To make a café-style iced matcha latte, whisk sweetened matcha powder with warm water until smooth, pour it over ice with milk and a little vanilla syrup, then top with cold foam. Sweetened powder and a cold-foam finish are what make it taste “bought.”
This is the “Café-Drink Chaser” recipe — the sweet, cold-foam version, not the traditional bowl. Cafés use sweetened powder and specific tools; copy the playbook and you'll save a fortune.
Ingredients
How to make it
- Whisk the matcha. Whisk or froth the sweetened matcha with warm water until smooth.
- Build the glass. Fill a tall glass with ice, add the vanilla syrup and milk.
- Layer the matcha. Pour the matcha over the top for that café layered look.
- Top with cold foam. Finish with a cap of cold foam — the detail that makes it taste bought.
Tips for the best cup
- Use a barista milk so the cold foam holds.
- No sweetened powder? Use latte-grade matcha plus extra syrup.
- Make cold foam by frothing cold milk with a splash of sweetener.
The tools cafés use, minus the markup.
Sweetened matcha powder
Gets closest to the café flavor with the least effort.
View on Amazon →Cold foam maker
The sweet, airy topping that separates homemade from café.
View on Amazon →Frequently asked questions
How do I make matcha taste like Starbucks?
Cafés use sweetened matcha powder, so start there or add extra syrup to a latte-grade powder. Build it over ice with milk and vanilla, and finish with cold foam.
What is cold foam and how do I make it?
Cold foam is frothed cold milk (often with a little sweetener) poured on top of iced drinks. Make it with a frother or cold foam maker using barista-style milk.
Is café matcha less healthy?
It's sweeter, so it has more sugar than plain matcha. You control that at home — dial the syrup up or down to taste.
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