6 Matcha Myths That I See On Reddit (And What Is Actually True)
Behind The Leaves #43
Myth 1: You Must Whisk Matcha in a W or M Motion
The W and M motion advice is real, but it is not universal. It originates from the Urasenke tea school and is one specific approach to creating a thick, frothy layer of bubbles. The Omotesenke school uses a circular motion instead, producing a different and equally valid result with less froth and bubbles covering only part of the surface.
The actual objective of whisking is to fully dissolve the matcha powder in the water with no dry clumps remaining. Any motion that achieves that is correct. If you also want significant foam, an up-and-down motion that gradually slides left and right across the bowl works well and is considerably easier than the M or W shape, particularly for beginners. Starting with the W or M motion as a beginner makes the process unnecessarily awkward.
The amount of foam also affects taste in a meaningful way. A thick layer of froth softens astringency and bitterness, making the drink more approachable, but it also partially obscures the umami and sweetness. For lower-quality matcha, more foam is generally better. For high-quality matcha where you want to taste everything the leaf offers, less foam tends to be preferable.
Myth 2: You Cannot Mix Matcha with Sugar and Milk
Many of the documented health benefits of matcha relate to the prevention of chronic diseases including obesity, liver disease, heart disease, and stroke. Adding sugar and milk works against those specific outcomes. If health is your reason for drinking matcha, plain matcha with water is the correct choice. If enjoyment of flavour is your reason, a matcha latte is completely fine.
Myth 3: Matcha Clumping Means It Is Low Quality
Myth 4: You Must Always Sift Your Matcha
Myth 5: Matcha Is Originally from China
Myth 6: Batching Matcha for Three Days Is Fine
Key Takeaways
- The W and M whisking motion is one technique, not the only technique. It comes from the Urasenke school. The Omotesenke school uses a circular motion. Both produce good results. Beginners should start with a simple up-down motion.
- Matcha clumping is a storage and handling issue, not a quality indicator. Even the best matcha clumps under humid or static-prone conditions. The paste method is a better solution to clumping than sifting in most everyday situations.
- Mixing matcha with milk and sugar is acceptable for flavour enjoyment but contradicts the health benefits. This is an honest distinction: the matcha latte format is fine as a drink, but the health compounds and the sugar work against each other.
- Matcha is a Japanese product, not a Chinese one. The ancestor of matcha came from China, but the drink as we know it, with shading, de-veining, and stone-milling, was developed and refined in Japan over centuries. The Chinese tradition died out.
- Twenty-four hours is the tested maximum for batched matcha. Beyond that, colour, aroma, and taste all degrade visibly. Three-day batching has been tested directly and produces a drink that no longer resembles quality matcha.
Insights From Yuki
One key observation is that the W and M motion debate is partly a schools-of-thought issue rather than an objective question. The framing of "you must do it this way" on Reddit reflects familiarity with one particular tradition without awareness that other equally legitimate traditions exist. This is very common in matcha communities online.
The stance on matcha lattes evolved over time. There was a period of holding a more purist position, reasoning that milk and sugar mask the qualities farmers and producers worked hard to create. The shift came from recognising that the same logic would apply to coffee lattes, which are widely enjoyed without being considered disrespectful to the craft.
In direct experimentation on the batching question, the 24-hour result was genuinely reassuring for cafe operations. The 72-hour result was the opposite: the colour change alone was alarming before any tasting. A drink that has turned brownish-green after three days in the fridge is not something that should be served, regardless of how well it was stored.
One key practical observation: the paste method for eliminating clumps consistently outperforms sifting in everyday use. It requires no additional equipment, nothing to clean beyond what you are already washing, and produces a smoother, more evenly dissolved matcha in the cup.