If you’ve ever wondered how professional kitchens and busy cafés serve perfectly smooth matcha drinks without the long wait of traditional whisking, the secret is a Matcha Syrup. This is a potent, silky-smooth matcha concentrate (syrup) that is prepared ahead of time.
Unlike my cream-based Matcha Paste, this water-based syrup is designed to dissolve instantly into cold liquids. It’s the ultimate “prep-ahead” tool for hosting a party or simply elevating your morning routine.
The Professional Rule: Soft into Hard

I learned the secret to a perfect, clump-free mixture during my first pastry job at a hotel in Japan. My chef taught me a fundamental principle that applies to almost everything in the bakery:
“When mixing ingredients of different densities, always add the soft (liquid) ingredient into the hard (dry) ingredient—never the other way around.”
Think of pancake batter: if you dump dry flour into a bowl of milk, you get a lumpy mess. But if you add the milk into the flour little by little, you can control the texture and keep it perfectly smooth. This is exactly how we treat matcha.
The Recipe: Matcha Syrup
This recipe makes a concentrated base. A little goes a long way!

Ingredients
- Matcha Powder: 20g (approx. 3 tbsp) — Must be sifted through a very fine mesh.
- Granulated Sugar: 100g (Divided into two 50g portions)
- Warm Water: 80g (80ml)
Step-by-Step: Mastering the Professional Matcha Blending Technique


- Sift & Prep: Sift the matcha powder into a medium bowl using your finest strainer. Add half of the sugar (50g) to the powder and mix well. The sugar crystals act as a physical abrasive to keep the tiny matcha particles from sticking together.
- The Warm Base: Dissolve the remaining half of the sugar (50g) into the warm water (approx. 70°C).
- The 5-Stage Incorporation: Pour a small portion of the warm sugar water directly into the center of the dry matcha-sugar mixture.
- The Grinding Motion: Using a small whisk, mix from the center in a “grinding” motion (suritsubushi). You are creating a thick, firm paste first.
- The “Soft into Hard” Build: Once the center is smooth, add another small portion of water. By adding the “soft” water into the “hard” paste in about 5 stages, you ensure the particles are fully suspended without any chance to clump.
- The Final Strain: Pass the syrup through a fine-mesh strainer into a glass bottle. If you followed these steps, your strainer should come out almost completely clean!
- Shock & Store: Immediately cool the bottle in an ice bath to lock in that brilliant, professional-grade green.
Scaling Tip for Matcha Syrup

Since many glass bottles are 8oz or 12oz, I highly recommend doubling the recipe if you want to fill a standard bottle.
- Double Recipe Yield: Approx. 10–11 oz (fills a 12oz bottle perfectly with a bit of “headspace” at the top).
If you are using this for your Matcha Lemonade, a 5-oz batch will give you enough syrup for about 5 to 8 large drinks, depending on how strong you like them!
The “Strainer Test”

In a professional setting, the strainer doesn’t lie. If you are “lazy” and add the matcha to the water (hard into soft), you will see a mess of clumps left in the mesh when you strain, which is a waste of expensive matcha. When done correctly, the syrup passes through like silk.
Storage Tips: Keeping Your Matcha Syrup Fresh

- Shelf Life: 4 to 5 days in the refrigerator.
- Color Change: For the best “electric green,” use it within the first 48 hours, as it will naturally oxidize and change color day by day.
- Pro Tip: Store in an air-tight, opaque, or dark glass bottle to protect the chlorophyll from light.
How to Use Your Homemade Matcha Syrup

This matcha syrup is incredibly versatile and can be used in countless drinks and dessert recipes. While it makes a flawless Matcha Latte, it is also my secret ingredient for:
- Matcha Lemonade: A refreshing, vibrant summer favorite.
- Botanical Cocktails: Use it as a green tea simple syrup for a Gin & Tonic or a Gimlet.
- Dessert Sauces: Drizzle it over panna cotta or vanilla bean gelato for a professional finish.
- Matcha Shaved Ice (Kakigori): This syrup is the perfect density for traditional Japanese shaved ice. It pours smoothly over the ice without melting it too quickly, keeping the flavor intense and the color vibrant.
- Matcha Tiramisu: Instead of the traditional espresso soak, I use this matcha syrup to dip the ladyfingers. It creates a stunning emerald layer and a clean, botanical flavor that balances beautifully with mascarpone cream.

One of my favorite ways to use this concentrate for a healthy morning routine is in my Matcha Chia Seed Pudding. Because the syrup is already liquid, it incorporates perfectly into the chia mixture without any clumping, ensuring every bite is a beautiful, uniform green.
Matcha Syrup
Instructions
- Sift your high-quality matcha powder through a fine-mesh strainer into a clean bowl. Whisk in the dry granulated sugar until completely combined.

- In a small saucepan, warm your filtered water over medium heat until the sugar dissolves into a clear liquid. Do not let it come to a rolling boil—you want it warm, not scorching.

- To ensure zero clumps, never pour powder into liquid. Instead, add the warm sugar water directly into the center of the matcha mixture in five strict, gradual stages.

- With each stage of water added, use a small whisk to grind the liquid into the powder using a firm, circular motion (suritsubushi). Continue until the texture transforms into a silky, shiny paste before adding the next splash of water.

- Pass the completed syrup through a fine-mesh strainer into a clean container or bottle. If your technique was correct, the mesh will come away completely clean, leaving no trapped lumps.

- Immediately place the container into an ice-water bath. Shocking the syrup stops the heat from oxidizing the matcha, locking in its brilliant, electric green color. Once completely chilled, seal and store in the refrigerator.

Notes
- Storage: Keep stored in an airtight glass bottle in the refrigerator. Thanks to the precise sugar suspension, it will retain its bright color and flavor for up to 1-2 weeks.
- Pastry Tip: Use this syrup straight from the fridge as an elegant soak for ladyfingers in a Matcha Tiramisu, or drizzle it over traditional Japanese Kakigori (shaved ice).

