Brewing Temperature Guide

Look up the ideal water temperature, steep time, and leaf-to-water ratio for any tea type. Select a tea category or specific variety and get precise brewing parameters for Western, gongfu, and cold brew methods.

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Brewing Methods

How to Use

  1. 1
    Select your tea category

    Choose from green, white, oolong, black, pu-erh, or herbal teas to narrow parameters relevant to your leaf.

  2. 2
    Review brewing parameters

    Read the recommended water temperature, steep time, and leaf-to-water ratio for Western, gongfu, and cold brew methods.

  3. 3
    Adjust for personal preference

    Use the displayed ranges as starting points, then fine-tune steep time by 15–30 seconds based on your taste preference for strength.

About

Brewing temperature is the single most critical variable in tea preparation, governing which flavor compounds dissolve, at what rate, and in what proportion. Each tea category occupies a distinct range: white and green teas demand cooler water to protect their delicate amino acids and chlorophyll, while black teas, pu-erh, and heavily roasted oolongs require near-boiling temperatures to achieve full extraction from denser, more oxidized leaf structures. Matching temperature to tea type is not aesthetic preference—it is the difference between expressing a tea's best qualities and destroying them.

Steep time and water temperature function as interdependent variables: raising the temperature accelerates extraction exponentially, so shorter steeps at high heat can yield equivalent strength to longer steeps at moderate heat. Gongfu brewing exploits this relationship deliberately, using excess leaf, boiling water, and rapid 15–30 second steepings to produce intense yet nuanced successive cups. Western brewing favors longer, gentler extraction to suit larger vessels and a single infusion format. Cold brewing inverts the relationship entirely, using time—6 to 24 hours—in place of heat to achieve full extraction with minimal bitterness.

The guide covers six tea categories and dozens of named varieties, incorporating parameters drawn from traditional Chinese, Japanese, and Taiwanese preparation conventions as well as contemporary Western practice. Leaf-to-water ratios, steeping vessel recommendations, and multiple brewing method comparisons are included for each variety, giving both beginners establishing foundational technique and experienced brewers optimizing a specific session the data they need to brew with intention and repeatability.

FAQ

Why does water temperature matter so much for green tea?
Green tea leaves contain heat-sensitive amino acids, particularly L-theanine, alongside catechins such as EGCG. When brewed above 80°C (176°F), the catechins extract rapidly and overwhelm the sweeter amino compounds, producing a bitter, astringent cup. Cooler water at 70–80°C selectively dissolves the umami-rich amino acids while limiting harsh polyphenol extraction. Japanese gyokuro and Chinese dragonwell respond dramatically to temperature: a 10°C difference can shift the cup from sweet and vegetal to sharply bitter. This sensitivity is why dedicated temperature-controlled kettles are considered essential equipment for serious green tea preparation.
What is the correct temperature for a traditional gongfu oolong session?
Traditional gongfu preparation of oolong teas uses fully boiling water at 95–100°C (203–212°F), particularly for heavily roasted or rolled varieties such as Wuyi rock oolongs (yan cha) and aged Dong Ding. The rationale is that the tightly rolled or dense twisted leaves require intense heat to open fully and release their complex aromatics. Lighter green oolongs like high-mountain Alishan or Lishan can be brewed at 85–95°C to preserve floral top notes. The short infusion times typical in gongfu brewing—15 to 45 seconds—compensate for the high temperature by limiting extraction duration, achieving balance between intensity and clarity in each successive infusion.
Can I cold brew any type of tea?
Cold brewing works across most tea categories, though it fundamentally changes the flavor profile by extracting primarily sweet and umami compounds while leaving behind many astringent polyphenols. Green teas cold brewed for 6–12 hours in the refrigerator produce exceptionally smooth, sweet cups that contrast sharply with their hot-brewed character. Black teas work well cold brewed over 8–12 hours but may taste flat compared to hot preparation if you prefer tannin-driven structure. Herbal infusions and fruit-based tisanes generally excel with cold brewing, producing clean, bright flavors. White teas develop a delicate, almost honey-like sweetness through cold infusion. The recommended ratio is typically 8–10 grams per liter of cold filtered water.
How does leaf-to-water ratio affect the brewing experience?
Leaf-to-water ratio directly controls concentration and the balance of flavor compounds extracted per unit volume. Western brewing typically uses 2–3 grams per 200 ml (roughly one teaspoon per 6 oz), producing a moderate cup intended for single long steep. Gongfu brewing uses dramatically more leaf—5–8 grams per 100 ml gaiwan capacity—but compensates with extremely short infusion times that allow 6 to 15+ sequential steepings, each revealing different aspects of the leaf. Higher ratios amplify both strengths and flaws in a tea's character, so fine-quality leaves reward increased leaf amounts while lower-quality material becomes harsh. Cold brew preparation typically uses similar ratios to Western hot brewing but extends time rather than increasing leaf.
How does altitude affect tea brewing parameters?
At high altitudes, water boils at temperatures below 100°C due to reduced atmospheric pressure: at 2,000 meters, water boils at approximately 93°C, and at 5,000 meters near 83°C. This matters practically for travelers and affects high-altitude tea ceremonies in regions like Tibet or the Himalayan foothills where local brewing traditions developed around these lower boiling points. For tea types requiring genuinely boiling water such as black teas and pu-erh, high-altitude brewing produces subtly different extraction because the maximum achievable temperature falls short. The guide's temperature ranges account for achievable temperatures at standard elevation; enthusiasts at significant altitude may need to extend steep time by 10–20% to compensate for lower maximum water temperature.