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How Long Can You Batch Matcha? What Happens After Three Days in the Fridge

Batching matcha for three days, even under refrigeration, produces a clearly degraded product. The colour shifts from vibrant green to brownish-yellow, the aroma disappears almost entirely, and the taste loses its umami, sweetness, and layered character, with bitterness and flatness taking over. The 24-hour window validated in previous testing is the limit. Beyond that, the quality drop is visible to any customer and not acceptable for service.

Behind The Leaves #39

The Follow-Up Question This Experiment Answers

The previous batching experiment established that matcha pre-mixed with water and refrigerated for 24 hours shows no detectable taste difference compared to fresh. That finding gave cafes clear confidence to batch daily. But the follow-up question was harder to ignore: some cafes and restaurants reportedly stretch their batched matcha to three days. What actually happens to it at that point?


Two batches were prepared using the same SEN matcha (an entry-level usucha grade) and refrigerated for approximately three days. One was mixed with room temperature water, the other with 80°C hot water. Both were stored sealed in bottles. A freshly mixed control was prepared at the time of testing for direct comparison.

What Three Days Does to the Colour

Before a single sip was taken, the visual difference was immediately obvious and described as concerning. The freshly mixed matcha was a vivid, vibrant green. Both three-day batches had turned brownish-yellow, with visible signs of heavy oxidation. This is exactly the same colour degradation described when matcha goes past its best-by date in powdered form: the chlorophyll has broken down and the colour signals a tea that has lost its freshness at a fundamental level.


The hot water batch presented a slightly different but equally degraded appearance: more pale and yellowish rather than brownish, suggesting the initial high-temperature mixing may have interacted with the extended oxidation differently. Both were visually alarming compared to the fresh control.

What Three Days Does to the Aroma

Fresh matcha, even when mixed gently without whisking, produces a clear aromatic lift of volatile compounds. The smell is green, clean, and immediate. Both three-day batches produced almost nothing. Holding the bottles close to the nose, it was difficult to detect any matcha scent at all. Any faint smell was more reminiscent of the refrigerator than of the tea itself. The aromatic compounds had essentially disappeared over the three-day period.

What Three Days Does to the Taste

The thick paste tasting, which is the most sensitive way to detect quality differences, confirmed what the colour and aroma already indicated. The freshly mixed matcha delivered its expected multi-layered profile: vegetable notes, umami, sweetness, structured astringency, and bitterness in balance. The room temperature water batch was flat. The richness was gone, the layers had collapsed, and bitterness stood out disproportionately. It was not aggressively stale, but it was unrecognisably diminished compared to the fresh sample.


The hot water batch was worse. The taste registered as more astringent and bitter than the room temperature batch. The heat applied during initial mixing appears to have accelerated the degradation process over time, making a three-day-old hot-water batch noticeably more unpleasant than a three-day-old cold-water batch. This difference was not evident at the 24-hour mark in the previous experiment, confirming that the gap between the two batching methods widens meaningfully with time.


When the usucha (diluted final form) was prepared and tasted, the verdict was equally clear. Umami, sweetness, vegetal notes, and flavour depth were all severely reduced. The matcha had become, in straightforward terms, a degraded liquid with bitterness and very little of what makes quality matcha worth serving.

The Operational Conclusion

The findings leave no ambiguity for cafe operations. Three-day batching is not a viable practice. The quality degradation is visible, smellable, and tasteable, none of which are subtle. A customer receiving a drink made from three-day-old batched matcha would almost certainly notice something is wrong, even if they could not name the reason. The reputational risk is real and unnecessary.


The 24-hour window established in previous testing remains the validated safe limit. Batching once daily, using room temperature or cold water, and discarding anything that has not been used within that window is the correct operational standard.

Key Takeaways

  • Three-day batched matcha degrades visibly, not just in taste. The colour shift from vibrant green to brownish-yellow is immediately apparent and would be noticeable to customers before the drink is even consumed.

  • Aroma disappears almost entirely by three days. The volatile aromatic compounds that give fresh matcha its characteristic lift are essentially gone. Both batches produced little to no detectable matcha scent.

  • The hot water batch degraded worse than the room temperature batch over three days. At 24 hours, the difference was negligible. At three days, the hot water batch was more astringent and bitter, confirming that initial heat accelerates long-term degradation.

  • The quality loss at three days is not subtle. Umami, sweetness, and flavour layering are all severely reduced. Bitterness dominates. This is not a professional-grade product and would likely be noticed by any matcha drinker.

  • 24 hours is the validated maximum for batched matcha. This is not a conservative estimate. It is the tested boundary beyond which quality becomes genuinely unacceptable for cafe service.
  • Insights From Yuki

    This experiment was a direct follow-up to the 24-hour batching test, motivated by the real-world observation that some cafes extend their batching to three days. The assumption had been that the degradation would be gradual and perhaps still within an acceptable range at three days. The visual evidence on opening the bottles made clear that assumption was wrong before any tasting began.


    One key observation is that the colour degradation alone should be a stopping point for any cafe. Brownish-yellow matcha in a glass is not something a customer will overlook, regardless of whether they understand why it looks wrong. It signals staleness immediately, and the reputational damage from serving it would outweigh any operational convenience from extended batching.


    One key observation specific to the hot water batch: the difference between the room temperature and hot water batches was negligible at 24 hours, but at three days the hot water batch was consistently worse on every dimension, particularly astringency. This suggests the initial thermal processing creates a compounding effect over time rather than a one-time impact. The data from both experiments together reinforce the recommendation to avoid hot water for batching entirely.

    Q&A

    How long can you keep batched matcha in the fridge?

    24 hours is the maximum validated window. At three days, batched matcha shows clear colour degradation to brownish-yellow, loses almost all aroma, and tastes significantly flat and bitter compared to fresh. The difference is visible and detectable by customers.

    Why does batched matcha turn brown or yellow?

    The colour change is caused by oxidation. Matcha's vibrant green comes from chlorophyll, which breaks down when exposed to oxygen over time. Adding water accelerates oxidation compared to dry powder, and three days is enough time for the degradation to become visually obvious.

    Does the water temperature affect how long batched matcha lasts?

    Yes, over extended periods. At 24 hours, room temperature and hot water batches taste essentially the same. At three days, the hot water batch shows more astringency and bitterness, suggesting that mixing with heat speeds up the long-term degradation of quality compounds. Room temperature or cold water is recommended for batching regardless of this factor, because of the operational safety issue of hot liquids in sealed bottles.
    About the author:

    Yuki Ishii

    Founder & CEO of Tealife

    LinkedIn | YouTube

    Yuki is the founder of Tealife, a Singapore-based Japanese tea company. He’s passionate about Japanese tea and spends his time testing, trying, and experimenting - then sharing what he learns through content to help people discover the depth of Japanese tea beyond just matcha.