The Tea Guide

Leaf to Cup: Teas of the World

Flavor Profiles

Explore and compare tea characteristics

Vegetal Floral Fruity Astringency Umami Earthy

Select a tea above to explore its flavor profile

Understanding Tea

Processing & Types

Green Tea
Oxidation halted immediately by heat (steaming in Japan, pan-firing in China). Preserves fresh, vegetal, grassy character and maximum polyphenols.
White Tea
Least processed of all types — simply withered and dried. Only the youngest buds and leaves, resulting in the most delicate and naturally sweet teas.
Oolong
Partially oxidized (15–85%), occupying the vast spectrum between green and black. Skill-intensive: the oxidation level and roasting transform character entirely.
Black Tea
Fully oxidized (95–100%). The oxidation develops bold flavors, deep color, and robust tannins — ideal for milk, and the world's most consumed tea type.
Pu-erh
Post-fermented tea unique to Yunnan. Undergoes microbial transformation that continues for years — raw (sheng) ages naturally; ripe (shou) is accelerated.
Yellow Tea
Rarest major type — like green tea but with an additional 'smothering' step that removes harsh notes for a mellower, sweeter profile.

Brewing Temperature

60–70°C
Gyokuro, very high-grade matcha, and the most delicate first-flush Chinese greens. Low temperature extracts amino acids (umami/sweetness) while minimizing tannin extraction.
75–80°C
Most Japanese greens (sencha, kabusecha), delicate Chinese greens (Longjing, Bi Luo Chun), white teas. Preserves brightness and florals.
85–90°C
Lightly oxidized oolongs (Tie Guan Yin, Alishan), first-flush Darjeeling. Needs more heat than green teas but less than fully oxidized styles.
95–100°C
Black teas, heavily roasted oolongs (Da Hong Pao, Dong Ding roasted), hojicha, pu-erh. The robust structure requires near-boiling water for full extraction.

Terroir

Altitude
Higher elevation = slower growth = more concentrated flavor compounds. Most premium teas come from 1,000m+. Taiwan's highest gardens reach 2,600m.
Fog & Cloud
Mountain mist filters harsh UV radiation, extending leaf development time and concentrating amino acids and aromatic compounds.
Soil
Volcanic and mineral-rich soils contribute to the characteristic 'rock rhyme' of Wuyi teas. Humus-rich mountain soil shapes Darjeeling's muscatel quality.
Season
First flush (spring) captures the energy of winter dormancy in concentrated, delicate leaves. Autumn flush develops complexity. Summer teas tend to be bolder.

Caffeine & L-Theanine

Caffeine
Young buds contain the most caffeine. Shaded teas (gyokuro, matcha) are highest. Hojicha and kukicha are lowest among green teas. Not determined by oxidation level.
L-Theanine
The amino acid unique to tea (and a few mushrooms). Promotes alpha brain waves and calm alertness. Shaded teas have the highest concentration.
Synergy
L-Theanine modulates caffeine's stimulant effects, producing tea's distinctive calm focus — different from the jittery spike of coffee or energy drinks.
Multiple Infusions
Caffeine extracts quickly in the first brew. Subsequent infusions from the same leaves are progressively lower in caffeine but retain flavor compounds.

Global Tea Culture

China
Birthplace of tea culture. Gongfu cha (skill tea) uses small vessels, multiple short infusions, and full sensory attention. 2,000+ years of cultivation history.
Japan
Chado (tea way) — the ritualized matcha ceremony codified by Sen no Rikyu in the 16th century. Also the informal daily culture of sencha and hojicha.
UK & India
British 'afternoon tea' tradition from 1840. Chai (spiced milk tea) is the national drink of India, consumed by more people daily than any other single beverage.
Taiwan & HK
Bubble tea (boba) originated in Taiwan in the 1980s. Hong Kong milk tea — ultra-strong Ceylon strained through silk stockings — is a UNESCO-recognized cultural tradition.

Grading & Quality

Orthodox vs CTC
Orthodox: hand-plucked, whole-leaf processing preserving complex flavors. CTC (cut-tear-curl): machine-processed into granules — uniform, strong, best for bags and milk tea.
Harvest Grade
Chinese: Ming Qian (pre-Qingming), Yu Qian (pre-Grain Rain). Japanese: Ichiban-cha (1st flush), Niban-cha (2nd). Darjeeling: First/Second/Autumnal flush.
Leaf Grade
Whole leaf grades (FOP, OP) vs broken grades (BOP) vs fannings and dust. Whole leaf = complex and nuanced. Fannings/dust = fast, strong extraction for tea bags.
Certification
Geographic indicators (Darjeeling GI, Uji-cha), organic certification, Rainforest Alliance, and Fairtrade all signal production standards and origin authenticity.

Teas

70 teas from China, Japan, Taiwan, Korea, India, Ceylon & beyond