Homemade Genmaicha Uses a 1:1 Ratio

The standard starting point for homemade genmaicha is a 1:1 ratio of green tea leaves to roasted rice by volume. That means one teaspoon of tea to one teaspoon of rice per cup.
This ratio produces a balanced cup where neither the grassy notes of the tea nor the toasted nuttiness of the rice dominates. If the tea tastes too thin or grain-forward, shift toward more leaves. If you find the vegetal sharpness of the green tea too prominent, add slightly more rice.
The type of green tea affects the balance. Sencha brings a clean, grassy brightness that stays distinct even with a lot of rice. Bancha is milder and earthier, so it blends more seamlessly into a rounder, softer cup. Both work well, but they produce noticeably different results at the same ratio.
How to Roast Rice for Homemade Genmaicha
Choosing the Right Rice
Traditionally, genmaicha is made with white Japanese short-grain rice, not brown rice, even though the name translates loosely to 'brown rice tea.' The brown color comes from toasting, not from the grain itself.
Short-grain white rice roasts more evenly and produces the clean, toasty flavour that defines genmaicha's character often described as somewhere between oatmeal and popcorn. Mochi rice is the traditional choice and gives a slightly nuttier result, but standard Japanese short-grain rice works reliably at home.
The Stovetop Roasting Method

Wash the rice briefly and drain it thoroughly. Any residual moisture causes uneven browning and can cause uneven roasting.
Spread the rice in a thin, even layer across a dry skillet or pan. Turn the heat to medium-low and stir continuously. Do not walk away. The rice will begin to colour within five minutes and can burn quickly once it starts.
Pull the rice off the heat when most grains have turned a golden amber colour and you smell a warm, nutty aroma. A few grains may pop slightly during roasting, which is normal. Let the rice cool completely on a flat surface before mixing it with tea leaves. Mixing while warm creates condensation that shortens the shelf life of your blend.
Want to level up your homemade blend with a caffeine boost? 👉 Matcha-iri Genmaicha Caffeine is Higher Than You Think
Brewing Homemade Genmaicha Properly
Use about one teaspoon of your blended genmaicha per 150 to 180ml of water. Genmaicha brews best at a water temperature between 80 and 90 degrees Celsius. Boiling water works if your base tea is bancha, which is robust enough to handle the heat. For sencha-based blends, cooler water at around 80 degrees preserves the green tea's softer notes.
Steep for 30 to 60 seconds on the first infusion. Genmaicha does not need long steep times. The roasted rice extracts quickly, and leaving it longer pulls out bitterness rather than more flavour.
A kyusu works well for homemade genmaicha because the fine mesh strainer handles both tea leaves and loose rice grains without allowing grains into the cup. If you do not have a kyusu, any fine-mesh strainer or infuser basket works. If you'd rather skip the blending process entirely, you can explore Nio Teas' full genmaicha collection to find ready-to-brew options sourced directly from Japan.
Common Mistakes When Making Homemade Genmaicha
Burning the Rice
The most common problem beginners run into is burnt rice. Rice that has gone too dark produces a harsh, acrid bitterness that is difficult to mask even with good tea. If your first batch tastes bitter in a smoky or chemical way rather than pleasantly toasty, the rice went too far.
The fix is simple: keep the heat at medium-low and stir without stopping. The process is not complicated, but it does require your full attention for those ten minutes.
Before we get into common mistakes, it's worth asking what you're getting from this cup nutritionally. 👉 Are the Genmaicha Matcha Tea Benefits Worth It?
Using Too Much Rice
A ratio that tilts heavily toward rice produces a cup that tastes more like roasted grain than tea. Some people enjoy that, but it is not what is traditionally balanced toward tea and rice equally. Start at 1:1 and adjust from there and when you're ready to compare your results against the world's best genmaicha teas, you'll have a clearer sense of what a well-balanced blend should taste like.
Skipping the Cooling Step
Mixing warm rice into your tea leaves creates a closed environment where residual heat and moisture transfer into the leaves. The result is a blend that goes stale faster and can taste slightly flat. Always cool the rice completely before blending and store the finished mix in an airtight container away from light and humidity.
If you want to taste what a perfectly popped roast should produce before attempting your own, this is a great benchmark. Shop our Genmaicha Popcorn Green Tea