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I Tried Bad (Old) Sencha: What Actually Happens

When sencha is stored improperly and left open in heat and light, it does not degrade gradually. It collapses almost entirely. In Yuki's direct comparison, the degraded tea went from a vibrant, umami-rich cup to something flat, nearly scentless, and vaguely reminiscent of dried autumn leaves. The quality loss was not a 20 percent drop. It was closer to losing 97 to 98 percent of what makes the tea worth drinking. The fix is simple: store sencha airtight, away from heat and sunlight, ideally refrigerated.
Behind The Leaves #20

How the Comparison Was Set Up

Yuki discovered a bag of sencha that had been sitting by a windowsill in the kitchen, exposed to heat and light, with the bag left improperly closed, for what appeared to be months. Rather than discarding it, he used it as an experiment: brewing the degraded tea side by side with a fresh batch of the same sencha using identical parameters at 70 degrees Celsius for 60 seconds, then comparing them across leaf appearance, dry and brewed aroma, and taste.

What the Leaves and Aroma Revealed Before Brewing

The visual differences in the dry leaves were already noticeable before anything was brewed. The fresh leaves were dark green, shiny, and visually sharp. The old leaves had taken on a reddish-brownish tint and had noticeably less surface shine.


The dry aroma gap was even more striking. Fresh sencha leaves carry umami and sweetness in their scent in a way Yuki describes as one of the best smells in the world. The old leaves offered almost nothing. A faint trace of green tea notes remained if you concentrated, but any sweetness or umami was essentially gone, replaced at the edges by something Yuki described as resembling dead or autumn leaves. Not rotten, just empty.

What Tasting Both Revealed

After brewing, the visual difference carried through into the cup. The fresh tea had the characteristic light green of a quality Uji sencha. The degraded tea had shifted toward a reddish-brownish tint, the same oxidation visible in the dry leaves now present in the brewed liquid.


On aroma of the brewed cup, the fresh tea lifted immediately with sweetness, umami, and fresh green notes. The old tea produced almost no smell. The difference in intensity was so extreme that Yuki rated the fresh tea as a 100 and the old tea as approximately a 2 or 3.


Tasting confirmed everything. The fresh tea delivered full umami, sweetness, savoriness, and freshness. The old tea was flat, devoid of umami and sweetness, and carried an aftertaste of dead leaves into the finish. Not unpleasant in a rotten sense, just completely hollow. As Yuki described it, it felt like the tea had lost its life.

Why This Matters for People Who Have Written Off Sencha

The most important point Yuki makes is directed at anyone who tried sencha once and concluded it was not very good. A significant proportion of those experiences were probably with tea that had been sitting around improperly stored, whether in a shop on a shelf in room temperature, in a cupboard at home, or in a bag that was not resealed after opening.


Degraded sencha does not taste bad in an obvious way. It tastes weak and flat, which can easily be mistaken for the tea being low quality, or for Japanese green tea simply not being to your taste. The reality is that what was tasted had lost virtually everything that makes the tea interesting. Yuki is direct: do not judge sencha by a cup like this. The actual tea is substantially better.

The Simple Storage Rules This Experiment Reinforces

The conditions that ruined this sencha were exactly the conditions described in Tealife's storage guidance: exposure to light, heat, and air. The fix is equally simple. Store sencha airtight, away from direct light and heat, ideally in a refrigerator or freezer for the bulk of the supply. Decant a week's worth into a small caddy for daily use, keeping that portion away from sunlight and heat.

Yuki also notes that Tealife stores its tea in refrigerated conditions at all times as an online shop, which preserves quality from the source. This is a structural advantage over most physical retail environments where tea sits on shelves at room temperature.

Key takeaways

  • Degraded sencha does not decline gradually. It collapses. Yuki estimates the old tea retained roughly 2 to 3 percent of the quality of the fresh version. This is not a gradual fade. It is a near-total loss of what makes the tea valuable.

  • The visual signs of degradation are visible before you brew. A reddish or brownish tint on the dry leaves, reduced shine, and a flat or absent dry aroma are all indicators that the tea has been compromised. You do not need to brew it to know something is wrong.

  • A flat, lifeless cup does not mean sencha is bad. It means that particular sencha went bad. Many people's first impression of sencha is formed from improperly stored tea. That experience is not representative of what the tea actually tastes like when fresh.

  • The three enemies of sencha are the same ones in this experiment: heat, light, and air. All three were present for the degraded tea. Removing all three is what proper storage achieves.

  • Tasting sencha before smelling it is a missed step. The dry and brewed aroma of fresh sencha carries significant information about what to expect in the cup. The complete absence of that aroma in the degraded tea was an early and accurate predictor of what the taste would be like.
  • Insights From Yuki

    On conducting a live experiment rather than a theoretical warning: Rather than simply describing what poor storage does to sencha in abstract terms, Yuki brewed both cups side by side and tasted them in sequence. The difference in his reactions between the fresh cup (genuine enthusiasm, immediate satisfaction) and the old cup (pause, visible disappointment, description of flatness and dead leaves) is more convincing than any written description. The experiment also provides useful baseline data: it grounds the 2 to 3 percent quality estimate in an actual sensory comparison rather than speculation.


    On the 2 to 3 percent estimate: One key observation is how Yuki frames the scale of degradation. He specifically rejects the idea that this is a modest decline (not 100 to 80 percent) and instead describes it as near-total collapse. This framing is useful because it challenges the assumption that improperly stored tea is just slightly inferior. It is functionally a different and much worse product.


    On the experience of people who have tried and dismissed sencha: Yuki addresses a real and common problem: people forming a negative or neutral impression of sencha based on a degraded or poorly made cup. His direct message is that this experience is not representative. The implication is that storage quality, both at the retail level and at home, has a larger impact on the tea experience than most buyers realize or account for when forming their preferences.

    Q&A

    How can you tell if sencha has gone bad?

    Look for a reddish or brownish tint in the dry leaves, a reduction in surface shine, and a flat or absent aroma when you smell the dry leaves. Fresh sencha should have a vivid dark green color, visible shine, and a clear umami-sweet scent. A brewed cup that smells like nothing and tastes flat and empty is a strong indicator of degraded tea.

    Does sencha go bad if left open at room temperature?

    Yes, and the degradation is severe. Exposure to heat, light, and air triggers oxidation that destroys the amino acids and aromatic compounds responsible for umami, sweetness, and fresh aroma. Yuki's comparison showed the quality dropped to approximately 2 to 3 percent of the original within what appeared to be a few months of improper storage.

    Can you still drink sencha that has gone bad?

    It is unlikely to be harmful, but the experience is significantly degraded. The tea loses essentially all of its umami, sweetness, and aroma, leaving a flat, lifeless cup with faint dead-leaf notes in the finish. Yuki brewed and tasted it but clearly found the result a waste of what was originally good-quality tea.
    About the author:

    Yuki Ishii

    Founder & CEO of Tealife

    LinkedIn | YouTube

    Yuki is the founder of Tealife, a Singapore-based Japanese tea company. He’s passionate about Japanese tea and spends his time testing, trying, and experimenting - then sharing what he learns through content to help people discover the depth of Japanese tea beyond just matcha.