A matcha made in heaven
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Alicia Robinson
Hidden behind a squat, unassuming building surrounded by some of
Newport Beach’s taller office buildings is a secret spot of
tranquillity.
Visitors to Chaya tea house can contemplate eternal mysteries or
just enjoy a cup of green tea while gazing on stones that were carved
hundreds of years ago an ocean away from Southern California.
The tea house, which serves a short menu including chicken salad
and a little sushi, narrowly escaped becoming a sandwich shop. Chaya
owner Yumiko Takada said she had planned for about four years to open
a quick lunch restaurant offering sandwiches, but she couldn’t get
the necessary permits from the city.
She also decided to let a friend display Japanese stone artifacts
in the yard behind the shop, and that evolved into a full-fledged
Japanese garden, so Takada shifted the direction of her business.
“Since this garden is so special, we decided not [to serve] the
sandwiches but something more Japanese style,” she said.
The garden is surrounded by a bamboo fence and includes round,
flat stones that were used to grind rice’ numerous carved stone
lanterns, including one that is 10 feet high; and a 150-year-old
stone basin filled with water. It was designed by Hidetsugu Kawatake
and his father, who collects Japanese artifacts.
The artifacts come from shrines and temples and are ignored by
many people in Japan, Kawatake said. His father wanted to share them
with Americans after seeing disappointing imitations of Japanese
relics in this country, he said.
The artifacts are shown on consignment at Chaya and can be
purchased. Kawatake said his father can easily replace any items that
sell with others from his collection of more than 1,500 stone
objects.
Visitors to the tea house can sit by large windows that look on
the garden while sipping coffee or one of several varieties of
Japanese teas, and Takada plans to hold traditional Japanese tea
ceremonies once or twice a month.
The ceremony involves making a special tea called matcha, with the
person performing the ceremony following each step in a certain
order, from folding a napkin to serving the tea.
When the tea ceremony originated hundreds of years ago, Takada
said, it was a great social equalizer because it would be held in a
room with a low entrance so everyone had to duck to enter.
“They crawl through a tiny gate so even the landlord has to bow,”
she said. “There’s no upper or lower class.”
Few customers have trickled in to Chaya since it opened in
September, but Takada said people are starting to hear about it. It
offers something unusual in Newport Beach, a temporary escape from
constantly ringing cellphones and busy schedules, she said.
Chaya is at 2072 Orchard Drive in Newport Beach.
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