Skip to main content

Uji Matcha at Tsuen: A Quiet Taste of Kyoto’s Tea Culture

🟠 Local-First — Best in its home region: Uji, Kyoto.

This article explores Uji’s quiet tea culture through matcha, yokan, and cha dango at Tsuen, a historic teahouse by Uji Bridge where Kyoto’s tea tradition feels calm, restrained, and deeply connected to place.

Last updated: 2026-05-24


Introduction

Matcha is now easy to find across Japan.

Tokyo has matcha cafés, convenience stores sell matcha sweets, and overseas, matcha lattes and matcha desserts are already familiar to many people.

For this article, I visited Tsuen Uji Honten, located near the east end of Uji Bridge.

Tsuen is said to have been founded in 1160, making it one of Uji’s historic teahouses. According to the shop’s own history, the first Tsuen was connected to Minamoto no Yorimasa and began serving tea to travelers near Uji Bridge. For generations, the Tsuen family is also said to have watched over the bridge while welcoming travelers with tea.

A teahouse beside Uji Bridge, serving tea to people passing through the old town — even before tasting anything, that setting gives the matcha here a different feeling from an ordinary café.

On this visit, I tried matcha called Ho-o no Mukashi with yokan, along with cha dango. These are not large, flashy matcha desserts. Instead, their quiet combination gives a clearer sense of what Uji tea culture can feel like.

📍 Tsuen Uji Honten (Tabelog English)


What to Try

Matcha “Ho-o no Mukashi” with Yokan — Bitter, Smooth, and Balanced by Sweetness

Matcha Ho-o no Mukashi with yokan at Tsuen Uji Honten in Kyoto

The first thing I tried was a bowl of matcha called Ho-o no Mukashi, served with yokan.

The matcha was whisked in a dark tea bowl, with fine bubbles on the surface and a deep green color that immediately felt substantial.

The first impression was not sweetness, but the bitterness and aroma of matcha. It was not harsh, though. The bitterness, green fragrance, and smooth foam spread slowly across the mouth.

When paired with a small piece of yokan, the balance changed.

The sweetness of the yokan did not erase the bitterness of the tea. Instead, it quietly supported it. Rather than making the sweet the main attraction, the yokan helped the tea taste better. That relationship between tea and sweet felt very Japanese to me.

The red tray, dark tea bowl, white plate, and deep color of the yokan also gave the scene a calm visual beauty. It was a small, restrained moment, but very fitting for Uji.

Cha Dango — A Simple Uji Tea Sweet

Cha dango tea-flavored dumplings at Tsuen Uji Honten in Kyoto

The other sweet I tried was cha dango.

Cha dango is a simple Uji-style sweet: small dumplings on skewers, flavored with tea. It is not flashy, but the glossy green color makes it feel clearly connected to the town of Uji.

The texture was soft and pleasantly chewy. The flavor was gentle, with a light tea aroma rather than strong sweetness.

Compared with mitarashi dango, which makes a strong impression through its sweet-savory glaze, cha dango feels much quieter. It is more like tea flavor turned into an everyday wagashi.

If matcha alone feels a little too minimal during a walk through Uji, cha dango is a good companion: small, simple, and easy to enjoy.


Tokyo or Trip?

🟠 Local-First — Best in its home region: Uji, Kyoto.

You can enjoy matcha in Tokyo.

Matcha lattes, matcha ice cream, matcha parfaits, and matcha cakes are easy to find, and many are very friendly for international travelers.

But matcha in Uji has a different meaning.

Uji is not simply a place to eat “matcha-flavored sweets.” It is a tea town, with the Uji River, Uji Bridge, and old teahouses that have welcomed travelers for centuries.

A bowl of matcha at Tsuen feels connected to that local memory.

If a Tokyo matcha café is a place to enjoy matcha in a modern, casual way, Tsuen in Uji is a place to feel how tea has long been connected with travel, rest, and place.

Not a flashy dessert, but a quiet bowl of tea.
Not sweetness first, but aroma.
Not impact, but aftertaste.

For that kind of tea experience, Uji is worth the trip.


Explore Nearby


Similar Dishes


External Links


About "Taste of Japan"

Hello, I'm Yuta.
Born in landlocked Yamanashi and having lived in the gourmet city of Sendai for 10 years, I now call Togoshi-Ginza home. My frequent business trips across Japan allow me to constantly explore the diversity of regional flavors.

Why Togoshi-Ginza?

This street is Tokyo’s longest shopping arcade (about 1.3 km), but it holds a special history. It was the very first street in Japan to adopt the "Ginza" name—a tradition that later spread across the country—after receiving bricks from the famous Ginza district following the 1923 Great Kanto Earthquake.

My Wish as a Local

I am not a culinary expert. However, as a Japanese local who knows both the convenience of Tokyo and the origins of regional food, I want to share the "atmosphere" and "personal feelings" that you won't find in standard guidebooks.

The Concept: "Tokyo or Trip?"

Visiting every region of Japan in a single trip is nearly impossible. Some food experiences are worth the travel to the source, while others offer a fully satisfying experience right here in Tokyo.

This blog is a guide to help you make that choice. Based in Togoshi-Ginza, I share my honest experiences and "my personal answer" to help you maximize your culinary journey in Japan.

Our Rating System:
  • 🟠 Local-First: Best experienced in its home region. Worth a trip.
  • 🟢 Great-in-Tokyo: A nationwide favorite or regional specialty that offers a fully satisfying, authentic experience right here in Tokyo.
  • 🟣 Tokyo-Do-Must: A unique food culture born in or exclusive to Tokyo.

Popular posts from this blog

A Local’s Guide to Hokkaido Crab: King Crab, Snow Crab, Hairy Crab & Best Season

🟠 Local-First — Best in its home region: Hokkaido. Hokkaido is one of the best places in Japan to enjoy crab, especially if you want to compare king crab , snow crab , and hairy crab . Each type has a different texture, sweetness, richness, and best season — and understanding the difference makes a crab meal in Hokkaido much more rewarding. Last updated: 2026-05-05 Introduction If you are planning a food trip to Hokkaido, crab is probably one of the first things that comes to mind. But “Hokkaido crab” is not just one thing. The experience changes depending on whether you choose king crab , snow crab , or hairy crab . King crab is meaty and dramatic, with thick legs that feel almost like a main dish. Snow crab is sweeter and more delicate, often appreciated for its elegant flavor. Hairy crab is smaller, but prized for its rich crab miso and deep umami. If this is your first crab meal in Hokkaido, knowing these differences helps you choose the right one ...

Kura Sushi Tokyo Guide: Best Locations, English Menu & What to Order

🟢 Great-in-Tokyo — Great experience you can enjoy in Tokyo. Planning to try Kura Sushi in Tokyo but not sure which branch to choose? This guide covers tourist-friendly locations, English ordering tips, and five beginner-friendly items that make conveyor-belt sushi easy and fun. Last updated: 2026-05-25 Introduction Kura Sushi is one of Japan's most beloved conveyor-belt sushi chains. Loved by everyone from children to adults, it is especially famous for being incredibly welcoming to international travelers. Many first-time visitors feel nervous about sushi in Japan. Kura Sushi removes that stress with English tablets, clear pricing, and a relaxed atmosphere. Why Kura Sushi Is Perfect for First-Time Visitors Think of Kura Sushi as the ultimate "Practice Ground" to get used to Japanese sushi culture. It is designed to lower every psychological hurdle you might have: No language barrier: Order everything via an English touchscreen tablet. Freed...

What Is Nigiri Sushi? A Beginner’s Guide to Nigiri, Maki, Gunkan & More

Nigiri sushi is the classic style of sushi made with a small mound of vinegared rice topped with fish, seafood, egg, or another ingredient. If you are wondering what “nigiri” means, this is the sushi style most people imagine when they think of Japanese sushi. But nigiri is only one part of Japan’s sushi culture. In this beginner-friendly guide, you will learn the difference between Nigiri , Maki , Gunkan , Oshi , Inari , and Chirashi — and how to enjoy them in Japan. Last updated: 2026-06-21 Quick Guide: Nigiri vs Maki vs Sashimi vs Gunkan If you are new to sushi, these four words are the most useful ones to understand first. Nigiri is the classic hand-pressed sushi with rice and topping. Maki is rolled sushi. Sashimi is sliced seafood without rice. Gunkan is a small “battleship-style” sushi wrapped with seaweed to hold soft toppings. Type What It Means Rice? Beginner Tip Nigiri ...