Definition:
Astringency is a tactile, rather than taste, sensation perceived in the mouth when polyphenols — particularly catechins (specifically EGCG and other catechin monomers and oligomers) — bind to proline-rich salivary proteins, causing those proteins to precipitate and aggregate on the surface of the oral mucosa, which reduces the lubricating effect of saliva and produces the familiar drying, puckering, rough, constricting sensation experienced as astringency. It is not a taste detectable by taste buds (like sweet, salty, bitter, sour, umami) but a tactile sensation mediated by trigeminal nerve response — the same class of sensation as the burn of capsaicin or the fizz of carbonation.
In-Depth Explanation
The biochemistry:
- Catechins (EGCG, EGC, ECG, EC) are present in the tea leaf as water-soluble compounds
- When dissolved in hot water, catechins enter the mouth
- They interact with proline-rich salivary proteins (PRPs) — proteins evolved as a defence against excessive polyphenol consumption from plant foods
- The polyphenol-protein complex is insoluble — it precipitates on oral mucosa surfaces
- The loss of lubrication creates the astringent sensation; salivary glands compensate with increased salivation
Factors controlling astringency intensity:
| Factor | Effect on astringency |
|---|---|
| Water temperature | Higher temperature extracts more catechins → more astringency |
| Steeping time | Longer time extracts more catechins → more astringency |
| Leaf catechin content | Higher catechin varieties (sun-grown; young buds; unoxidised) → more astringency |
| Oxidation | Oxidation converts catechins to theaflavins/thearubigins → reduced astringency |
| Shade growing | Shade suppresses catechin biosynthesis → lower astringency |
Astringency vs. bitterness: These are distinct and often confused:
- Bitterness is a taste detected by taste buds; in tea, caffeine is a primary bitter compound
- Astringency is a tactile sensation; catechins are the primary source
Both can occur together (high-catechin green tea can be both bitter and astringent) or independently (heavily oxidised black tea can have low catechin astringency but caffeine bitterness)
Astringency reduction through processing:
- Oxidation: Converts catechins to theaflavins and thearubigins (black tea polyphenols); astringency character changes from “green/grassy puckering” to “firmer, drying” but also reduces intensity
- Shade growing: Suppresses catechin synthesis at the genetic expression level; gyokuro has far lower astringency than sun-grown sencha from the same cultivar
- Kill-green: Does not reduce catechins but prevents further oxidation, preserving whatever catechin content the leaf has
- Lower brewing temperature: Most practical home control for reducing astringency
Acceptable vs. excessive astringency: Moderate astringency is considered a positive quality in many teas — it provides structural contrast against sweetness and umami, adds complexity, and contributes to the polyphenol health profile. Excessive astringency from over-brewing or poor quality leaf is generally considered a flaw.
Research
Polyphenol-salivary protein interaction:
Bacon, J.R., et al. (2000). “Interaction of polyphenols with salivary proteins and mechanisms of astringency perception.” Food Quality and Preference, 11(1–2), 75–82. Seminal study on the biochemical mechanism of astringency.
Catechin content vs. astringency perception:
Leung, L.K., et al. (2001). “Theaflavin-3,3′-digallate and other theaflavins inhibit oxidized LDL-mediated platelet aggregation and endothelial dysfunction.” Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry, 49(5), 2447–2451. Includes data on catechin-to-theaflavin conversion and associated astringency changes.