Why Japanese Green Tea Is Healthier (It’s Not the Plant. It’s the Process)
Behind The Leaves #1
Points
All Tea Comes from the Same Plant. So What’s Different?
The Real Driver of Health Benefits: EGCG
When people talk about green tea being healthy, whether they mention antioxidants, catechins, or polyphenols, they are often referring to EGCG specifically. It is one of the most potent and unique compounds found in meaningful amounts almost exclusively in green tea.
Same Plant, Different Outcome
So the key question is:
If the plant is the same, why is Japanese green tea often considered healthier?
The answer lies not in the plant, but in how the tea is processed after harvesting.
Fixation: The Critical Step
- Oxidation reduces EGCG levels
The earlier and more effectively oxidation is stopped, the more EGCG is preserved
- Oolong tea is partially oxidized
Black tea is fully oxidized
As oxidation increases, EGCG decreases.
Why Japan Preserves More EGCG
- Japan uses steaming
Most other countries use pan-firing (dry heat)
This is why Japanese green tea tends to have higher EGCG levels compared to other green teas.
A Historical Reason Behind It
It was initially used in temples to help monks stay awake during long meditation sessions. Later, it spread to the samurai class, where alertness and discipline were essential.
- Tea in Japan developed as a functional, focus-driven drink
Processing methods evolved differently from countries where tea was more recreational
Key Takeaways
- Japanese green tea is not inherently different at the plant level (although the cultivars and soil is different), it’s the processing that matters
- EGCG is the primary compound responsible for most health benefits
- Steaming preserves EGCG better than pan-firing
- Oxidation reduces EGCG. Less oxidation = more health benefits
- Japan’s tea culture evolved around function (focus, discipline), shaping its processing methods
Q&A
What makes Japanese green tea healthier than other teas?
What is EGCG in green tea?
Does oxidation affect green tea health benefits?
