Structure First — Tea

The 20-Session
Tea Course

An analytical path from a single leaf to the cup in your own hand. Tea has the cleanest spine of anything in the series: one plant, Camellia sinensis, and the entire category map organized by one variable — how far the leaf is oxidized. Fifth in the Structure First series, alongside wine, cacao, cheese, and bourbon.

0 of 20 sessions complete
Before you start — three things.
1 · Open the files in a browser, not a file preview. These pages run on JavaScript (the tasting instrument, decoders, the oxidation dial, the leaf calculator, quizzes, flashcards). On iOS, open in Safari (or host the folder) rather than a Files-app preview, and everything works.
2 · Progress saves per device under one shared key, so your place and quiz scores carry across all seven files on the same browser. Tasting needs actual tea — the one thing the course can't supply.
3 · Brewing is part of the course, not an afterthought. Unlike wine or whisky, in tea you perform the final production step — so a kettle you can control the temperature of (or just a thermometer) will teach you more than any single expensive tea. Session 15 is where that pays off.

A · Foundations & Tasting

01What tea is 02The Tasting Instrument 03Calibration & the flavor wheel

B · Production

04The processing chain 05Oxidation — the master variable 06Fixing / kill-green 07Rolling, firing & finishing

C · Types & the Category Map

08Green tea 09White tea 10Oolong I — light & floral 11Oolong II — dark & roasted 12Black / red tea 13Pu-erh & dark tea

D · Comparative & Brewing

14Comparative technique 15Brewing parameters 16Gongfu vs Western

E · Origin & Terroir

17China & Japan 18India, Taiwan, Sri Lanka & beyond

F · Sourcing & Consolidation

19Grades, freshness & sourcing 20Consolidation & final

Sourcing Companion

ListThe Tea Sourcing Checklist
After the course

Where to take the palate next

Three good next steps: go deep on one type (oolong and pu-erh each reward a lifetime); learn gongfu hands-on with a simple gaiwan, which transforms how much a good tea will show you; and keep a tasting log that records brewing parameters, so you can reproduce the cups that worked.

The framework transfers, too — the same "one variable organizes the category" thinking you used for oxidation is exactly how the cacao and coffee worlds are best understood, if you want an adjacent leap.

Additional Readings

Definitive resources on tea varieties, terroirs, and traditional brewing: