Caffeine in Tea
Определение
Tea contains 20-70 mg of caffeine per cup depending on tea type, leaf grade, and brewing parameters. Paired with L-theanine, tea caffeine produces a sustained, focused energy distinct from coffee's sharper stimulation.
Подробности
Tea caffeine, chemically identical to coffee caffeine, behaves differently in the body because of its companion compounds. L-theanine moderates caffeine's stimulant effect, while tea polyphenols slow its absorption, producing a gentler, longer-lasting energy curve without the peak-and-crash pattern many coffee drinkers experience. Contrary to popular myth, tea type alone does not predict caffeine content — a heavily brewed white tea can contain more caffeine than a lightly brewed black tea. The primary factors are bud content (young buds contain the most caffeine as a natural insecticide), water temperature, steep time, and leaf-to-water ratio. Matcha delivers the highest caffeine dose (60-70 mg per serving) because the entire powdered leaf is consumed. Gyokuro, shade-grown for three weeks before harvest, also ranks high due to increased caffeine synthesis in response to reduced sunlight. Decaffeination processes (CO2 or ethyl acetate) reduce caffeine by 95-98% but also remove significant amounts of beneficial catechins and flavor compounds. For naturally lower caffeine, choose bancha, houjicha, or later-harvest teas.