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Sencha

Green tea

About this tea

Sencha is Japan's most popular green tea, accounting for roughly 80% of all tea produced in the country. Distinguished by its vibrant green needle-shaped leaves and refreshing balance of vegetal sweetness with mild astringency, sencha is steamed shortly after harvest to halt oxidation — a uniquely Japanese technique that preserves its bright color and clean, grassy flavor. From casual daily drinking to refined single-origin tastings, sencha is the everyday heart of Japanese tea culture.

How to brew: 75°C, 1.5 min, 2 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

75°C
1.5 min
2 g per cup

Flavor notes

vegetal, sweet, fresh

Often associated with

Calm alertness, Gentle focus

Best time to enjoy

Mid-morning, Early afternoon

Tags

FocusRefreshingCalm

Origin & Production

Japan — Shizuoka, Kagoshima, Uji (Kyoto)

Sencha is cultivated across Japan, with Shizuoka Prefecture producing nearly 40% of the national crop thanks to its temperate climate and Mt. Fuji's volcanic soil. Kagoshima in southern Kyushu is the second-largest producing region, known for early harvests due to its warm climate. Uji in Kyoto Prefecture, while producing smaller volumes, is revered for its centuries-old tea heritage and premium single-origin sencha.

Production process

1

Harvest

The first flush (shincha/ichibancha) in late April to May yields the most prized leaves, rich in amino acids after winter dormancy. Later flushes (nibancha, sanbancha) produce progressively more astringent teas.

2

Steaming

Freshly harvested leaves are steamed within hours to halt oxidation. Steaming duration defines the character: light steaming (asamushi, ~30 seconds), medium (chumushi, ~60 seconds), or deep steaming (fukamushi, 60–120 seconds).

3

Rolling & shaping

Steamed leaves are rolled multiple times to break down cell walls and release juices, then shaped into the characteristic tight, needle-like form that defines sencha's appearance.

4

Drying

Rolled leaves are dried to approximately 5% moisture content, locking in flavor and enabling long shelf stability. The final product has a deep green color and a clean, fresh aroma.

SteamedNeedle-leafFirst flushSun-grown

History & Tradition

Sencha revolutionized Japanese tea culture by making high-quality green tea accessible to everyone — not just monks and aristocrats who drank powdered matcha.

1
1738

Nagatani Soen invents sencha

Nagatani Soen, a tea farmer from Uji, develops the uji method of steaming, rolling, and drying green tea leaves — creating the sencha we know today and making leaf tea accessible to common people.

2
1835

Yamamoto Kahei refines gyokuro

Building on sencha techniques, Yamamoto Kahei VI develops gyokuro by shade-growing leaves before harvest. This innovation further elevated the art of Japanese leaf tea.

3
1899

Shizuoka becomes Japan's tea capital

With the opening of Shimizu Port for international trade, Shizuoka Prefecture expands tea production dramatically, becoming Japan's largest sencha-producing region — a position it holds today.

4
1953

Fukamushi sencha is developed

Tea producers in Makinohara, Shizuoka, develop deep-steamed (fukamushi) sencha to create a richer, smoother cup from leaves that were too coarse for traditional light steaming.

Health Benefits

Rich in catechins

Sencha is one of the highest sources of catechins (especially EGCG) among all teas. Sun-growing boosts catechin production, making sencha particularly rich in these protective polyphenols.

Gentle mental clarity

Contains L-theanine and moderate caffeine (~30–40 mg per cup), providing a clean, focused alertness without coffee-like jitters. First-flush sencha has the highest L-theanine content.

Vitamin C content

Steaming preserves vitamin C that would otherwise degrade during pan-firing. One cup of sencha provides roughly 10–15% of the daily recommended intake of vitamin C.

Cardiovascular support

Regular sencha consumption has been linked to reduced LDL cholesterol levels and improved endothelial function. The Ohsaki study in Japan found daily green tea drinkers had 26% lower cardiovascular mortality.

Metabolic boost

The combination of caffeine and catechins in sencha has been shown to increase thermogenesis and fat oxidation, supporting healthy metabolism when combined with an active lifestyle.

Grades & Varieties

Fukamushi (deep-steamed)

Steamed for 60–120 seconds, producing a rich, full-bodied cup with a deep green, slightly cloudy liquor. The leaves break down more, creating smaller particles that deliver intense flavor and color.

Best for

  • Daily drinking
  • Rich, smooth flavor preference
  • Shorter brewing times

Asamushi (light-steamed)

Steamed for approximately 30 seconds, retaining a more delicate, transparent pale-green liquor with nuanced vegetal notes. The leaves remain intact and elegant, offering a clean, refined taste.

Best for

  • Refined tasting sessions
  • Light, delicate flavor preference
  • Multiple infusions

Chumushi (medium-steamed)

Steamed for about 60 seconds — the middle ground that balances the delicacy of asamushi with the body of fukamushi. The most common style, offering a well-rounded cup with good color and balanced flavor.

Best for

  • All-purpose daily tea
  • Balanced flavor profile
  • Introduction to sencha

Did you know?

Sencha was invented in 1738 by Nagatani Soen, who spent 15 years perfecting a steaming method so ordinary people could enjoy quality green tea; it now represents about 80% of Japanese tea.

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Drinks with this tea