How to Brew Green Tea (and Why 80C Matters)

teas.co.uk · 8 min · Serves 1

You'll need

Method

  1. Bring the kettle to a full boil. Boiling first drives off any flat or chlorine taste in the water before you let it cool.
  2. Take the kettle off the heat and leave it to stand, lid open, for two minutes. That brings it down from 100C to about 80C, which is what green tea wants. A thermometer will read it exactly, but the two minute rule is reliable without one.
  3. While it stands, warm a cup by half filling it with hot water and tipping it out. A smaller cup suits green tea; about 200ml of brew in a 250ml cup is the right amount.
  4. Drop the tea bag into the warm cup.
  5. Pour the cooled 80C water over the bag, filling to about a centimetre below the rim.
  6. Cover with a saucer or tea cosy to hold in the delicate aromatics during the short steep.
  7. Steep for two to three minutes, no longer. Green tea over extracts fast, and the gap between three minutes and five is the gap between a clean cup and a bitter one.
  8. Lift the bag out with a teaspoon and discard. Do not press it against the side; squeezing a green tea bag forces out the tannins and turns the cup astringent.
  9. If you like, twist a thin curl of lemon peel over the surface to drop a little of its oil in, then add the peel to the cup. The peel gives a fragrant lift without the sharpness that a squeeze of juice would bring.
  10. Drink it while it is hot and fresh, in the first ten minutes or so, with a plain shortbread or a slice of sponge if you fancy.

Recipe: https://teas.co.uk/recipes/green tea/how to brew green tea and why-80c matters/