Japanese Gyokuro: Shaded Green Tea Cultivation and Preparation
Japan — Uji, Kyoto (developed 1835 by Yamamoto Kahei)
Gyokuro (玉露, 'jade dew') is the most premium category of Japanese green tea — and arguably the most technically demanding tea to both produce and prepare correctly. Its extraordinary character derives from a specific cultivation practice: the tea plants are shaded from direct sunlight for approximately 20 days before harvest, using traditional tana (bamboo and reed) shading frames or modern black netting. The absence of direct light triggers physiological changes in the tea plant: chlorophyll production accelerates (darkening the leaf to deep green), photosynthesis slows (reducing catechin/tannin production), and L-theanine — the amino acid responsible for tea's characteristic smooth, umami sweetness — increases dramatically. The result is a tea that is markedly lower in bitterness and astringency than standard sencha, and higher in amino acid-derived umami sweetness. Preparation must respect these chemical characteristics: gyokuro is brewed at extremely low temperatures (50–60°C) with a high leaf-to-water ratio (approximately 5–6g per 60ml). Boiling water or even standard sencha temperatures (70–80°C) will extract the catechins that shadowing suppressed, producing a bitter, astringent brew that defeats the purpose. The correct preparation yields a thick, viscous, deep green liquor of extraordinary depth and sweetness with virtually no bitterness.