blog regularly but haven't tried our tea yet, you are missing out on the full Mellow Monk experience.


So, as an enticement we are making this special offer for blog readers only: free shipping on all orders. When checking out, just enter this code:

freeship_blog

After entering the code, be sure to click the "RECALCULATE" button ... and watch your shipping charges magically disappear.


(Please note that this offer expires in one week. And sorry--this offer is for U.S. orders only.


We look forward to welcoming you to the Mellow Monk community. You'll find we're a very mellow bunch.


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, April 02, 2009

In which we review a wonderful pair of Yoga Hyde pants

The women folk here at Mellow Monk recently had the opportunity to try a pair of yoga pants from Yoga Hyde. This particular pair, which you can see modeled in the photo below, are Hyde's Engineered Seam Yoga Pants.


All who tried the pants were absolutely delighted with them. The jersey fabric—a 95% cotton, 5% spandex blend—is substantial and supportive yet soft and unrestricting, as you can see from the high-kick executed by the Monkette in the photo.


As one of the reviewers said, these pants are not only comfortable enough to wear all day, but she wishes she could wear them to the office, too.


After all, you never know when you will need to execute a swift, accurate high-kick.





—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, March 26, 2009

Mellow Monk supports Kiva.org

Kiva.org is a great concept and a great organization: Through it, ordinary folks like you and I can extend microloans directly to independent farmers and other entrepreneurs anywhere in the world.


Mellow Monk has chosen to support a tough gal in Tajikistan named Nigora Masaidova.


It is all part of our mission to promote family farms—just like our growers—wherever their farms may be located.


And if you want to join our lending team, then by all means please click here.



Say hi to Ms. Nigora Masaidova.


—Mellow Monk


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Monday, March 09, 2009

Adobe Girl's pics

Here are a couple of photos sent in by customer and Monk's friend Mary Palmer, a.k.a. The Adobe Girl. From her beautiful photographs I can tell her mission is the same as mine—to create more mellow in the world.








—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, February 28, 2009

Blissful Buds reviewed

Wesley Crosswhite, a.k.a. Green Tea Man, has reviewed one of the newest additions to the Mellow Monk family, Blissful Buds Green Tea.



A cup of Blissful Buds that Wes brewed for his review.


—Mellow Monk


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Sunday, February 22, 2009

Mellow Monk debuts on European TV

A while back I wrote a series of blog posts entitled "Stringing Tea" about my tea-buying adventures in Kyushu and working with a European film crew that was documenting my journey for Arte.tv's "360° Geo" series.


Well, the show was finally broadcast late last year and I received a copy, a clip of which I humbly present to you here.


The German/French narration is stripped out of this clip. There are no subtitles yet, but in a nutshell, a tea grower is showing off his fields and his tea-processing operation. He explains how he maintains healthy fields through proper soil management and discusses the demanding business of harvesting and processing tea leaves in just the right way to assure the highest quality tea.


Stay tuned for more clips!





—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, February 14, 2009

Happy Valentine's Day

Have a rose for Valentine's Day. On second thought, have three roses.





—Mellow Monk


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Friday, January 16, 2009

Kaleidoscope, virtually.

Have you ever dreamed of making your own virtual kaleidoscope online? Well then this is your lucky day.



Whatever shapes you drag into the small circle on the left show up "kaleidoscopized" on the right when swept by the blue wedge.


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, January 01, 2009

Happy New Year, everyone!





"Believe me, there's a little something extra in tonight's green tea."


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, December 25, 2008

Happy Holidays

Happy holidays, everyone.


May this day and all the rest be like a cup of green tea — warm, healthy, and delicious.





—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, December 16, 2008

New Mellow Monk mugs

Just in time for the holidays, we have opened a new Mellow Monk store at Zazzle.com. I am very impressed with the quality of their items and their printing, and I am confident you will be, too.


Right now, we have three varieties of tea mugs, but we will be adding more products to our Zazzle store soon. In the meantime, if you need a Mellow Monk tee-shirt, you can still get one at our old store at CafePress.





—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, December 09, 2008

Free shipping in December

Happy Holidays, everyone.


As our holiday gift to you, we are offering free shipping on all orders through the month of December.


To take advantage of this offer, use the coupon code number 212081665 when checking out. As shown in the example below, after entering your shipping zone and ZIP code (Step 1), enter the code in the VOUCHER box (Step 2), then click RECALCULATE (Step 3). Then proceed with checkout.





There's one catch: This offer is only good for orders shipped to U.S. addresses, and is for U.S. Postal Service shipping only.


Other than that, that's all there is to it. There is no minimum purchase required. Simple and mellow, yes?


—Mellow Monk


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Wednesday, October 15, 2008

Mellow Monk releases two new teas — Blissful Buds and Shaded Leaf!

Mellow Monk is proud to announce two new additions to our lineup of family-farm green tea: Blissful Buds and Shaded Leaf.


Blissful Buds is a mecha ("bud tea"), made from only the most tender young buds. This is the same kind of premium tea served at the best sushi restaurants. The full-bodied flavor of Blissful Buds makes it the perfect tea for post-meal palate cleansing ... or for any time of the day!


Shaded Leaf is our most premium tea ever: Three weeks before harvest, our growers shade these pampered tea plants with special woven covers. By blocking out just enough sunlight, this shading produces a simply exquisite flavor (by stopping the leaves from "baking" in the sun) and also stimulates the leaves to produce even more super-healthful catechins, including EGCG.


Please join us in welcoming these two new teas to the Mellow Monk family.



Introducing our most premium tea, Shaded Leaf.


—Mellow Monk


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Monday, August 11, 2008

Mellow Monk reviewed on STeaP TV

Over at the STeaP TV vodcast, Joe and Brandice review Mellow Monk's Top Leaf Green Tea. (Click here to watch the video if the embedded version below won't play.)


Their verdict: thumbs up for a very mellow tea.


I'm glad you enjoyed our tea, Joe and Brandice.





—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, August 09, 2008

The benefits of a TV-free week

Husband-and-wife team Marc and Angel list the 40 positive effects they experienced during a week without television, such as:

12. Finally trimmed the hedges in our front yard. – I always put this off because I am tired after mowing the lawn. This time, however, I did it on a totally separate evening. It only took me 30 minutes.
13. Cleaned out the garage and sold 2 old dehumidifiers on eBay. – We setup a 5-day eBay auction and got $65 for each one of them!
14. Took 2 evening strolls around a local park. – We hadn’t been to this park in years… there’s only 1 reason why.

Of course, you can also cheat by recording all the programs you want to see during the week, then watching them on the weekend. You also get to skip through the commercials, and even with "old school" VCR technology, the recording isn't that hard to do once you get into the habit.


Or is that cheating, Marc and Angel?





—Mellow Monk


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Monday, August 04, 2008

Rave reviews for Mellow Monk's teas

Here are recent reviews of Mellow Monk's green teas at:

  • ThisNext — "This tea is absolutely delicious, and is the everyday tea of Japan. If you enjoy truly authentic green tea, then you will love Monk's Choice tea."

  • The Greater Green — "I spent three years in the Gunma region of Japan and during that time came to love green tea, the taste and the health and the art of it all. . . . It has been a struggle to find authentic green tea here in America. When I first drank Mellow Monk's teas it was like being transported back across the seas."

  • Yelp — "I lived in Japan for a long time, and I can tell you this tea is the real deal - better even than a lot of the stuff sold in supermarkets in Japan."

  • The Green Tea Review — "The scent from the brew is mellow and slightly earthy. Upon tasting, the slight tang presents itself to the palate. The tea at first tastes very clean and mellow with some earthiness, and is followed by a soft bite of tang characteristic of guricha."

  • Cooking Little — "For some [reviewers] this tea was reminiscent of tea they drank on visits to Japan and never since."

  • Multiple Infusions — "Dropped into a heated kyusu, 3.5 grams of leaf had a strong and complex–nearly holographic–marine aroma, all the smells of the ocean at once. After a 60 second steep at 174°F, the tide receded to reveal a mellower tea than the seaside odor suggested. Not quite as delicate as gyokuro, and not bold like sencha, this tamaryokucha takes up a nice position in the middle, with a steamy, clean earthiness and mildly vegetal sweetness . . . ."


Thanks, everyone, for taking the time to review our humble tea.



Top Leaf Green Tea, as brewed by the folks at Multiple Infusions.


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, July 22, 2008

Climb Mt. Fuji four times in 24 hours? Are these guys serious? Yes, they are

To raise money for deserving Japanese and U.S. charities, three American climbers will attempt to scale Mt. Fuji 4 times in one 24-hour period.


It's not as crazy as you'd think — last year, two of the climbers scaled Mt. Fuji 3 times in one day, also to raise money for charity.



A picture from their 2007 climb.


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, June 24, 2008

"Stringing Tea": Intro & Chapter 1

Intro: Just How Does One “String Tea”?

[This is the first of a series of postings about my recent tea-buying expedition in Japan. Stay tuned for further installments.]

On a recent tea-finding trip through the wilds of Kyushu, Japan, I was followed by a three-person film crew from Europe’s Arte TV network. They were filming a 1-hour documentary on Japanese green tea for Arte's "Geo 360" series.

The subject of this installment of "Geo 360," which is due to be broadcast in September or October, is Japanese green tea. Arte chose Kyushu—and in particular Kumamoto—because of its natural, unspoiled environment. And they chose me because Kumamoto is where Mellow Monk's Green Teas are grown.

I was honored to have been chosen by such a prestigious public television network.

But filmmaking is serious business. And busy business. The shooting schedule was über-tight. The film crew and I lived out of a suitcase. Each day we drove far enough and fast enough to alter Earth’s rotation. We had to — we were under constant pressure right up until the night before we all went home.

On this three-week adventure, I was a tea-buyer second and a stringer first. No one is sure of the origins of the word stringer, but if I had to guess based on my own experience, I’d say it derived from an ancient word for “slave.” Or maybe “punishment.”

A stringer is a film crew’s interpreter, travel agent, interviewer, negotiator, luggage carrier, and all-around gofer. It may sound complicated, but a stringer's job is exceedingly simple: A stringer’s job is to Make It Happen.

For instance, if the director says, “We’re going to spend the next two nights in Hitoyoshi and film the tea fields there,” then the stringer books the rooms, clears everything with the tea grower, and finds the hotel on a map. The stringer Makes It Happen. If the cameraman says, “Can you get him to do the same thing again so we can film it from a different angle?” the stringer Makes It Happen. If the sound engineer wants the gardener to shut off the leaf blower for the next ten minutes, then the sound engineer Makes It Happen (in that particular case).

Anyone who’s ever translated between two languages knows that an interpreter is also a diplomat. Actually, this is true of anyone who communicates a message from one person to another. “Don’t shoot the messenger” is an invocation that isn’t always successful, and so a messenger with a strong survival instinct always softens the message.

So, when the director says in English, “What the hell is he doing? Tell him to do that again and not to bounce all over the place when he’s talking,” a smart stringer will put it slightly differently. Such as: “Wow, that was great. Just great. But the electromagnetic pulse from a solar flare zapped the camera, so could we do that one more time?” Such diplomacy is absolutely consistent with the Make It Happen directive. After all, as we say in America, you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. (To which some may retort, Yes but you can catch more flies with scheissen than with honey.)

Chapter 1: This Is Not Possible

“This is not possible,” Mr. Matsuzaki said to me in Japanese. This shy, soft-spoken man — who had hardly made eye contact with me at all during the long hours we had spent together that day — was now staring me dead in the eye. Through thick, nearsighted eyeglasses he gave me a dumbstruck look, as if I had just asked him to cut off a finger or give up his firstborn.

Confused, I responded weakly. “You can’t?” What I was really thinking to myself was Can’t do what? Can’t pour hot water on tea? How the hell else do you make tea?

We were filming Mr. Matsuzaki making a hot cup of tea in a beautiful tea room — like a cross between this one and this one — on his tea farm. But when we got to the part where he was finally supposed to pour hot water into a teapot full of tea leaves, he balked.

Unaware of what we were saying, the film crew waited patiently. The cameraman, Chris, raised his eyebrows curiously. Manuel, the sound engineer, bedecked with wires, cables, and other sound-recording accoutrements, paused with his usual tired, oh-what’s-the-point-in-complaining look. The director, Ilka, stroked her chin pensively. The much-feared Furrow had yet to appear in her brow, which meant I might actually live to see tomorrow.

But I couldn’t explain to the crew what the problem was: There was no time. And I wasn’t even sure myself what the problem was. Besides, I was the stringer. The stringer’s job is to Make It Happen. And when things don’t happen, that means trouble. Such as dinner at ten o'clock instead of eight or nine.

I decided to play dumb with Mr. Matsuzaki. “All you have to do is pour the water into the teapot,” I smiled as pleasantly as I could.

“It’s not possible,” he repeated. “That’s not the way you’re supposed to do it.”

“Then how are you supposed to do it?”

“You have to cool the water first. You can’t pour it directly from the kettle into the teapot.”

A sharp, loud voice shattered the quiet. “What’s the problem?” asked Ilka. The Furrow was near. I could feel it.

“He says he has to cool the water before he pours it onto the tea.”

“There’s no time for that!”

Chris chimed in helpfully. “Tell him you can’t even see the kettle in the closeup. Only the stream of water flowing into the pot.”

I translated. I added my own pleas. But Mr. Matsuzaki was adamant. “That’s not the way you’re supposed to do it.”

But there was no room for negotiation. Once the director and cameraman had made up their mind, my job was to Make It Happen. Period.

“It’s okay,” I said to Mr. Matsuzaki. Desperation had crept into my voice. “The kettle won’t even be in the shot. It’s a closeup, so no one will know.”

With a little more prodding, Mr. Matsuzaki finally relented and poured hot water from the small silver kettle into the earthenware teapot. As he did, Chris filmed, Manuel recorded, and Ilka watched intently on the small monitor. The pour was perfect. No second take necessary.

The next shot was to be of the brewed tea being poured into a small white teacup. Once Chris was finished repositioning and refocusing the high-definition Sony movie camera, just enough time had passed for the tea to steep.

Mr. Matsuzaki poured the green infusion into the cup. Everything looked fine to my untrained eye. But Ilka was clearly unhappy.

“This is not possible,” she said in her Teutonically accented English. What’s not possible? I thought to myself. That tea leaves turned hot water green? What the hell else is supposed to happen?

“This is not possible,” Herr Direktor repeated. She locked her gaze on me. This was obviously my fault. “The tea is too dark. Much too dark. Why is it not bright green?”

I turned to Mr. Matzuaki, who, although he had no idea what we were saying, had paused instinctively, sensing the bad vibes in the air. “It’s the color,” I translated. “She says it’s too dark.”

“Of course it’s dark,” he responded matter-of-factly. “The water was too hot. When the water’s too hot, the tea comes out dark.”

I explained this to Ilka. “Oh,” she responded with uncharacteristic meekness. “Then . . . let’s do it again. With cooler water.”

“Can we do it again?” I asked Mr. Matsuzaki.

“Yes,” he replied softly. “This time we’ll brew the tea correctly.”




This is the kind of yuzamashi (literally "water cooler") that Mr. Matsuzaki used to cool the hot water when we decided to make tea correctly.


—Mellow Monk


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Friday, June 13, 2008

First flush tea is here!

We've just received the first of the '08 harvest from Japan—first-flush Monk's Choice.


It's been a great growing season, and I snapped up as much first-flush tea as I could. Get it while it lasts!



Fresh from the field to you!


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, May 06, 2008

More Mellow Monk merchandise

The Mellow Monk Store has been improved and expanded. We now offer a larger "Monk" logo on a wider range of goods, from T-shirts to hats to book bags. Check us out!



Now what do I have to do to put you in one of these stylish, comfy T-shirts?


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, February 12, 2008

Our review in "The Green Tea Review"

The blog "Green Tea Review" has reviewed our Monk's Choice Green Tea. It's quite a flattering review, if I do say so myself.

The aroma of the dry leaf is mild and mellow, but carries with it the tantalizing tang noted in the previous post. This tang smell is exclusive to the leaf of guricha. The leaf is in amazing shape compared to the usual broken up sencha leaf. This shows that care really did go into the processing of this tea.




—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, January 22, 2008

Warm teapot for a cold budgie

Our budgie, Sunny—who's gotten her own press coverage—is pretty smart. She's figured out that a teapot full of hot green tea is a nice, toasty spot to get warm. On cold nights, whenever she sees a teapot on the table, she flies over and perches on the handle.


(Her cage is open most of the time, although her flight feathers are kept short enough to keep her from flying very far in the event she gets outside—we have a lot of cats in the neighborhood!)


Sunny the budgie perched on a teapot handle

"Mmm ... nice and warm."


—Mellow Monk


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Wednesday, January 16, 2008

EcoGreenOffice launches its blog

The folks at EcoGreenOffice have launched their very own
blog. Please give it a look when you get a chance.





—Mellow Monk


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Monday, January 07, 2008

Your feedback is humbly requested

If you have tried our tea, we'd like to hear your feedback for listing on our new feedback page.


And if you're reading this but haven't tried our tea yet, please consider giving us a try. We are supremely confident in the quality of our tea, and at Mellow Monk, your satisfaction is always 100 percent guaranteed.


—Mellow Monk


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Friday, December 28, 2007

Mellow Monk in the news!

Extra, extra, read all about it!


A local newspaper has run a story about Mellow Monk!


Page 1 of the earth-shattering story

Sorry, gents, she's taken. (He's taken, too, ladies.) ladies.


Earth-shattering news, page 2

Here you can see a picture of two growers and their kids. Mr. and Mrs. Monk have children, too, but they refused to be photographed with us.


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, December 25, 2007

Merry Christmas!

From everyone at Mellow Monk's Green Teas, here's wishing a happy and mellow holiday season to you and yours.



A Christmas bonsai.


—Mellow Monk


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Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Our affiliate program is now live!

Mellow Monk has just started an affiliate program through Shareasale.com. If you're a blogger or webmaster and think your readers would be a perfect match for Mellow Monk's teas and our philosophy, please give it some consideration.


A referring affiliate gets 20 percent of each sale, so it's really a win-win for both of us—we get people to try our tea, and you get not only a commission but also the inner peace that comes with knowing you got someone to try some of the best green tea out there. (Who said a monk has to be humble?)



One of our grower's tea groves.


—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, October 20, 2007

Why isn't Mellow Monk tea so pricey? (and one more new FAQ)

I've made a couple of new additions to our page of frequently asked questions (FAQs). Click on the questions below to read the answers on the FAQs page.


Will I be able to taste the difference between Mellow Monk and other green teas?


Why isn't Mellow Monk tea more expensive?



A close-up of an actual tea plant in one of our grower's orchards.


—Mellow Monk


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Monday, October 15, 2007

The official Mellow Monk mug

You can now get your very own Mellow Monk Mug.



The Mellow Monk Mug, perfect for green tea.


—Mellow Monk


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Monday, October 08, 2007

Mellow Monk unveils new look

Mellow Monk has unveiled a new look. Our tea is still exactly the same—imported directly from the same family-owned and -operated growers. But the website has a sleek new look befitting the quality of that wonderful tea.


We've also increased your shopping convenience in response to your requests: Mellow Monk now accepts direct credit card payments. That's right—you don't have to go through PayPal anymore (although you still have that option).


Just a technical note: If you see any buttons, etc., from the old site showing up on one of the new pages, you can try two things:

  • Refresh the page (Ctrl + R on a PC or command + R on a Mac).
  • Clear your Web browser's cache.

If refreshing the page doesn't work, you probably need to clear your browser's cache. If you're using Internet Explorer on Windows, go to Tools → Options. On the "General" tab, under "Temporary Internet files" click the "Delete Files..." button.


If you're using a Mac, for Firefox the path is Firefox → Preferences → Advanced → Network. Under "Cache" click the "Clear Now" button.


We hope you enjoy the new look and continue enjoying our tea. If you haven't had Mellow Monk Green Tea yet, why not give us a try? In the highly unlikely event that you're not satisfied, our tea is 100 percent guaranteed.



Our new website. Isn't it cool?


—Mellow Monk


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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Mellow Monk joins Eco Green Office

Mellow Monk has recently been approved as a partner at Eco Green Office, a supplier of eco-friendly office supplies and other products. You can check out our partner profile here.


—Mellow Monk


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Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Announcing cold-brewed iced green tea!

A couple of weeks ago I mentioned that drinking iced green tea actually has a long history in the United States.


Well, Mellow Monk has made carrying on that tradition a whole lot easier with—drumroll, please—Cold-Brewed Iced Green Tea Pouches.


"Cold-brewed" means that you don't have to boil water; simply add one of the ultrafine-mesh nylon tea pouches to a pitcher or other container of water, then stir, put in the refrigerator for 2 hours, and you've got a pitcherful of cold, tasty, healthy iced green tea.


And like all other Mellow Monk teas, this tea is from family-owned and -operated tea farms in the mountains of Aso, Japan.


We're very excited about this new tea, and as far as I know, cold-brewed green tea pouches like these aren't available anywhere else in America. To read more, click here.



Healthy, tasty, and convenient—that's Mellow Monk's Cold-Brewed Iced Green Tea Pouches.


—Mellow Monk


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Monday, July 23, 2007

The blog is staying here!

Previously I had announced that I was moving my blog to another location. Well, that just isn't working out, so will be "re-activating" this old blog. I apologize for the confusion. Thanks for your patience!


—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, February 03, 2007

An apology to readers: Sorry for botching the comments feature

To any reader who's tried to leave a comment on this blog in the past few months:


I'm so sorry!


I did a real forehead-slapper: I had the comments feature set to notify me before publishing a reader's comment to avoid subjecting you all to a lot of spam. However, I wasn't getting those email notices because of a goof on my part, so no one's comments were getting published.


I simply assumed no one was leaving comments. In hindsight, I wonder how I could have assumed you didn't care! (sniffle)


I have just rectified the situation, however, and published a large cartload of accumulated comments that you had left in the past months. Unfortunately, there's no way to show all those comments on one page—they're each attached to their respective postings. But rest assured that your comments will appear promptly from now on. My apologies to those who took the time to leave those comments.


—Mellow Monk


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Saturday, December 09, 2006

The Monk is looking for affiliates

I'm looking for webmasters who'd like to become Mellow Monk affiliates. If you're interested, please drop me a line (affiliates at mellowmonk dot com).


—Mellow Monk


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