Green grape is one of those flavors that sells itself: it’s familiar, bright, and easy to describe at the counter. Pair that with a light, icy tea slush texture and you’ve got an LTO that feels “new” without making your bar complicated.
This SOP is built for speed and consistency. You’ll get measured recipes (16 oz + 24 oz), a simple prep schedule, basic costing guidance, and the fixes for the problems that usually show up on day two (too icy, too sweet, weak tea, separation).

What you’re selling (and why it works as an LTO)
A green grape tea slush is a blended, semi-frozen drink made with brewed tea, grape syrup, and ice. You can also describe it on menus as a grape bubble tea slush (especially if you offer toppings).
Compared to a creamy smoothie, it’s lighter, more refreshing, and easier to batch for.
Why it works:
Easy flavor story: “green grape” reads clean and fruity.
Fast build: a short ingredient list + a single blend.
Upsell-friendly: add a topping (aloe, crystal boba, popping boba) without touching the base recipe.
Ingredients + tools (what’s non-negotiable vs flexible)
Non-negotiables
Tea base (recommended: jasmine green tea for a crisp fruit profile)
Grape syrup (your chosen brand)
Ice (fresh, clean-tasting)
Fructose or simple syrup (optional) for fine-tuning sweetness without changing grape flavor
Flexible add-ons
Acid (optional): a small squeeze of lemon/lime can sharpen fruit flavors
Toppings: crystal boba, aloe, grape popping boba, or light jelly
Tools
Blender
Jigger/measuring cup or scale
Shaker cup (optional)
Standard scoop for ice (one size per drink size)
Pro Tip: Decide one measuring system (grams or milliliters) and train everyone on it. Consistency beats “close enough.”
SOP — 16 oz Green Grape Tea Slush
Target profile
Bright grape aroma
Light tea backbone (not bitter)
Slushy texture that pours but doesn’t separate instantly
Build (16 oz)
Step 1 — Prep the blender
Input: clean blender jar
Action: rinse and drain; avoid soap residue
Output: neutral, ready-to-blend jar
Done when: no leftover odors or foam
Step 2 — Add tea base
Input: chilled brewed tea
Action: add 120 ml (4 oz) tea
Output: liquid base in jar
Done when: tea is cold (not warm)
Step 3 — Add grape syrup
Input: grape syrup
Action: add 30–45 ml (1–1.5 oz) grape syrup
Output: sweetened base
Done when: you can smell grape clearly above tea
Step 4 — Add ice
Input: ice
Action: add 250–300 g ice (start lower if your syrup is thick)
Output: blend-ready mix
Done when: ice reaches just above liquid line
Step 5 — Blend
Action: blend 20–30 seconds high
Output: fine slush
Done when: no large ice chunks; texture is spoonable but pourable
Step 6 — Taste + adjust (fast)
Too sweet → add 15–30 ml tea and a small handful of ice, re-blend 5–10 seconds
Too weak → add 10–15 ml grape syrup, re-blend 5–10 seconds
Not bright enough → add a few drops citrus, re-blend 3–5 seconds
Step 7 — Serve
Action: pour into 16 oz cup
Done when: slush fills cup evenly with no watery pooling at the bottom
SOP — 24 oz Green Grape Tea Slush
Use the same method, scaled proportionally.
Build (24 oz)
Tea base: 180 ml (6 oz)
Grape syrup: 45–60 ml (1.5–2 oz)
Ice: 350–450 g
Blend: 25–35 seconds
Done-when check: You should get a consistent pale-green slush that doesn’t melt into clear liquid in the first 2–3 minutes.
If you use a slush machine: a starting bubble tea slush machine ratio
If you’re running a slush/granita machine, the “secret” is not the flavor—it’s the ratio.
A common starting point is diluting slush syrup at about 6:1 (water to syrup), per Slush.co.uk’s 2024 slush mix ratio guide. If your grape syrup is concentrated or very thick, you may need to adjust slightly.

How to adapt this for tea:
Build the slush base with your syrup dilution first.
Replace part of the water with strong, cooled tea (so you keep freezing behavior while adding real tea flavor).
⚠️ Warning: Changing sugar concentration changes freezing. If you “free pour” extra syrup, texture is the first thing that breaks.
Batching + prep schedule (so this stays fast at peak)
Tea base (daily)
Brew tea strong enough to show up through syrup and ice.
Cool quickly and store cold.
Practical schedule:
Open: brew 1–2 batches
Mid-shift: refresh if volume is high (tea tastes flatter as it sits)
Syrup station
Decant grape syrup into a labeled bottle with a consistent pour spout.
Keep a backup bottle ready so you’re not changing brands/batches mid-rush.
If you want more syrup selection and cost/consistency thinking for shop ops (including how to evaluate grape syrup for bubble tea), use Best syrups for bubble tea (cost, consistency, and flavor picks) as a planning reference.
Costing + pricing guardrails (quick and usable)
You don’t need perfect costing to price an LTO well—you need a repeatable method.
Simple COGS formula
Cost per cup ≈ (tea cost) + (grape syrup cost per ml × ml used) + (cup/lid/straw) + (topping cost, if any)
Operational guardrails:
Lock one syrup dose per size (your “standard”). Only allow “less sweet” by reducing syrup once, not by custom negotiating.
If you offer toppings, push one hero topping for this LTO to keep inventory tight.
For cross-selling ideas that don’t complicate your bar, pull pairings from this fruit bubble tea combinations guide.
Shelf life, labeling, and station hygiene (keep it simple)
Local health codes vary, but the operational principles don’t:
Label prepared items with a clear date and discard point.
Cold-hold prepared tea and other time/temperature-controlled items properly.
Avoid cross-contamination by using dedicated tools and clean, sealed containers.
A practical starting point for staff training is the common “date-mark and use within 7 days when held cold” guidance described in Gordon Food Service’s food labeling and dating overview. For broader labeling context, reference the FDA Food Labeling Guide (2024 PDF).
What to do in your shop:
Tea base container: “Made on / Use by”
Syrup bottles: label open date and keep caps/pour spouts clean
Blender jars: rinse between drinks, sanitize on schedule
Troubleshooting (the stuff that ruins repeat orders)
It’s too icy / melts fast
Tea wasn’t cold.
Not enough dissolved solids (too little syrup).
Fix: chill tea harder; raise syrup slightly; blend longer.
It’s too sweet
Syrup dose is too high for your ice amount.
Fix: add tea + a little ice and re-blend (don’t “fix” with water—it thins flavor).
It tastes like grape candy (no tea)
Tea is too weak or over-diluted.
Fix: brew stronger; use less liquid in the blender and rely on ice for volume.
It separates in the cup
Inconsistent blend time or ice size.
Fix: standardize blend time; use one ice scoop; avoid half-melted ice.
Variations that still keep ops simple
If you want an LTO board with 2–3 options (without multiplying prep):
Green grape + aloe (clean and light)
Green grape + crystal boba (texture upgrade)
Green grape + citrus (adds bite; great in hot weather)
For more seasonal rotation ideas that stay practical, pull from Bubble Tea Supplier’s new drink ideas hub.
Next steps (optional, but smart)
Add this as a limited-time “Summer Green Grape Slush” and feature it in your top 3 menu placements.
Train with the “done-when” checks above so every cup tastes the same.
If you want to position it clearly on your menu next to fruit tea, use this guide to fruit tea vs. bubble tea in North America to tighten your wording.
















