Japanese Gyokuro Ice Brew and Cold Extraction Tea Techniques
Japan — contemporary premium tea innovation built on traditional gyokuro production
Cold extraction of premium Japanese green tea — most significantly gyokuro — is a technique that pushes the bounds of conventional brewing by exploiting the temperature-selectivity of different flavour compounds. At cold temperatures (4–10°C), the amino acid L-theanine and its related compounds extract slowly and fully over 6–12 hours, while the bitter catechin compounds extract at a negligible rate at these temperatures. The result is a tea of extraordinary purity: an almost viscous, amber-green liquor of extraordinary sweetness and umami depth with zero bitterness — often described as the most complex single-ingredient cold beverage in existence. The gyokuro ice brew technique ('gyokuro koridashi') uses the most extreme version: premium gyokuro leaves (6–8g per 30ml) placed in a vessel and a single large piece of ice placed on top. The ice melts slowly at room temperature, dripping through the leaves over 2–4 hours at just above 0°C, extracting only the most delicate, low-molecular-weight amino acid compounds. The resulting liquid (typically 20–40ml per session) is served in a small glass vessel and consumed as a meditative experience. Sencha cold brew (4°C, overnight, 4g per 500ml) is a more accessible version producing a refreshing summer drink of exceptional clarity.