What a broad instruction is! That's what I thought so for the first time. I have been taught that you use one and a half
scoops of matcha for one serving. However, it is a little ambiguous (^^;;
Books don't usually specify the amount of tea to be used. But, the book I have talked about the other day, introduces the following;
Thin tea: one-and-a-half scoops, or 1.9
grams
Thick tea: three heaping scoops, or 3.75
grams
(Refer a note at the bottom for thin and
thick tea)
In either case, one scoop is regarded as around
1.25g. But now, can you imagine how much
volume 1g of matcha actually has?
I can’t.
I guess many people couldn’t.
I see … now I understand that there won’t
be much meaning in instructing with a particular amount of grams. Since I now aware of the specific grams, I want to
know how much it looks like on a tea scoop.
You want to see it as well, don’t you?
It was pretty difficult to scoop exactly
1.2g. (My scale can only measure up to one decimal point)
![]() |
| 0.9g |
![]() |
| 1.1g |
![]() |
| 1.0g |
![]() |
| 1.9g |
Finaly, 1.2g!
![]() |
| 1.2g |
So, one-and-a-half scoop will be something
like this. (1.2+0.6)
![]() |
| 1.2g |
However, this is not an absolute amount of
tea. It can only serve as a simple guide. I have seen different number in terms of grams on different paper. If I try scooping
this much, my current master will tell me that it’s already excessive. It depends on schools, and moreover it should
be adjusted for each of your guests. Is
1.2g enough for your tea? Perhaps, less or
more?
NOTE:
In The Way of Tea, there are two different
ways of preparing matcha. They are thin tea and thick tea. The matcha
I have been referring in my blog was thin tea.
Thick tea uses the double amount of matcha
and it is regarded more formal in the ceremonies.









































