Loose Leaf Green Tea: China & Japan

Shop online for loose leaf green teas made from whole tea leaves sourced directly from the artisan farmers who tend them. Our best-selling Premium Green tea varieties include Sencha, Dragon Well, Dragon Pearls and other gourmet teas. Enjoy a variety of delicious flavors, ranging from sweet to vegetal to umami to nutty, with options for a strong, toasty tea or lighter profiles, as well as the many health benefits associated with regularly drinking green tea. Choose from conventionally grown and organic green tea selections. Our direct-trade advantage ensures superior taste, freshness and value.

41 Green Teas

What Is Green Tea?

Green tea is the world's most widely consumed tea category — and the one with the longest written history of health associations. Like all true teas, it comes from the Camellia sinensis plant. What makes it green rather than black or oolong is the processing: immediately after harvest, the fresh leaves are heated — either pan-fired in a wok (the Chinese method) or steamed (the Japanese method) — to stop oxidation before it begins. The result is a tea that retains the fresh, green character of the leaf rather than developing the darker, more oxidized flavors of black tea.

The two processing traditions produce distinctly different flavors. Chinese green teas — pan-fired in large woks — develop a characteristic nutty, slightly toasty quality from the dry-heat contact. Japanese green teas — steamed — develop a cleaner, more vegetal, umami-forward character without the roasted note. Neither is better; they're different, and both have a place in any serious green tea collection.



The Loose Leaf Green Tea Collection

Sencha

Japan's most widely consumed tea and the reference point for what Japanese green tea tastes like. Adagio's loose leaf Sencha is steamed in the traditional Japanese style — clean, fresh, with a natural sweetness and a gentle umami depth that distinguishes quality Sencha from the flat, bitter versions that give green tea its undeserved reputation for difficulty. The right everyday green tea for anyone transitioning from green teabags to whole-leaf brewing. From 13¢/cup.

Dragon Well (Longjing)

China's most celebrated green tea — Long Jing (龍井), or Dragon Well — from the hills above West Lake in Hangzhou, Zhejiang province. Pan-fired in a flat-leaf style that produces the characteristic chestnut and fresh grass notes of authentic Long Jing, Dragon Well is the green tea that most clearly illustrates the difference between Chinese and Japanese green tea processing. Clean, slightly nutty, naturally sweet, and with a finish that develops pleasantly in the mouth after the cup is empty. The gateway to Chinese green tea for anyone who primarily knows the Japanese styles. From 18¢/cup.

Dragon Pearls

Hand-rolled green tea pearls that unfurl dramatically during steeping — one of the most visually compelling teas in the Adagio catalog, period. Dragon Pearls are a Chinese green tea rolled into tight spheres; as hot water covers them, they slowly open into long, full leaves that perform a quiet visual spectacle in a glass teapot. The flavor matches the presentation: naturally sweet, clean, and smooth, with none of the bitterness that poorly processed green tea can develop. From 27¢/cup.

Jasmine Phoenix Pearls

Hand-rolled green tea pearls naturally scented with jasmine flowers using the traditional multi-cycle method — the most visually and aromatically impressive green tea in the collection. The long, dark pearls unfurl during steeping as jasmine blossoms float to the surface; the fragrance fills the room from the moment hot water touches the leaves. Naturally scented, not artificially flavored — the jasmine character persists across four or five steepings rather than disappearing after the first cup. From 36¢/cup.

Gyokuro

Japan's most prized green tea — shade-grown for 20–30 days before harvest to develop the highest concentration of L-theanine and the deepest umami character available in any green tea. The shade-growing process suppresses catechin development while increasing amino acid production, resulting in a naturally sweet, intensely savory cup with almost no bitterness. Gyokuro requires the most precise brewing of any green tea: 140–150°F water, 90 seconds, a small quantity of leaves. Done correctly, it produces a cup unlike anything else in the tea world. Done with boiling water, it produces something unpleasant — which is why most people who claim not to like Gyokuro have simply never had it brewed correctly. From 27¢/cup.

Genmaicha

Japanese green tea combined with roasted brown rice — a style that began as a way to extend expensive tea with a cheaper ingredient and became one of the most beloved tea styles in Japan. The roasted rice adds a toasty, slightly nutty, almost popcorn-like quality to the green tea base that makes Genmaicha the most immediately accessible Japanese green tea for anyone new to the category. The roasted character softens the grassiness that some green tea drinkers find challenging. From 13¢/cup.

Gunpowder Green Tea

Tightly rolled into small pellets that expand during steeping, Gunpowder gets its name from its resemblance to black powder. A Chinese green tea with a bolder, slightly smoky character than most green teas — the pellet rolling and the higher firing temperature produce a more assertive cup with good body and a clean, slightly brisk finish. The most forgiving green tea to brew in terms of temperature — its bolder character tolerates minor over-temperature better than more delicate styles. From 13¢/cup.

Flavored Green Teas

Adagio's flavored green tea collection applies whole-leaf Chinese or Japanese green tea bases to fruit and botanical flavor profiles that make the category immediately accessible to anyone who hasn't tried pure green tea before:

  • Apricot Green — honeyed apricot sweetness on a clean green tea base. The most popular flavored green tea in the collection and one of the strongest cold brew performers in the entire catalog.
  • Citrus Mint Green — bright citrus and cooling peppermint over green tea. An invigorating cup that works equally well hot and iced.
  • Moroccan Mint — green tea with spearmint, in the Moroccan tea tradition. The most recognizable flavored green tea globally and the most approachable starting point for green tea beginners.


Chinese vs. Japanese Green Tea: Which Is Right for You?

The most useful framework for navigating the green tea collection is understanding the two main processing traditions and what they produce in the cup:

  • Chinese green teas (Dragon Well, Gunpowder, Dragon Pearls, Jasmine Phoenix Pearls, Pi Luo Chun) — pan-fired processing produces a nutty, slightly toasty, sometimes sweet character with lower vegetal intensity than Japanese greens. Generally more accessible to drinkers new to green tea. Brewed at 165–175°F.
  • Japanese green teas (Sencha, Gyokuro, Genmaicha) — steaming produces a cleaner, greener, more umami-forward character with the fresh vegetal quality that defines Japanese cuisine pairing. More sensitive to temperature — always below boiling. Brew at 140–170°F depending on the specific tea.
  • Not sure which direction to start? Dragon Well for Chinese; Sencha for Japanese. Both are reliable everyday green teas that demonstrate their respective tradition's character clearly without requiring the precision that more demanding teas (Gyokuro, Pi Luo Chun) need.


Green Tea Health Benefits

Green tea has the most extensively studied health profile of any tea category — centuries of consumption in China and Japan combined with several decades of modern clinical research have produced a substantial body of evidence for several specific benefits:

  • EGCG and antioxidants — Epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) is the most studied catechin in green tea and the compound most associated with its health properties. Green tea retains higher EGCG concentrations than any more-oxidized tea category because the pan-firing or steaming stops oxidation before EGCG degrades. Whole-leaf green tea extracts more EGCG per gram of tea than fannings-based teabags of equivalent weight.
  • L-theanine and calm focus — L-theanine is an amino acid found almost exclusively in tea (and some mushrooms) that modulates the effect of caffeine in the brain. The combination of green tea's moderate caffeine (25–45mg per 8oz) and its L-theanine produces a state of calm, focused alertness distinct from the jittery stimulation of coffee or energy drinks. This combination is increasingly studied for cognitive performance applications.
  • Cardiovascular associations — multiple large-scale epidemiological studies, primarily from Japan, have found associations between regular green tea consumption and reduced cardiovascular risk. The strongest associations are with daily consumption of 3–5 cups rather than occasional use.
  • Metabolic effects — green tea catechins have been studied for associations with fat oxidation and metabolic rate in multiple clinical trials. The effects are modest and not a substitute for other metabolic health practices — but they are reproducible in the research literature in a way that many other supplement-category health claims aren't.
  • Blood sugar regulation — several trials have found associations between green tea consumption and improved insulin sensitivity and blood glucose management, making it one of the more credible functional wellness beverages for this specific benefit.


Green Tea Caffeine Content

Green tea contains approximately 25–45mg of caffeine per 8oz serving — less than black tea (40–70mg) and significantly less than coffee (95–200mg).

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