Japan (nationwide; dominant in hot Kanto summers; Kyushu warm-version tradition)
Mugicha (barley tea, literally 'wheat/barley tea') is Japan's most consumed hot-season non-alcoholic beverage and occupies a unique position in the Japanese beverage landscape: not a true tea (no Camellia sinensis), not sweetened, served almost exclusively cold as a hydration and cooling beverage, and made from roasted whole barley grains steeped in water for 8–12 hours. The flavour is distinctive — toasted grain, slightly smoky, with a gentle bitterness and almost coffee-like darkness that provides contrast to sweet foods without competing with them. Mugicha contains no caffeine (roasting destroys it) and very low tannin content, making it suitable for all ages and all times of day including evening. Traditional preparation: add 1–2 tea bags or 20g loose roasted barley to 2 litres cold water, refrigerate overnight — the cold water extraction preserves a cleaner, less bitter flavour than hot brewing. The Japanese cultural practice of keeping a pitcher of cold mugicha in the refrigerator throughout summer is nearly universal — it is the domestic answer to the season's heat and the drink served to visiting guests without ceremony. Mugicha also appears warm in winter in Kyushu regions, served at izakaya and shotengai. The health associations are genuine: mugicha contains p-Coumaric acid (antioxidant), potassium (for electrolyte balance during heat sweating), and a gentle diuretic effect from barley compounds. Beyond Japan, mugicha has direct parallels in Korean boricha (virtually identical) and Chinese damai cha (wheat tea).
Toasted, grain-forward, gentle bitterness — neutral, refreshing, seasonally cooling
{"Cold water cold-brew preferred: 8–12 hours in refrigerator — cleaner, less bitter than hot brew","Zero caffeine, low tannin — suitable for all ages, including evening consumption","Roasted barley flavour: toasty, slightly smoky, gentle bitterness — no sweetness or umami","Universal summer domestic practice: cold pitcher in every Japanese household refrigerator","Health properties: p-Coumaric acid, potassium for summer electrolyte balance"}
{"1 mugicha tea bag per 1 litre of cold water in a sealed pitcher — perfect concentration without bitterness","Serve in tall glass over large ice cube — the grain toastiness is most refreshing when very cold","Mugicha pairs with virtually any Japanese summer food without conflict — the neutral grain backbone supports","Pairing: serve mugicha as the non-alcoholic option at yakitori or casual Japanese meals — universal accessibility"}
{"Brewing at boiling water — produces bitter, overly dark result compared to cold-brew method","Storing loose mugicha uncovered in refrigerator — absorbs refrigerator odours, compromising flavour","Over-steeping cold-brew beyond 16 hours — bitterness compounds concentrate","Expecting flavour complexity similar to green tea — mugicha is deliberately simple and refreshing"}
The Story of Tea: A Cultural History and Drinking Guide — Mary Lou Heiss; Japanese Farm Food — Nancy Singleton Hachisu