Bancha

Type of Japanese green tea From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Bancha (番茶) is a type of Japanese green tea. It is harvested from the third and fourth flushes of sencha between summer and autumn.[1]

TypeGreen
Other namesCommon Tea
OriginJapan
Quick descriptionMore widely available in the West. A late season crop, goes well with food.
Quick facts Type, Other names ...
Bancha
TypeGreen

Other namesCommon Tea
OriginJapan

Quick descriptionMore widely available in the West. A late season crop, goes well with food.

Close

It can be found in a number of forms such as roasted, unroasted, smoked, matured or fermented for three years and even post-fermented. For example, goishicha.

Background

Bancha is harvested from the same tea tree as sencha grade, but it is plucked later than sencha is, giving it a lower market grade.[1] It is considered to be one of the lowest grades of Japanese green teas.[2] There are 22 grades of bancha. Its flavour is unique and varies depending on the type.

Flavours range from smoke, roasted nuts, green grass, earth, soil, wet leaves, some of the types of bancha have a stronger straw smell.

See also

References

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