How Many Infusions Can You Get from Gyokuro? A Six-Steep Experiment with Real Tasting Notes
Behind The Leaves #37
The Experiment Setup
Infusions One Through Three: Where the Quality Lives
Infusions Four Through Six: Where It Falls Apart
What This Means in Practice
The experiment confirmed the conventional two-to-three infusion recommendation, but with the added context of what each steep actually delivers. Three infusions is not an arbitrary cutoff. It is the point at which the quality components of the leaf have been extracted and what remains no longer represents the tea you paid for. Stopping at three is the decision that respects both the tea and your time.
Key Takeaways
Insights From Yuki
This experiment was run specifically because the standard "two to three infusions" answer had never actually been tested to its limit. Before this session, it was a repeated recommendation based on general knowledge rather than personal observation of all six infusions back to back.
One key observation is that the drop-off between the third and fourth infusion is clear and consistent, not gradual. Up to infusion three, there is something distinctly gyokuro about the taste. By infusion four, that quality has gone completely.
One key practical observation: the first infusion yields less liquid than expected because the dry leaves absorb roughly four times their own weight in water. For 8 grams of leaves, approximately 32 grams of water is absorbed before any extraction reaches the cup. This is not a brewing error. It is a physical property of the dry leaf and explains why the first pour is always smaller in volume.
The visual observation that infusions four, five, and six look almost identical in colour while tasting meaningfully different confirmed that colour is not a useful measure of remaining quality in later steeps.