A Legacy in Every Leaf
Uji’s tea tradition began over 800 years ago, when Zen monks returning from China introduced the Camellia sinensis plant to Japanese soil. While tea spread throughout the country, it was Uji’s unique terroir—mist-laced mornings, mineral-rich riverbanks, and shaded valleys—that gave rise to Japan’s finest green teas. The region became the birthplace of tencha, the precursor to matcha, and its farmers were the first to adopt the innovative shading technique that remains vital to matcha production today.
Uji’s tea farmers cultivate with a mindfulness that honors legacy and traditional tea culture. Many small, multigenerational farms in Uji still rely on hand-harvesting methods and local heirloom cultivars, eschewing industrial-scale production to focus on quality, not quantity. Each leaf is a living link to generations past.
The Invention of Shading
Perhaps Uji’s most defining contribution to the world of tea is the development of ooishita—the practice of shading tea plants from sunlight for up to 30 days before harvest. This slows photosynthesis, increasing chlorophyll and amino acid levels (particularly L-theanine), and gives matcha its characteristic umami flavor and vibrant green color.
The leaves harvested after shading are steamed, dried without rolling, and carefully stone-ground into the fine powder known as matcha. This process, perfected in Uji, is a delicate blend of science, art and patience—a ceremonial offering of the land’s finest.