The One Thing That Determines Japanese Tea Quality (And How to Spot It Before Drinking)
Behind The Leaves #2
Points
The Core Rule: Quality = Umami
In practical terms:
- More umami → higher quality
Less umami → lower quality
This isn’t a minor factor.
Why Japanese Tea Is So Simple (Compared to Others)
For example, in Chinese tea:
- Aroma plays a major role
Oxidation levels are manipulated to create diversity
Scented teas (jasmine, rose, etc.) add another dimension
Aging (like pu’er) becomes part of the experience
In contrast, Japanese tea strips this down and focuses intensely on pure taste, which is why umami becomes the central metric.
What Causes High Umami in Japanese Tea
- Amino acids (especially L-theanine)
Careful processing to preserve these compounds
Cultivation methods like shading (e.g., in matcha and gyokuro)
Higher-end teas are specifically grown and processed to maximize this umami profile.
Exceptions: When Price Doesn’t Match Umami
Rare cultivars: Some tea varieties are difficult to grow, making them expensive even if their umami isn’t exceptionally high
Competition teas: In national tea competitions, pricing can reflect prestige, rarity, or technical perfection beyond just taste
So while umami explains most cases, it’s not absolute.
Key Takeaways
- Japanese tea quality is largely driven by one factor: umami
Around 70–80% of price can be explained by umami levels
This simplicity is unique compared to more complex evaluation systems in other tea cultures
High umami comes from amino acids, shading, and processing techniques
Exceptions exist, but umami remains the most reliable baseline
Q&A
What determines the quality of Japanese tea?
- The primary determinant is umami. The richer and deeper the umami, the higher the quality.
Why is Japanese tea quality simpler than other teas?
Does a higher price always mean better Japanese tea?
