← Back to context

Comment by tmtvl

3 years ago

TL;DR no, but it will make it bitter and astringent because more caffeine and catechins will be extracted.

It depends on the green, though. Good-quality green tea from China can often withstand higher temperatures or long brewing, to the point where it's normal to just pinch some tea in a mug and refill with hot water throughout the day.

  • IIRC, Chinese green tea is a completely different beast from Japanese green tea like sencha.

  • I wouldn't say it is matter of quality; or rather lot of high-quality teas can still be quite sensitive to high temps. Gyokuros mentioned in the article are good example

    • Please re-read my post that I said from China specifically. Gyokuro, a green tea primarily of japanese make and style, does not apply to what I said. I'm thinking of gan lu or mao jian style teas.

      1 reply →

>TL;DR no, but it will make it bitter...

See, that's where the "no" is actually a "yes" for me. For my palate, bitter tea = ruined tea.