What Is Kukicha? The Japanese Stem Tea With Half the Caffeine and a Surprisingly Distinct Taste
Kukicha is a Japanese green tea made primarily from the stems of the tea plant rather than the leaves. It is a by-product of the sencha and gyokuro manufacturing process, collected when stems are separated from leaves during finishing. Because stems have roughly half the caffeine and fewer catechins than the leaf, kukicha is naturally lower in bitterness and astringency, higher in certain amino acids, and carries a distinct fresh, sweet, light aroma that is meaningfully different from any leaf-based Japanese tea.
Behind The Leaves #34
What Kukicha Is and Where It Comes From
Why Kukicha Tastes Different from Leaf-Based Teas
The difference in taste is not incidental. It is rooted in the chemistry of the stem itself. Stems have been shown in studies to carry approximately half the caffeine content of tea leaves. They also contain less catechin. Because caffeine and catechins are the primary contributors to bitterness and astringency in Japanese tea, kukicha naturally produces a cup that is softer and less sharp than a comparable sencha or gyokuro.
On the other side of the equation, the stems are said to have higher concentrations of certain amino acids than the leaf portions. Amino acids, particularly L-theanine, contribute to umami and sweetness. This means kukicha offers a genuinely different balance: more sweetness and umami presence, less astringency and bitterness, and a lower stimulant load overall.
The aroma is also distinct. Research into the volatile aromatic compounds of stems versus leaves shows that stems carry different aromatic profiles, contributing to the fresh, sweet, and light character that kukicha drinkers recognise as unlike any other Japanese tea. It is not just a milder version of sencha. It smells and tastes like something genuinely different.