Mastering the chasen: how to use and care for your matcha whisk

Your chasen does more work than it looks like. Hand-carved from a single piece of bamboo, its tines curved inward by heat and tension to create the even foam that makes a properly whisked matcha so distinct.

Treat it well and it keeps rewarding you. Here's how.

T2 Tea

Mastering the chasen: how to use and care for your matcha whisk

Your chasen does more work than it looks like. Hand-carved from a single piece of bamboo, its tines curved inward by heat and tension to create the even foam that makes a properly whisked matcha so distinct.

Treat it well and it keeps rewarding you. Here's how.

What is a chasen?

The chasen (pronounced cha-sen) is a bamboo whisk used exclusively for preparing matcha. Each one is carved from a single piece of bamboo, split by hand into dozens of fine tines that curve inward. Those tines do two things: they suspend matcha powder evenly in water, and they aerate the liquid into the smooth, frothy bowl matcha is famous for.

T2 has two chasens, and the difference comes down to tine count. The Everyday Chasen is split up to 80 times, making it a versatile and reliable whisk that handles everyday matcha beautifully.

The Premium Chasen goes to 120 tines, which classifies it as an usucha whisk. It's designed to cover more surface area, create a finer foam, and a slightly more refined finish to the bowl. Both are handcrafted from a single piece of bamboo, and both are cared for the same way.

A chasen is not meant to last forever, and understanding why helps you get the most from it while it's at its best.

Bamboo is a natural, living material. It responds to water, heat, and humidity. With use, the tines soften and adapt, many people actually prefer the feel of a well-broken-in chasen, which moves through matcha with a certain ease you don't get from a new one. What you're managing is not wear, but damage: bent tines, snapped prongs, mould from improper drying.

Waking up your chasen

Before the first use: the bloom

Fresh from its packaging, a chasen's tines are tightly grouped together. Before you whisk anything, soak the bloom (the tine end) in hot water, around 70–80°C for two minutes. This softens the bamboo, opens the tines, and prepares them to move the way they were made to.

Don't skip this step. Dry bamboo is brittle, and you risk snapping tines before you've made your first cup.

The box your chasen arrives in is protective packaging only, once you're home, let it breathe to prevent mould.

Before every use: a short soak

The bloom isn't just a first-use ritual. A 30–60 second soak in warm water before each session keeps the bamboo supple and responsive. This simple step makes a real difference: softer tines produce better foam and are far less likely to snap mid-whisk. Never use boiling water as it can damage your chasen, 70–80°C is the sweet spot.

How to whisk

Move the whisk in a quick "W" or "M" motion: back and forth across the width of the bowl, not in circles.

Circular stirring puts uneven pressure on the tines and can bend or snap them. The zigzag distributes movement evenly and builds the even, fine foam matcha is known for.

Don't press down.

The tines should skim lightly across the liquid, not drag along the bottom of the bowl. If you feel yourself pressing, ease off and let the whisk do what it was made to do. And only ever use your chasen for matcha. The tines aren't built for mixing anything else.

As your foam builds, lift the chasen slowly through the centre of the bowl.

This final lift pulls the foam upward and settles it into that classic matcha finish: smooth on the surface, with a fine, even layer of froth. Don't rush it, the last few seconds are what make the bowl look as good as it tastes.

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After use: cleaning, storing and caring for your chasen

Rinse immediately, warm water only.

As soon as you've finished your matcha, rinse the tines under warm running water. Matcha left to dry on the tines hardens quickly and becomes much harder to remove. You can also swirl the chasen gently in a bowl of clean warm water to loosen any residue, that works well too. Use your fingers to ease out any powder caught between the tines.

Warm water is genuinely all you need, as soap strips the natural oils from the bamboo and a dishwasher will warp and splinter the tines completely.

Dry on a chasen whisk holder

After rinsing, shake off any excess water first, then rest the chasen on a chasen whisk holder. The holder cradles the dome of the tines, keeps their shape as they dry, and allows enough airflow to prevent mould. Bamboo takes around one to two hours to air dry completely, don't seal it in a bag or airtight container until it's fully dry, and keep it away from direct sunlight and excessive humidity, both of which can warp the bamboo over time.

Don't store the chasen with tines pointing straight up, as this traps moisture and can cause the tines to shrink and lose their curve. And if you notice a crack in the handle, don't worry. Bamboo expands and contracts with humidity, and handle fissures are common. As long as the tines are intact, the chasen is still perfectly usable.

A chasen tells you when it's done.

One or two broken tines won't ruin your whisk, the foam might look slightly less even, but it keeps going. When several break, you'll notice it immediately in the texture of your matcha. If the tines stay flat after drying rather than bouncing back, the tension is gone. A musty smell or persistent discolouration signals mould deep in the bamboo, boiling water may help, but if the smell persists, replace it. And if you find bamboo splinters in your cup, the whisk has given everything it had.

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