A Tea Addict's Journal

Sticks or tea?

July 22, 2015 · 5 Comments

If you think this is just a pile of sticks, you’re not wrong. It is, mostly, just a pile of sticks, with a few really broken leaves. It is, however, a bancha.

Specifically, it’s called the three year bancha. I’ve seen bancha before, but most of them just look like lower grade green tea. This is quite something else. This is one of the many teas I got from the tea fair I attended in Kyoto. I’ve been slowly going through them one by one, and some are definitely more interesting than others. It seems as though Yuuki-cha used to sell this tea.

This particular one is from a farm not in the normal tea producing regions of Shizuoka or Kagoshima, where most Japanese green teas are grown these days, but in Miyazaki, next to Kagoshima on the southern side of Kyushu. The farm does a bunch of interesting things – growing black tea, a pan fried (as opposed to steamed) green tea, and this. The farm is located in a mountainous area, and as they tell you, looking up to Mount Aso, an occasionally active volcano in the middle of Kyushu.

The instructions on the back of the package says you should add the desired amount of the tea into a kettle, and boil and then turn to low heat for 20 minutes. Then you can drink as you please. What you get then is not so much tea in the normal sense of the word, where we brew leaves, but rather a bit of a soup using the sticks from the tea plant that’s been cut down and then roasted.

The package opens with obvious charcoal smell, and the tea itself is not very strong and quite mild. It’s the sort of thing you might just sip all day, and in this way not too different from cheap roasted oolongs in purpose, except in this case it’s even milder and softer, without much of the bitterness or sourness that can sometimes accompany roasted oolongs.

If you ignore the instructions and just brew this, what you’d get is just a cup full of roast and not much else – did I say it’s mild? What is funny to me is that this tea is still classified as “green tea,” even though it’s about as far from green tea as you can get while still calling it that. When we say Japanese green tea, I’m pretty sure nobody’s thinking of this.

Categories: Teas
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5 responses so far ↓

  • Michael Eversberg II // July 22, 2015 at 11:02 pm | Reply

    Houjibankukicha!

  • Cwyn N // July 23, 2015 at 5:01 am | Reply

    Thank you for posting this. I have to tell people all the time that twig teas and hard stems need to be boiled and they don’t believe me. Now I can link here. 😉

  • miig // July 23, 2015 at 6:22 am | Reply

    Yes;
    this method of classification has amused me before, i got some Kyobanchas from Yunomi.us, and they, too, say “Green Tea”.
    Some of them are quite nice for a simple, but warming brew in the afternoon that is mild in caffeine. They indeed do come quite close to cheap Oolong, even though I trust them somewhat more if it says that they’re “organic” 🙂 Totally easy-drinking stuff anyways.

    One of these is even a Batabata-Cha, a dark, roasted Bancha that has actually been post-fermented. It actually isn’t intended for drinking alone, its brewed and then whisked and then served with some special Japanese food. Bottomline is, these leaves are almost Black and the tea tastes super-earthy, but on the pack it says “Japanese Green Tea” *g*

    I suppose that these are all sub-categories of Bancha, and since Bancha is green tea, they fall into the same class. Probably this hasn’t been changed because they just are so rare and few people actually care about these teas.

    • MarshalN // July 28, 2015 at 3:11 am | Reply

      Yeah, I think they just don’t have any category to put it in, and since technically it sort of is a green tea, there it goes – even though it’s about as far from “green tea” as one could imagine it

  • Hailey // October 25, 2015 at 7:57 pm | Reply

    Hello,

    I’d never heard of Bancha until reading your post but I’m now fascinated with the idea of this tea. Your pictures were a nice touch – it’s hard to believe that pile of sticks is in fact a form of green tea. Also, thanks for the preparation advice. Your tips on boiling Bancha versus brewing it are definitely a useful feature in this post (considering I can’t read the Japanese label). All in all, this is an enlightening read that offers valuable insight into the realm of Japanese tea. Keep the posts coming!

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