Advantages of performing penicillin G amidase catalysed synthesis of ampicillin and cephalexin by enzymatic acyl transfer to the β-lactam antibiotic nuclei in a highly condensed system using mainly undissolved substrates, with no apparent aqueous liquid phase, were demonstrated. It was shown that synthesis can be performed in the absence of a liquid phase formed by water or an organic co-solvent. This highly condensed system is formed by a liquid phase given by one of the reactant, the phenylglycine methyl ester (PGM), that remains liquid in these operative conditions and the partially dissolved β-lactam nucleus. Operating in such highly condensed system, the water that causes the hydrolysis of PGM is limited to the water hydrating the support on which the enzyme is covalently immobilised. In this way the reaction system is maintained at a controlled degree of hydration. In the present work the reaction system was modulated by eliminating the solvent (aqueous or aqueous/organic), reducing the amount of water to the minimum for the biocatalytic activity and using PGM as solvent and reagent at the same time. The synthesis was conducted with equimolar amounts of PGM and the β-lactam nucleus, with a reduced hydrolysis of the activated acyl donor. We have also studied a simple and efficient method for the workup of the reaction where the unreacted reagents can be recovered after selective filtration and precipitation.