What L-Theanine Actually Does, and Why Matcha Has More of It
L-theanine is the reason matcha produces a different kind of alertness than coffee. It is an amino acid found almost exclusively in tea plants, and in concentrations that vary significantly depending on how the tea was grown. Understanding it helps explain why the grade and origin of your matcha are not just marketing details.
What L-Theanine Does in the Body
L-theanine crosses the blood-brain barrier and promotes alpha wave activity in the brain. Alpha waves are associated with a state of relaxed alertness, the kind of focus that comes without tension or agitation. They appear naturally during meditation, and L-theanine appears to induce a similar state chemically.
When L-theanine is consumed alongside caffeine, which matcha also contains, the two compounds interact in a way that modifies how the caffeine is experienced. Caffeine increases alertness and reaction speed; L-theanine attenuates the anxiety and jitteriness that caffeine can produce, while sustaining the focus. The result is a state that most matcha drinkers describe as calm concentration, alert but settled, focused without agitation.
Why Shade-Grown, First-Harvest Matcha Contains More
L-theanine is produced in the roots of the tea plant and transported up into the leaves, where it is normally converted into other compounds through photosynthesis when exposed to direct sunlight. Shade-growing interrupts this process. By blocking sunlight for three to four weeks before harvest, growers slow photosynthesis and allow L-theanine to accumulate in the leaves without being converted.
First-harvest leaves, harvested in spring after the plant's winter dormancy, also contain the highest natural L-theanine concentrations of any harvest in the year. The combination of shading and first harvest is what gives A-Grade ceremonial matcha its characteristic sweetness and umami depth: both are partly expressions of high L-theanine content.
What This Means for the Cup
Culinary grade matcha, made from later-harvest, unshaded leaves, contains measurably less L-theanine and more catechins. The result is a product that is more bitter, less sweet, and produces a less distinctive alertness profile. It works well in cooking and baking, where it will be mixed with other flavours. Drunk as a preparation, it does not deliver the same experience.
This is one concrete reason why the grade of matcha you use matters beyond taste. Our Ceremonial Matcha, Okumidori, and Samidori are all A-Grade first-harvest, shade-grown matcha, which means high L-theanine content is built into how they were produced.