Provenance Technique Library

Japan (Kyoto — Ippodo and Fukujuen pioneered commercial hojicha 1920s; nationwide since) Techniques

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Japan (Kyoto — Ippodo and Fukujuen pioneered commercial hojicha 1920s; nationwide since)
Hojicha Roasted Green Tea Brewing and Applications
Japan (Kyoto — Ippodo and Fukujuen pioneered commercial hojicha 1920s; nationwide since)
Hojicha (ほうじ茶) is produced by roasting green tea leaves, stems, or twigs at high temperature (150–200°C) over charcoal or in rotating drum roasters — transforming the raw vegetal, grassy character of green tea through Maillard reaction and pyrolysis into the characteristic roasted, nutty, caramel-like aroma that distinguishes it from all other Japanese teas. The roasting process reduces caffeine content (making hojicha appropriate for evening drinking and children) and tannin levels while producing dozens of new aromatic compounds including pyrazines, furanes, and thiophenes responsible for its warmth and depth. First-grade hojicha uses whole leaves (bancha or sencha quality); second grade uses stems and twigs (kukicha base), producing a lighter, sweeter, more delicate roasted character. Kyoto's Ippodo and Fukujuen pioneered modern hojicha production in the 1920s. Brewing is straightforward compared to other Japanese teas: 5g per 200ml at 90–95°C for 30–45 seconds — the roasted character is resilient and emerges clearly at higher temperatures that would damage more delicate teas. Beyond drinking, hojicha has become a major flavour in Japanese confectionery, ice cream, chocolate, latte applications, and bakery — the roasted character bridges sweet preparations in ways matcha cannot.
Tea and Beverages