Kaga Bocha

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Tea Twigs
Flavors
Nuts, Roasted, Brown Toast, Dark Bittersweet, Dark Wood, Decayed Wood, Roasted Barley, Stems, Sweet, Toasted, Toasty, Wood, Bark, Rye, Grain, Toasted Rice, Smooth
Sold in
Loose Leaf, Sachet
Caffeine
Low
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 2 min, 0 sec 3 g 10 oz / 295 ml

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9 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This tea is very unique and very delicious! If you like houjicha, you simply HAVE to try this tea! It’s perfect without milk or sugar. Houjicha is my favorite type of green tea, and this is a...” Read full tasting note
    95
  • “The tea looks like little sticks. Not at all like other green teas I’ve had. Lupicia calls this a houjicha, but it doesn’t look anything like Adagio’s houjicha (my only other exposure) so I’m not...” Read full tasting note
    60
  • “Bocha is literally “stem tea” and refers to the fact that this tea is made from stems of the tea plant rather than the leaves. Kaga is a place in Japan (near Kanazawa) known for producing this...” Read full tasting note
  • “Second tea from the sample pack. This time it is Kaga Bocha. The first thing I noticed when I opened the package was the light brown/green colour. This is an excellent sign of a decent houjicha....” Read full tasting note
    91

From Lupicia

A tea type called “bocha” made with the roasted stems of the tea plant. This tea is a specialty of the Kaga area in Ishikawa Prefecture. Toasty taste with a sweet roasted aroma. Makes an interesting milk tea!

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9 Tasting Notes

95
639 tasting notes

This tea is very unique and very delicious!

If you like houjicha, you simply HAVE to try this tea! It’s perfect without milk or sugar. Houjicha is my favorite type of green tea, and this is a definite favorite. Don’t give up on green tea without trying this one.

I had this tea on the same day I tried my first genmaicha, so I’m going to compare them in the rest of this review. The genmaicha I had was Kirara Rice Tea.

“Kaga” Bocha has a much sweeter aroma than Kirara Genmaicha. Roasted leaves are very different from roasted rice. The genmaicha reminds me of eating roasted peanuts from a street vendor. Houjicha tastes more like tea.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 45 sec

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60
123 tasting notes

The tea looks like little sticks. Not at all like other green teas I’ve had. Lupicia calls this a houjicha, but it doesn’t look anything like Adagio’s houjicha (my only other exposure) so I’m not sure what to expect.

The flavor reminds me of dry roasted grain. Like puffed wheat cereal that hasn’t been sweetened. Not at all like other green teas. It is mildly sweet, actually.

Lupicia’s website recommends blending this with milk for a tea latte, and I could see the flavors complementing each other well. It also makes me think my flavor comparison to cereal is not completely off-base; we eat milk with cereal, right?

Slightly bitter aftertaste, probably because I used water that was hotter than necessary to brew the tea. We don’t have a controlled water heater at work; it just comes out off the dispenser ‘hot’ and you deal with it. I tossed a couple of small ice cubes in to lower the temp. a tad, but I don’t think I did enough.

Preparation
0 min, 30 sec

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10 tasting notes

Bocha is literally “stem tea” and refers to the fact that this tea is made from stems of the tea plant rather than the leaves. Kaga is a place in Japan (near Kanazawa) known for producing this particular style of tea.

The tea is roasted like houjicha, and is similarly very aromatic and produces a light brown or golden color liquid. My local Lupicia store advertises this tea as “the taste of autumn” and for some reason the smell of Kaga Bocha does somehow make me think of cool crisp air and fallen leaves.

Currently this is my favorite tea to drink in the afternoon. Like houjicha in general, it is pleasantly sweet, and has less caffeine that other Japanese green teas. Compared to most other houjicha I’ve tried, this Kaga Bocha is lighter and smoother. I much prefer it. And it’s cheap!

I find that water at a full boil can add some bitterness, so let it cool for a bit first. Otherwise this is a very easy tea to brew. A spoonful of leaves in a mug full of 208°F water for 30 seconds comes out great.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 2 tsp 7 OZ / 207 ML

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91
24 tasting notes

Second tea from the sample pack. This time it is Kaga Bocha.

The first thing I noticed when I opened the package was the light brown/green colour. This is an excellent sign of a decent houjicha. Usually many people would roast bancha, kukicha or sencha too much and then the tea would often have more of a scorced, and sometimes bad, taste to it. (Do not get me wrong , I do like some more roasty houjichas as well.)

A good houjicha is usually more green than brown, so this might have been just slightly overdone but seemed promising nonetheless. (The leaves I tend to see here are dark brown) Since the tea consists of only stems, I assume it has been made from kukicha.

Certainly, the tea was much less strong and roasty than other houjichas I have tasted and the taste itself was much richer. There was also a slight natural sweetness attached to it as well, that made the beverage much more enjoyable. I love it, actually.

I think I might just buy more of this tea to enjoy during the now more colder winter days in Japan. Not that I should complain though. As I am writing this, it is about -18 degrees Celsius at the place I usually live in Norway, compared to 1 degree Celsius here in Japan.

Better make another cup!

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 45 sec

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82
1237 tasting notes

A highly enjoyable tea. If you are having an off day or someone online says something to make you mad (#firstworldproblems lol) this tea will really calm you down. It has a nice nutty flavor along with the roasted notes from the roasting process. I’m impressed with the stems in the tea bags. They are in great shape and look like they were precisely picked.

Flavors: Nuts, Roasted

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81
2958 tasting notes

This is a kukicha, not a houjija as lebelled (stems, not leaves). Heavily roasted.
You can taste a sweetness and bitterness similar to what you experience when you eat charred toast or burnt sugar. Old burning wood, dry twigs, bark/wood, roasty and toasty, notes of rye and roasted grain.

Flavors: Brown Toast, Dark Bittersweet, Dark Wood, Decayed Wood, Roasted, Roasted Barley, Stems, Sweet, Toasted, Toasty, Wood

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 4 min, 30 sec 3 g 17 OZ / 500 ML

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1711 tasting notes

I have no idea what this stuff is! It is roasty, has a slight grainy taste, is smooth and comforting. Whatever it is is really nice!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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82
467 tasting notes

From the Not My Cup O’ Tea TTB
This is an interesting tea for me. I haven’t had anything like this before. The closest I’ve had is genmaicha which I really enjoy. I sense a little astringency in the aftertaste but no bitterness. This is enjoyable and I think I’m going to take this packet out of the TTB! I think this is my cup o’ tea. :D

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 3 min, 30 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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75
961 tasting notes

I got a GIANT package of this in my Lupicia Happy Bag! It’s not something I would have picked out my own, but it’s actually quite good. It reminds me of a roasted oolong…smooth and slightly sweet with an intense roasted grain flavor and aroma.

Flavors: Grain, Roasted, Smooth, Sweet, Toasted

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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