Slow Social Club Logo

BEWERTET MIT 4,9/5 ★ VON UNSEREN KUNDEN

KOSTENLOSER VERSAND AB €50 NACH PT & ES

Warenkorb 0

Herzlichen Glückwunsch! Deine Bestellung ist für den kostenlosen Versand qualifiziert. Du bist €50 von der kostenlosen Lieferung entfernt.
Bundle and save 10%
Sorry, sieht so aus, als hätten wir nicht genug von diesem Produkt.

Kombinieren mit
Zwischensumme Kostenlos
Versand, Mehrwertsteuer und Rabattcodes werden an der Kasse berechnet

Matcha in Madrid und Barcelona: Der Stand der Szene

Matcha in Madrid and Barcelona: The State of the Scene

Matcha has become a fixture in the cafe landscape of both Madrid and Barcelona. The Spanish market for quality matcha has matured considerably in recent years — moving from novelty item to an expected offering at quality-focused cafes in both cities.

Madrid's matcha scene

Madrid's speciality coffee culture has been the primary driver of matcha quality in the city. Neighbourhoods like Malasaña, Chueca, and parts of La Latina have developed concentrations of cafes that treat matcha with the same seriousness they apply to espresso — sourcing ceremonially graded powder, training staff in correct preparation, and presenting it as a genuine alternative to coffee.

The Japanese restaurant and grocery community in Madrid has also played a role, maintaining a more culturally authentic approach to matcha and often stocking products not available elsewhere in the city.

Barcelona's matcha scene

Barcelona's cafe culture, concentrated in the Eixample, El Born, and Gràcia neighbourhoods, has followed a similar trajectory. The city's large international community and its position as a design and lifestyle hub have made it receptive to the matcha aesthetic in a way that connects to its broader cultural identity.

Barcelona has also seen stronger integration of matcha into restaurant menus beyond just cafes — as an ingredient in desserts, cocktails, and food items — which reflects a deeper penetration of the product into culinary culture.

The home market in Spain

Both cities now have reliable retail access to quality ceremonial matcha, and Spanish online retailers have expanded their matcha selections significantly. The home matcha market is growing in Spain, driven by the same demographic — younger urban consumers — that has driven it elsewhere in Europe.

What to look for

In both cities, the cafes doing matcha well tend to be the same ones doing coffee well. Quality signal: they source specifically, they prepare properly, and their staff can tell you about what they use. The standard has risen — but so has the variation. Knowing how to identify a good cup remains useful.

Mehr lesen