Green Tea

Green Tea Flavor Profiles

Green tea flavor profile guide: vegetal, marine, nutty, floral, and sweet notes. How to identify flavors in Chinese, Japanese, and Korean green teas.

5 min read

Introduction

Green tea offers one of the most diverse sensory experiences in the tea world, spanning from ocean-spray marine notes to warm chestnut sweetness. Developing your ability to identify these flavors transforms tea drinking from a simple act of consumption into an engaged sensory practice.

The Five Flavor Families

Vegetal: The most commonly associated green tea flavor. Grassy (fresh-cut lawn), herbaceous (parsley, dill), and cooked vegetable (steamed spinach, asparagus) notes are characteristic of Japanese steamed greens. Chinese pan-fired greens are less vegetal, leaning toward nutty and floral.

Marine: Seaweed, ocean breeze, brine, and iodine. This family is strongest in Japanese greens, particularly gyokuro and deep-steamed sencha. The marine character comes from specific amino acids and dimethyl sulfide compounds that develop during steaming and shade-growing.

Nutty: Chestnut, almond, roasted grain, and toasted sesame. The hallmark of pan-fired Chinese greens like Longjing and Mao Feng. Genmaicha occupies this space in the Japanese tradition. Nutty notes develop during the Maillard reaction in pan-firing.

Floral: Orchid, jasmine, lily, and osmanthus. Subtle in most green teas but prominent in certain Chinese varieties like Bi Luo Chun and high-altitude greens. Korean ujeon and sejak can develop delicate floral qualities.

Sweet: Honey, brown sugar, corn, and malt. All quality green teas should finish sweet, a sign of adequate amino acid content and proper processing. The lingering sweetness in the throat (called huigan in Chinese) is a prized quality indicator.

Processing and Origin Effects

Steaming amplifies vegetal and marine notes. Pan-firing develops nutty and toasty notes. Shade-growing intensifies umami and sweetness while suppressing astringency. High altitude concentrates aromatics. Spring harvest maximizes amino acids. Each combination of processing and origin creates a unique flavor fingerprint.

Embed on your site — TeaFYI

Add the widget to any webpage using a script tag.

<div data-teafyi="guide" data-slug="green-tea-flavor-profiles"></div>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/teafyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>

Embed using a standard iframe — works in any CMS.

<iframe src="https://teafyi.com/iframe/guide/green-tea-flavor-profiles/" width="100%" height="480" frameborder="0" loading="lazy" title="TeaFYI guide widget"></iframe>

Paste the URL into WordPress, Medium, or any oEmbed-aware editor.

https://teafyi.com/guides/green-tea-flavor-profiles/

Add a badge linking back to TeaFYI.

<a href="https://teafyi.com/guides/green-tea-flavor-profiles/" target="_blank" rel="noopener">
  <img src="https://teafyi.com/badge/site.svg" alt="TeaFYI" height="20">
</a>
Preview: TeaFYI

Use the TeaFYI WordPress plugin shortcode.

[drinkfyi-guide site="teafyi" slug="green-tea-flavor-profiles"]

Use as a native HTML custom element in modern browsers.

<teafyi-guide slug="green-tea-flavor-profiles" theme="light"></teafyi-guide>
<script src="https://cdn.jsdelivr.net/npm/teafyi-embed@1/dist/embed.min.js" defer></script>

Powered by TeaFYI

Docs →