Matcha Tiramisu Recipe

Creamy, rich, and bursting with flavor, this irresistible Matcha Tiramisu layers green tea-soaked ladyfingers with a light and airy mascarpone cream. It’s a modern Japanese twist on the classic Italian dessert. The vibrant green pop of color will wow your guests at your next party.

Ingredients

For the Cookie Layer

For Serving

Instructions

Before you start

  1. Please note that this is a chilled dessert and requires at least 4 hours of chilling time, preferably overnight.
  2. You will need a medium saucepan, a medium heatproof mixing bowl to set over the saucepan, and two large bowls. Fill one of the large bowls with water and ice and make sure that the mixing bowl fits in this ice bath; set aside for cooling the egg mixture later. Also, set an instant-read thermometer near the double boiler in the next step.
  3. Set up a double boiler. First, add 2 inches of water to the saucepan. Next, set the mixing bowl on top and check that the bottom of the bowl does not touch the water. Set aside the mixing bowl to use for the egg mixture. Bring the water to a bare simmer over medium heat, then reduce the heat to low.

Cooking the Egg Mixture

  1. In the medium heatproof mixing bowl, add 3 large egg yolks, 2 Tbsp marsala wine, and 3 Tbsp of the ⅓ cup sugar. Start whisking it with a handheld electric mixer.
  2. Set the bowl over the saucepan of barely simmering water and continue to beat the egg yolks. Over the next 10 minutes or so, you‘ll gently cook this egg mixture until it registers 160ºF (71ºC), when it‘s safe to consume. Keep your instant-read thermometer handy to check the temperature. Tip: At around 160ºF, your eggs may turn into scrambled eggs; therefore, I highly recommend both an electric mixer and an instant-read thermometer for this process (please read my post).
  3. Continue to cook the egg mixture, beating it constantly. The egg mixture will increase in volume and becoming lighter in texture. It also will turn a pale yellow color.
  4. Continue whisking. I use Speed 3 of a 5-speed hand mixer throughout this process. Continue to check the temperature.
  5. As soon as the egg mixture reaches 160ºF (71ºC), immediately remove the mixing bowl from the saucepan. Set the bowl in the ice bath to quickly stop the cooking. Let it cool for 1 minute.

Making Mascarpone Cream

  1. Meanwhile, put 8 oz mascarpone cheese in another large bowl and soften it with a silicone spatula. Add the cooled egg mixture into the bowl with the mascarpone.
  2. Note: The egg mixture does get cooked a bit on the sides of the bowl from the double boiler. Do not scrape off or use this cooked egg in your mascarpone mixture.
  3. Gently fold the egg mixture into the mascarpone until just smooth. Tip: The egg mixture will become grainy if overmixed.
  4. Now, make the whipped cream: In another bowl, beat 1½ cups heavy (whipping) cream until foamy; you can reuse the bowl from the ice bath, but make sure it‘s completely dry. Then, gradually add the rest of the sugar.
  5. Beat together until medium peaks form. The cream holds its shape well but is still soft and hasn’t started to become grainy. When you lift out the whisk, peaks will form but they will bend over at the end.
  6. Now, gently fold the whipped cream mixture into the mascarpone mixture.
  7. Fold the mascarpone cream until well combined.

Assembling

  1. In a small bowl, combine ½ cup water (heated to 175ºF/80ºC) and 1½ Tbsp matcha (green tea powder). Whisk together until there are no lumps. Transfer this matcha mixture to a flat-bottomed container big enough for a ladyfinger cookie to lay flat.
  2. Gather 24 ladyfingers. One at a time, quickly dip a ladyfinger into the matcha mixture until soaked but not soggy; use a pair of tongs to flip it over to soak the other side. Then, place it on the bottom of an 8 x 8-inch (20 x 20 cm) baking dish. Repeat until you‘ve arranged 2 rows of 6 ladyfingers each.
  3. Spread half of the mascarpone cream over the ladyfingers in an even layer. Smooth out the surface using the silicone spatula or a silicone pastry scraper.
  4. Create a second layer of cookies, dipping the remaining ladyfingers in the matcha mixture and placing them in 2 neat rows on top of the mascarpone cream layer.
  5. Top with the remaining cream and smooth out the top. Cover with a sheet of plastic wrap placed directly on the surface of the cream to prevent a skin from forming. Refrigerate for at least 4 hours, preferably overnight.

Serving

  1. Remove your chilled Matcha Tiramisu from the refrigerator and unwrap the plastic. Immediately before serving, dust 2 Tbsp matcha (green tea powder) on top of the tiramisu using a fine-mesh sieve. Enjoy!

You can keep the leftovers in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for up to 3 days.

Source attribution

Just One Cook Book: Matcha Tiramisu

Redirect Here


tiramisu tiramisu-cut tiramisu-cut

Website Research

Recipe Websites

Yummly

Yummly.com

Yummly has an extremely easy to use interface: there are many recipes, yet it doesn't feel cluttered. On the home page you can easily navigate types of cruisines. As you scroll, the recipe grid provides alignment, presenting all the important information cleanly and efficiently.

Delish

Delish.com

Delish presents itself as a great recipe website thanks to it's clean design and high-quality imagery. The page is well laid out, with images being the primary focus. Every cell of new information, including ads, fit into the visual layout of the website well; even as the user scrolls and interacts.

Food Network

FoodNetwork.com

Food Network is one of the most prominent recipe websites: they provide everything a food enthusiast may need including insightful blog posts. Despite that, the website is easy to use and straightfoward with a theme-based orientation.

Non-Recipe Websites

Jelly Cat

JellyCat.com

JellyCat's website is fun, playful, and simple to use. I would like to implement a similar playful theme without losing the effectiveness of the website, like JellyCat's website delivers.

The Skimm

TheSkimm.com

The Skimm is my go-to news website because all the information is easy and entertaining to read. I hope to utilize a siimlar communication technique, by designing the website so it's entertaining rather than havig it be a chore to read.

Blueprint Coffee

BlueprintCoffee.com

Blueprint coffee's entire website is extremely on brand. Everything uses the same 2 fonts and the same blue color, even the little icons of accepted credit cards are Blueprint blue. I hope to use this consistency in my own website design.