null Skip to main content

Matcha Color Is Misleading: When Color Matters, and When It Doesn’t

Matcha color matters, but not in the way many people think. A dull, yellowish, or brownish matcha can be a warning sign of lower quality, poor storage, oxidation, or later harvest material. But once you are comparing two reasonably good green matchas, color alone does not tell you which one will taste better.
Behind The Leaves #5

Color and Taste Are Not the Same Thing

A major misunderstanding is the idea that greener matcha automatically tastes better. 

Shading does increase chlorophyll, and chlorophyll makes matcha look greener, but chlorophyll itself is only a pigment. It does not create the umami, sweetness, and smooth texture people actually value in high-quality matcha.


What drives delicious taste more directly are compounds such as amino acids, including theanine and glutamic acid.

Why Greenness Does Not Guarantee Better Flavor

Both chlorophyll and amino acids can increase through shading, but they come from different biological pathways. That means one does not guarantee the other.

So even if one matcha looks greener, that does not automatically mean it has more umami or sweetness. This is exactly why judging matcha too heavily by color can lead you to the wrong product.

Cultivars Can Change the Picture Completely

The video explains that cultivar choice plays a major role. Some cultivars are especially good at producing strong green color, while others are prized more for taste.


For example, Okumidori is known for deep green color and is widely used in blends where appearance matters. Saemidori, on the other hand, may look a little lighter, but it is especially valued for its high amino acid content that drives umami and sweetness. This means a lighter-looking matcha can still taste better.

Why Matcha Blends Prove the Point

Tea masters often blend cultivars for different purposes. One cultivar may be chosen for umami and sweetness, another for a controlled amount of astringency and structure, and another to improve color.


That alone shows color and taste are not the same thing. If color were a complete indicator of quality, this kind of blending logic would not be necessary.

When Color Actually Does Matter

The video does not say color is useless. It says color is useful in a more limited way.


If matcha looks yellowish, brownish, or very dull, that can be a red flag. It may indicate poor storage, oxidation, old material, or later harvest leaves rather than first flush material. In those cases, color can help identify potential problems.

The key rule from the video is this: use color as a red-flag indicator, not as a ranking tool.

Key takeaways

  • Greener matcha does not automatically mean better-tasting matcha.
  • Chlorophyll affects color, but it is not what creates umami or sweetness.

  • Amino acids are more closely tied to the delicious taste people seek in high-quality matcha.

  • Cultivar choice can make one matcha look greener while another tastes better.

  • Color is useful for spotting obvious problems, but not for splitting hairs between good matchas.

  • Q&A

    Does greener matcha mean higher quality?

    Not necessarily. A greener matcha may have more chlorophyll, but that does not automatically mean it has better umami, sweetness, or overall taste.

    What gives high-quality matcha its delicious taste?

    Amino acids such as theanine and glutamic acid as key drivers of umami, sweetness, and smoothness.

    How should you use color when judging matcha?

    Use color as a warning-sign tool. Yellowish, brownish, or dull matcha can indicate problems, but color should not be used to rank two otherwise good matchas.

    Yuki

    Yuki is the founder of Tealife. He bleeds Japanese Tea and loves being a part of the Japanese Tea journey of others. Writes, does events, conducts tasting sessions, drinks, drinks and drinks tea!