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​7 Japanese teas every tea lover should experience

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 27, 2025, 00:03 IST
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1/8

7 Japanese teas every tea lover should experience

In Japan, tea is not just poured; it is lived. A cup marks pauses in the day, anchors conversations and keeps alive a tradition where flavor is inseparable from ritual. What makes Japanese teas remarkable is their range: some taste like fresh spring grass, others like roasted nuts, and a few carry such depth they could pass for broth. To drink them is to see how one plant, treated with care, can open into many worlds of taste. Scroll down for seven teas worth discovering.

2/8

Sencha - the green heartbeat

Sencha is the tea most people in Japan reach for daily. Its leaves, steamed and rolled, brew into a bright green liquor that tastes fresh, clean and slightly brisk. Brew it lightly and the sweetness comes forward; steep it longer and a sharper bitterness appears. Either way, it’s the dependable cup that frames everyday life.

3/8

Matcha - ritual in a bowl

If tea has a celebrity, it’s matcha. The finely milled, shade-grown leaves whisked into froth create a drink that feels almost creamy, carrying grassy depth and a lingering sweetness. In the tearoom, matcha is about ceremony, quiet gestures and respect. Outside it, the same green powder turns up in lattes, cakes and even noodles - proof that tradition and trend can share the same leaf.

4/8

Genmaicha - comfort with a crunch

Genmaicha is green tea blended with roasted rice kernels that sometimes pop during heating, giving the tea a playful, popcorn-like look. The flavor is gentle, nutty and soothing, like warm toast on a cool day. Long considered a “people’s tea” for its affordability, today it’s valued for the easy comfort it delivers.

5/8

Gyokuro - liquid luxury

Gyokuro is tea raised in shade, a practice that deepens its sweetness and fills the cup with rich umami. Brewed at a lower temperature, the liquor is almost silky, closer to a broth than a drink. Scarce and costly, gyokuro is not for every day - but for those who taste it, the memory lingers.

6/8

Kukicha - twigs with charm

Kukicha, or twig tea, is made from stems and stalks left behind after higher-grade leaves are processed. Light, slightly nutty and naturally sweet, it turns thrift into elegance. Brewed gently - it yields a pale cup that feels both comforting and refreshing. What began as a way to waste nothing has become a tea celebrated for its clean, calming character.

7/8

Bancha - the family staple

Bancha is the tea of the table, brewed from larger, later-harvested leaves. Less refined than sencha, it has an earthy, modest taste that makes it a constant in homes. Its mildness makes it easy to drink at any time of day, often alongside simple meals. It doesn’t demand the spotlight, it simply refreshes.

8/8

Hojicha - roasted and relaxed

Hojicha stands apart because it is roasted, not steamed. The fire deepens the leaves into a copper-brown and releases a mellow fragrance that hints at nuts and caramel. Low in caffeine, it slips easily into late evenings, a cup made for unwinding. In winter it feels like warmth in the hands, and in summer, poured over ice, it cools with the same quiet ease.

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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 06.51PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service