NEWSAR
Multi-perspective news intelligence
SRCBBC News - World
LANGEN
LEANCenter
WORDS921
ENT12
FRI · 2026-05-08 · 23:01 GMTBRIEF NSR-2026-0509-74797
News/Is hojicha the next matcha? The Japanese tea creeping onto m…
NSR-2026-0509-74797News Report·EN·Human Interest

Is hojicha the next matcha? The Japanese tea creeping onto menus

Hojicha, a roasted Japanese green tea, is gaining popularity in the UK, moving from niche to mainstream. Coffee roasters like Grind have begun featuring hojicha on their menus, recognizing a growing trend in Japanese food and drink.

BBC News - WorldFiled 2026-05-08 · 23:01 GMTLean · CenterRead · 4 min
Is hojicha the next matcha? The Japanese tea creeping onto menus
BBC News - WorldFIG 01
Reading time
4min
Word count
921words
Sources cited
6cited
Entities identified
12entities
Quality score
100%
§ 01

Briefing Summary

AI-generated
NEWSAR · AI

Hojicha, a roasted Japanese green tea, is gaining popularity in the UK, moving from niche to mainstream. Coffee roasters like Grind have begun featuring hojicha on their menus, recognizing a growing trend in Japanese food and drink. While hojicha's brown color is considered less visually appealing than matcha's vibrant green, consumers are drawn to its flavor. Matcha, meanwhile, continues to be a popular beverage, with sales of matcha powder in UK supermarkets quadrupling in the past year. However, some consumers feel that the trendiness of matcha has led to its flavor being masked by excessive syrups and flavorings in many cafe offerings.

Confidence 0.90Sources 6Claims 5Entities 12
§ 02

Article analysis

Model · rule-based
Framing
Human Interest
Economic Impact
Tone
Measured
AI-assessed
CalmNeutralAlarmist
Factuality
0.40 / 1.00
Mixed
LowHigh
Sources cited
6
Well sourced
FewMany
§ 03

Key claims

5 extracted
01

Shoppers spent nearly £9m on matcha powder in the UK over the last 12 months.

statisticNielsen IQ
Confidence
1.00
02

The quantity of powdered matcha sold at UK supermarkets and convenience stores has grown more than fourfold over the past year.

statisticNielsen IQ
Confidence
1.00
03

Some customers complain that matcha tastes too bitter or don't like it when served without syrups or sweeteners.

quoteIsabel MacNeaney
Confidence
0.90
04

Hojicha is moving from niche to mainstream quite quickly.

quoteSiddique
Confidence
0.80
05

Mate, from South America, is going to be the next tea craze.

predictionAdam
Confidence
0.60
§ 04

Full report

4 min read · 921 words
"Hojicha feels like where Matcha was two or three years ago," Siddique says, "it's moving from niche to mainstream quite quickly." The tea even hit the menu for the first time at east London coffee roasters Grind this summer, in the form of a black sesame Hojicha. Head of coffee Howey Gill says it added the drink after keeping an eye on Japanese food and drink trends spreading to the UK - though he acknowledges the brown colour is "not as sexy as Matcha".Ana, 21, says her Hojicha latte from Matcha" class="entity-link entity-organization" data-entity-id="124320" data-entity-type="organization">How Matcha - served iced with oat milk and a pump of vanilla syrup - is definitely "less Instagrammable" than Matcha, but she enjoys the flavour and says the appearance doesn't matter to her.Getty ImagesMatcha hype is showing no signs of slowing Shoppers carrying cups of bright green Matcha have become ubiquitous in town centres across the UK. As of February, even Greggs is selling it.And increasing numbers of people are buying the powder to prepare at home, too.The quantity of powdered Matcha sold at UK supermarkets and convenience stores has grown more than fourfold over the past year, with shoppers spending nearly £9m on it over the last 12 months, according to data from research company Nielsen IQ.Sipping matchas in the sun, Anjani, 28, says she feels the drink is still "very trendy". Her friend Abeer, 28, agrees, but adds that she thinks the majority of people drink it "for the vibes" rather than because they like the flavour.Mike Turner, founder of speciality tea shop Bird & Blend, says Matcha sales are "sustaining pretty well" and that he expects the market to continue growing, but thinks the hype could die down as the novelty wears off.Getty ImagesBarista-made Matcha lattes remain popular - but UK shoppers are increasingly buying Matcha powder to make their own drinks at homeDrinking her Hojicha, Ana says she likes the taste of Matcha and drinks it twice a week, but feels that a lot of UK coffee shops have "warped" it to make it trendy with too many syrups and flavourings."The drinks become less about the quality and taste of the Matcha" and more about highlighting unique flavour combinations, she says. "You often aren't able to actually taste the Matcha."Isabel MacNeaney, 23, a barista in a Japanese cafe in London, agrees. She says some of her customers change their mind about buying a drink when they discover the cafe doesn't serve Matcha with syrups or sweeteners, or complain it tastes too bitter.Barista Isabel (right) says she thinks some customers don't like the taste of Matcha, while her friend Adam (left) reckons mate, from South America, is going to be the next tea craze"Some people truly do like Matcha," Isabel says, "but for a lot of people it's trendy and they can hide the taste with syrups so they can still have a pretty drink."But for others - regardless of how eye-catching or how many syrups have been added, they will never enjoy the taste of Matcha."I've tried to like it. It's gross," says Liv Dyer, 31, who'd much rather have a coffee, English breakfast tea or green tea. "It tastes like a muddy puddle."Liv (left) and her friend Annie have tried Matcha but just don't like how it tastesMatcha mania may have been sweeping the world, but Nielsen IQ data shows sales of other types of tea - including green tea, kombucha and cold carbonated tea - are all rising, too.Twinings, for example, branched out into selling sparkling fruity tea in cans in 2024, while kombucha is now available in some supermarket meal deals.At Bird & Blend, black tea - which includes flavours like chocolate digestive and violet cream - is lined up alongside rooibos, chai, Matcha and other teas. Annual sales of chai grew 38% in the year to April."I have been saying chai will be the next thing for a few years," says Bird & Blend's Turner, but he adds, "I don't think it will explode to the same extent that Matcha has."A sweeter, milder western version in the form of a chai latte already features on the menu of most major coffee chains, but there's growing interest in karak chai, a sweet, milky Indian tea spiced with ginger, cardamom and cinnamon, according to Chaiiwala founder Sohail Alimohamed. Clockwise from left Hojicha, karak chai - made with more spices than a chai latte, mate, and ube - which is appearing on more menus latelyChaiiwala, which sells Indian street food and hot and iced drinks, sells around half a million cups of karak chai every month.Its cafes are open late - some beyond midnight at the weekend - and Alimohamed says in recent months he's been contacted by universities interested in opening stores on their campuses for students who don't drink alcohol.This is in part why friends Anjani and Abeer tell me they enjoy Matcha and chai cafes so much.Neither like coffee, and both say going to cafes with a wide range of other hot - or iced - drinks offers a great alternative to socialising at the pub.Vibrantly-coloured drinks made with ube, or purple yam, have also been added to Costa Coffee and Starbucks menus this summer, with marketing materials heavily promoting ube's lilac hues.But on a sunny Spring day when I ask people in a London park what tea trends they've got their eyes on, it's not ube that keeps coming up - it's mate.A bitter, caffeinated tea from South America, it's traditionally served hot with a straw, but is also available chilled.
§ 05

Entities

12 identified
§ 06

Keywords & salience

9 terms
matcha
1.00
hojicha
1.00
japanese tea
0.90
food trends
0.80
uk market
0.70
mainstream
0.60
niche
0.50
coffee shops
0.40
flavour
0.40
§ 07

Topic connections

Interactive graph
No topic relationship data available yet. This graph will appear once topic relationships have been computed.