What Does Hojicha Taste Like?
Hojicha is one of the most approachable Japanese teas — its flavour is warm, roasted, and smooth in a way that is immediately familiar even to people who do not usually drink tea. Where matcha is grassy, vegetal, and umami-rich, hojicha is toasty, nutty, and slightly sweet. The contrast is significant, even though both come from the same plant.
The roasted character
The defining quality of hojicha is the roasting. Leaves are roasted at high temperatures — around 200°C — which caramelises the natural sugars and produces the characteristic warm, slightly smoky flavour. The result reminds many people of roasted barley, toasted grain, or a light caramel. There is a pleasant earthiness completely different from the fresh grassiness of green tea.
Sweetness and bitterness
Hojicha is noticeably low in bitterness. The roasting process breaks down the catechins and tannins that cause bitterness in green tea, leaving a naturally sweeter, mellower flavour. This makes it an accessible entry point for people who find green tea or matcha too bitter — most who try hojicha find it immediately pleasant, without the adjustment period matcha can require.
Comparing to matcha
If matcha is the vivid, intense, alert-feeling tea — bright green, grassy, focused — hojicha is the warm, settling, amber-coloured tea. They complement each other well in a daily routine precisely because they are so different. Hojicha latte has a flavour closer to a roasted grain or chicory drink than a matcha latte.
Temperature and flavour
Hot hojicha is warming and comforting. Cold-brewed hojicha is lighter and more refreshing, with less of the toasty quality and more of a subtle cool sweetness. Both work well and suit different seasons.