Bright green matcha powder with bamboo whisk in white ceramic bowl for troubleshooting matcha problems

Matcha Clumps, Foam, and Colour: Troubleshooting Your Matcha Problems

Matcha Troubleshooting: Clumps, Foam, Colour

Matcha Clumps, Foam, and Colour: Troubleshooting Your Matcha Problems

Making matcha at home seems simple — add powder, add water, drink. But the gap between "technically drinkable" and "actually delicious" involves a handful of specific problems that trip up most first-time matcha makers in India. Here are the most common ones and their solutions.

By Saran Reddy, Founder — InstaCuppa | Last updated: May 2026

Problem 1: Matcha Is Clumping and Won't Dissolve

Why it happens: Matcha is a hygroscopic powder — it absorbs moisture from the air and forms hard clumps. Hot water on dry powder seals the outside of clumps before the inside hydrates. Result: green lumps floating in your cup.

Fix 1 — Sift first: Press matcha through a fine tea strainer before mixing. This mechanically breaks up clumps before you add any liquid.

Fix 2 — Paste method: Add matcha to a small amount of cold or room-temperature water (2 tablespoons). Mix aggressively with a frother, whisk, or fork until you have a smooth, clump-free dark green paste. Only then add your hot water or milk.

Fix 3 — Store properly: If your matcha clumps even when freshly opened, it is absorbing moisture from the air. Store in an airtight tin in the refrigerator. Let it come to room temperature before opening to prevent condensation forming inside the tin.

Problem 2: Matcha Won't Foam

Why it happens: Foam in matcha comes from the proteins in the powder creating stable bubbles when aerated. Low-quality matcha has fewer proteins (because it uses older leaves with less L-theanine and protein content). Old or oxidised matcha also foams poorly.

Fix 1 — Use better matcha: Ceremonial grade foams most easily because it has the highest protein content from young first-flush leaves. Good culinary grade should still foam. Very cheap matcha may not foam at all regardless of technique.

Fix 2 — Use a frother, not a spoon: Real foam requires rapid agitation that incorporates air. A spoon stirs but does not aerate. An electric frother, bamboo chasen, or small hand whisk creates the rapid W-shaped or circular motion needed for foam.

Fix 3 — Right temperature: Matcha foams best at 70–80°C. Cooler water produces less foam. If your water is too cold, warm it slightly.

Fix 4 — Position the frother correctly: Keep the frother head just below the liquid surface (not submerged at the bottom). Surface agitation incorporates more air and creates better foam.

Problem 3: Matcha Colour Is Brown, Yellow, or Olive — Not Vivid Green

Why it happens: Dull, olive, brown, or yellowish matcha colour means one of three things: (a) the matcha is low quality (made from older, less chlorophyll-rich leaves), (b) the matcha is oxidised (chlorophyll breaks down over time with air and light exposure), or (c) the matcha is fake (not real matcha at all).

Fix 1 — Check the source: Real, fresh, high-quality matcha is vivid neon green. If your matcha looked dull when you first opened the tin, it was low quality from the start. This cannot be fixed.

Fix 2 — Check storage: If your matcha started bright green but has become dull, it is oxidising. Store in an airtight, opaque tin in the refrigerator. Use within 4 weeks of opening.

Fix 3 — Upgrade your source: Buy from a verified Japanese matcha importer with origin documentation. Genuine matcha from Uji or Nishio is intensely, unmistakably green.

Problem 4: Matcha Sinks to the Bottom Instead of Mixing

This happens when the matcha paste was not made first, or when the powder was added to hot liquid that immediately sealed around the particles. The fix is always the paste method: cold water + matcha first, mix until completely smooth, then add the remaining liquid.

Problem 5: Matcha Latte Has Green Foam on Top of Brown Milk, Not Mixed

This is actually the correct appearance of a freshly made matcha latte when you pour the matcha over the back of a spoon onto cold milk. The layers are a feature, not a bug. Stir before drinking to combine.

If you do NOT want layers — if you want it fully mixed — combine the matcha paste with the milk before pouring, and blend or froth together.

Problem 6: Matcha Tastes Bitter Every Time

See the full article: Why Does My Matcha Taste Bitter? 6 Reasons and Fixes. The short version: boiling water, too much powder, low-quality matcha, or oxidised matcha are the four main causes.

Quick Reference Table

Problem Most likely cause Fix
Clumping No sifting; hot water on dry powder Sift + paste method with cold water
No foam Low quality matcha; no agitation tool Better matcha + electric frother
Dull colour Low quality or oxidised matcha Verified Japanese matcha; proper storage
Sinks to bottom No paste step; added to hot liquid directly Always make paste first
Too bitter Boiling water; too much powder; bad quality 75-80°C water; 0.5-1g powder; better matcha

Frequently Asked Questions

Why does my matcha have white foam instead of green?

White foam is normal — the foam colour comes from air bubbles in the matcha liquid, which appears lighter when aerated. The green colour is more visible in the liquid beneath the foam layer. As the foam settles, the green colour becomes more visible. This is correct and expected behaviour in well-prepared matcha.

Is clumpy matcha safe to drink?

Clumpy matcha is safe to drink — the clumps are just undissolved powder, not harmful. However, they taste unpleasant (concentrated bitterness when a clump dissolves in your mouth). The paste method and sifting prevent clumping completely and result in a much better drinking experience.

P.S. Most matcha preparation problems disappear with the right tools: a frother for smooth mixing and foam, and a temperature-controlled kettle for 80°C water. See the InstaCuppa Frother →

P.S. — Tools That Make This Easier

InstaCuppa 4-in-1 Electric Milk Frother

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InstaCuppa Rechargeable Travel Milk Frother

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InstaCuppa Electric Gooseneck Kettle

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Saran Reddy

Founder, InstaCuppa

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