Describing tea precisely requires a shared vocabulary covering appearance, aroma, taste, texture, and finish. This reference covers the key terminology used in professional tea evaluation, competitive tasting, and expert community discussion. Understanding these terms helps tea drinkers communicate more precisely and compare experiences across teas.
In-Depth Explanation
Structural Dimensions of Tea Evaluation
Professional tea evaluation assesses four categories:
| Evaluation category | What is assessed |
|---|
| Dry leaf (appearance) | Color, form, uniformity, presence of tip, aroma |
| Liquor (brewed tea) | Color, clarity, aroma, taste |
| Infused leaf | Color, texture, uniformity after steeping |
| Taste/mouthfeel | Body, astringency, bitterness, sweetness, finish |
Appearance Terms (Dry Leaf)
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Tip / Golden tip | Budset; golden or silver bud-tip visible in dry leaf; premium indicator in black teas |
| Pekoe | Downy silver or white hair on young buds; particularly prominent in white tea and some oolongs |
| Wiry | Long, slender rolled/rolled leaf; common in orthodox black tea |
| Twisted | Leaf twisted along its length during rolling; typical Darjeeling form |
| Balled / Rolled | Leaf rolled into tight ball or pellet; typical Taiwanese oolong; Gunpowder green tea |
| Flat | Intentionally pressed flat during processing; Longjing (Dragon Well) is classic example |
| Open / Leafy | Leaves not heavily rolled; more casual appearance; used for some white and aged teas |
| Uniform | Consistent leaf size and shape throughout the batch; indicates careful grading |
| Fannings / Dust | Very small broken material; bottom of grading scale; most used in tea bags |
| BOP (Broken Orange Pekoe) | Standard broken orthodox grade; smaller than whole leaf; common in many black tea blends |
| OP (Orange Pekoe) | A whole-leaf orthodox grade; not orange-flavored; “orange” refers to the Dutch House of Orange (historical trade term) |
Liquor Terms (Brewed Tea)
Appearance:
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Bright | Clear; luminous; reflects light well; associated with quality brewing and fresh leaf |
| Clear | Free from particles and suspension; not cloudy |
| Cloudy / Hazy | Suspended colloidal material; can indicate cream-down (theaflavin precipitation) in black tea when cooled; sometimes normal in certain teas |
| Cream down | Cloudiness in black tea liquor when cooled; caused by theaflavin-caffeine-protein complexes; not a defect per se |
| Dull | Lacking brilliance; may indicate poor quality, over-oxidation, or old leaf |
Color:
| Color term | Commonly describes |
|---|
| Pale yellow / Straw | Light oolongs; white tea; some green teas |
| Jade / Emerald green | Fresh green tea liquors (Gyokuro, Biluochun, cold-brewed Sencha) |
| Gold / Amber | Medium oolongs; light black teas; aged white tea |
| Copper / Bright red | Quality Darjeeling; good Assam; brisk Ceylon |
| Dark red / Mahogany | Heavy black tea; well-brewed strong Assam; concentrated beverage |
| Dark / Black-brown | Over-brewed; or very dark puerh; sometimes desirable in shou puerh |
Aroma Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Fragrant | Any pleasant aroma; general positive descriptor |
| Floral | Flower-like aromas; broad category — orchid, jasmine, osmanthus, rose, lily |
| Vegetal | Green plant character; grass, spinach, seaweed; positive in fresh green tea; negative if dominant in black tea |
| Grassy | Fresh-cut grass; typical of lightly processed green teas; slight “hay” quality |
| Toasty / Roasted | Warm, baked, roasted grain or nut character; from firing or charcoal roasting |
| Malty | Sweet, warm grain character; classic Assam descriptor; produced during in-cup withering |
| Muscatel | Highly specific grape-muscat aroma; defined term for quality Darjeeling second flush |
| Honey | Sweet, rich, floral-honey character; common in bug-bitten oolongs and aged white tea |
| Mineral / Rocky | Stone, wet rock, slate, chalk-like character; Wuyi rock oolongs (yan yun) |
| Oceanic / Marine | Sea air; seaweed; some Japanese green teas (umami-rich Gyokuro) |
| Smoky | From smoke exposure; purposeful in Lapsang Souchong; defect in other teas |
| Earthy | Rich soil character; normal in aged puerh; off-note if unintended |
| Camphor | Cool, penetrating, slightly medicinal note; characteristic of aged puerh and some puerh storage types; also appears in Bingdao |
| Musty | Old, damp, musty; defect unless intentionally present in aged puerh |
| Fishy | Off-note; trimethylamine; production or storage defect |
Taste Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Sweet | Natural sweetness without added sugar; from amino acids, specific sugars in the leaf |
| Umami | Savory, brothy, rich depth; associated with high L-theanine; classic Gyokuro descriptor |
| Brisk | Lively, clean sharpness; positive quality often associated with quality Ceylon and Assam |
| Astringent | Dry, puckering sensation; caused by polyphenol-protein binding; positive in moderation; negative if excessive |
| Bitter | Sharp unpleasant edge; from caffeine and some catechin types; normal in some teas at right dose |
| Hui gan (回甘) | “Returning sweetness”; bitterness that transforms into sweetness in the throat after swallowing; highly prized |
| Sheng jin (生津) | “Salivation”; tea that stimulates saliva production; associated with mineral freshness |
| Thick / Fat | Perceived density and richness in the cup; positive quality associated with good material |
| Clean | No off-notes; pure expression of variety; absence of defects |
| Complex | Multiple flavor layers; different notes appear across the evaluation |
| Flat | Lacking character; one-dimensional; may indicate old or poor-quality tea |
| Tannic | High tannin presence; drying, persistent; negative if excessive |
Mouthfeel Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Body | The weight and density of the liquor on the palate; light / medium / full body |
| Smooth | No harshness or astringency; silk-like on the tongue |
| Velvety | Very smooth with slight luxurious weight; highest compliment for mouthfeel |
| Silky | Smooth with an almost frictionless quality; high-grade green teas and good cold brew |
| Coating | Tea that leaves a lingering sensation on the inside of the mouth |
| Drying | Leaves a dryness after swallowing; from tannins or astringency |
| Mouth-watering | Actively stimulates salivation; a positive quality in some tea traditions |
| Cha qi (茶气) | “Tea energy”; subjective sense of tea’s effect on the body; widely used in puerh community; not pharmacologically defined |
Aftertaste / Finish Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Finish | Whatever the palate perceives after swallowing |
| Long finish | Flavor and sensation persisting for extended period (many seconds to minutes); indicator of quality |
| Short finish | Character disappears quickly; can indicate lower quality or heavily processed material |
| Clean finish | No lingering off-notes; character trails off pleasantly |
| Warm finish | Lingering warm sensation; typical of roasted teas and certain oolongs |
Infused Leaf Terms
| Term | Meaning |
|---|
| Bright | Vivid green/copper color in infused leaf; quality indicator |
| Coppery / Red | Well-oxidized black tea leaf after steeping; positive |
| Uniform | Consistent color and texture throughout infused leaf |
| Coarse | Large, hard, older leaf material; indicator of lower grade |
| Soft | Young, tender leaf; high-grade indicator |
Related Terms
Research
- Liang, Y., et al. (2003). “Relationship between sensory evaluation and chemistry of Chinese green tea.” Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 51(25), 7293–7300. Conducted parallel sensory panel evaluations and chemical analysis of multiple Chinese green tea grades; established statistically significant correlations between specific chemical markers (theanine, EGCG, certain volatile compounds) and specific sensory vocabulary terms — confirming that tasting vocabulary describes real, chemically measurable differences rather than entirely subjective impressions.
- Pettitt, T. (2012). The Tea Specialist’s Handbook. Tea Guild. Industry reference work covering the international professional tea trade’s standardized evaluation terminology; includes the historical development of the FBOP/OP/BPS grading nomenclature, standardized liquor assessment protocols used in Colombo, Mombasa, and London auction contexts, and the sensory vocabulary used by professional brokers and blenders — the authoritative source for understanding how professional trade tasting vocabulary relates to market value.