I know that you can use matcha powder in a similar way to chocolate in sweet foods but are there any savoury dishes you can make with it?
6 Answers
One trend I've seen recently is making tea broths/sauces for meats, fishes, etc... Besides being a good use for tea, this has the double effect of giving off the tea's natural aroma when presented to the eater as opposed to simply using the tea to crust a meat - where you wouldn't really get any tea flavor until you actually bit in.
I've also seen people smoking meats with tea leaves and such. I haven't tried this myself to see if the results are worth the trouble (aka - if you can actually taste the tea flavor).
I would also try poaching various items in a matcha tea poaching liquid. For example:
- Water
- Sugar + salt
- Matcha tea powder
- Peppercorns
- Bay leaves
- Whatever else sounds good to you.
You could use this to poach chicken and fish.
Lastly, don't be afraid to add it to soups! Carrot-ginger soup would benefit from the addition of some matcha powder.

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I've made a green tea and garlic cream sauce using matcha, which I thought was pretty nice. It's tricky to pull off, as I learned when someone tried my imprecise steps transcribed and found the result "bland", but I came to the conclusion that it was likely a difference in the amount of salt used.
Matcha-iri Genmaicha, which is a toasted rice green tea that has additional matcha powder for flavor, is sometimes used in ochazuke, a post-drinking food that typically involves a bowl of rice with tea or soup stock poured over, topped with pickles or other flavorful ingredients (furikake, sliced nori, some other things).
Additionally, for a few years, matcha flavored salts were popular in Japan as an accompaniment to tempura. I've bought them or just mixed very finely grained salt with matcha.
I wrote about matcha salt and the green tea cream sauce years ago on my blog.

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I'd like to mix it in your fried chicken flour/spice mix, dredge it well, and serve with a sesame/mustard dip, or something with a little Asian flare.

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1+ sounds interesting – Willbill Aug 08 '10 at 14:28
You can check out recipes at Matcha Natural www.matchanatural.com/recipes they post a ton of helpful recipes including Matcha tea, also for green tea noodles, pasta, rice etc.
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Dear user20678, welcome to the site! We appreciate your contribution, but we generally discourage link-only answers, because they 1) look like spam, and 2) are susceptible to link rot. If you can summarize the content of the links in a few sentences, we will keep the answer, but else we will have to delete it. – rumtscho Oct 11 '13 at 21:19
You can dig though these (also google) for more, but this looked good.
I've used it in pastries and quick breads before (these pancakes were good).

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It might be worth summarising the link content in the answer for usability and to keep the answers relevance if the links become broken – Willbill Aug 06 '10 at 08:48