Matcha Tiramisu Recipe: The Ultimate No-Bake Green Tea Dessert
If you’ve been scrolling through Pinterest or TikTok lately, chances are you’ve already seen matcha tiramisu taking over every dessert feed. And honestly? The obsession is completely justified.
I first made this recipe on a rainy Sunday afternoon when I had leftover matcha powder and a block of mascarpone sitting in my fridge. I wasn’t expecting much. But after that first bite — creamy, earthy, perfectly sweet — I knew I had stumbled onto something special. I’ve made it over 20 times since then, tweaking every detail until it was absolutely perfect.
This isn’t just another matcha tiramisu recipe. This is the one you’ll save, share, and make on repeat.
What Is Matcha Tiramisu?
Matcha tiramisu is a Japanese-Italian fusion dessert that transforms the classic Italian tiramisù by replacing coffee with a smooth, vibrant matcha green tea syrup. Instead of espresso-soaked ladyfingers layered with a coffee-kissed mascarpone cream, you get:
- Ladyfingers soaked in a sweet matcha syrup — earthy, slightly bitter, deeply aromatic
- A light, airy mascarpone cream — rich but not heavy
- A bold matcha dusting on top — beautiful, striking, and Instagram-worthy
The result is a dessert that feels both familiar and completely new — nostalgic like tiramisu, fresh like a Japanese tea ceremony.
Also known as: green tea tiramisu, Japanese tiramisu, matcha cream dessert.
If you’re new to matcha desserts, check out our guide on the best culinary matcha brands for baking before you start.
Why This Matcha Tiramisu Recipe Is Better Than Others
After testing more than a dozen matcha tiramisu recipe variations from popular food blogs, cookbooks, and social media trends, we kept running into the same problems. Here’s how we fixed every single one:
| Common Problem | Why It Happens | Our Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Soggy, falling-apart layers | Too much liquid absorbed by ladyfingers | Precision dipping: exactly 1 second per side in a measured matcha-to-water ratio |
| Bitter, grassy aftertaste | Burning matcha with boiling water or using low-grade powder | Culinary-grade matcha + water at exactly 175°F / 80°C max |
| Runny, weeping mascarpone cream | Over-whipping cream or over-beating mascarpone | Soft peaks only + gentle folding, never an electric mixer on the cheese |
| Dull, grayish green color | Old, oxidized matcha or cheap culinary grade | Bright green, fresh matcha stored in the freezer + generous final dusting |
| Bland flavor without alcohol | Missing depth when coffee and liqueur are removed | Double Matcha Method + vanilla extract + optional white chocolate layer |
The result is a stable, sliceable, deeply flavored dessert that holds its shape on a plate and looks like it came from a boutique patisserie.
Matcha Tiramisu Trends in 2026
This isn’t just a viral recipe — it’s part of a much bigger dessert movement. If you’re wondering why matcha tiramisu is suddenly everywhere, the data tells a clear story.
According to 2026 food and Pinterest trend reports, searches for matcha desserts, Japanese-Italian fusion sweets, and no-bake desserts have all surged. Consumers are actively looking for:
- Lower-caffeine alternatives to coffee-based treats
- Visually “green” and aesthetic desserts that perform well on social media
- Make-ahead, no-bake recipes that require zero oven time
- Asian dessert fusion (think mochi, bingsu, and matcha everything)
Our 2026 trending desserts guide breaks down every major movement, but matcha tiramisu sits at the perfect intersection of three of them. That is why we spent months perfecting this specific recipe — so you don’t have to experiment.
The Secret: Double Matcha Method
What makes this recipe different from every other matcha tiramisu recipe out there is the Double Matcha Method.
Most recipes only add matcha to the soaking liquid. We go further:
| Layer | Matcha Used? | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Soaking syrup for ladyfingers | ✅ Yes | Infuses the cookie base with earthy green tea flavor |
| Bottom cream layer (green) | ✅ Yes | Creates a distinct visual layer + deep flavor |
| Top cream layer (white) | ❌ No | Provides color contrast and creamy balance |
| Final dusting | ✅ Yes | Gives that iconic vibrant green finish |
This creates distinct visual layers, a deeper green tea flavor, and a beautiful color contrast when you slice into it — without any bitterness.
Ingredients

For the Matcha Soaking Syrup
- 2 tbsp culinary-grade matcha powder (sifted)
- ⅓ cup (80ml) warm water — 175°F / 80°C (not boiling)
- 2 tbsp granulated sugar
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
Note: We strongly recommend using one of the culinary matcha brands we tested rather than generic grocery-store powder. The color and flavor difference is dramatic.
For the Mascarpone Cream
- 1 cup (240ml) heavy whipping cream — cold, 35% fat
- 8 oz (225g) mascarpone cheese — room temperature
- ½ cup (60g) powdered sugar, sifted
- 1 tbsp culinary matcha powder (for the green cream layer)
- 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
For Assembly
- 20–24 ladyfinger cookies (savoiardi)
- 1–2 tbsp matcha powder for dusting
- Optional garnish: white chocolate shavings, edible flowers, or fresh strawberries
How to Make Matcha Tiramisu — Step by Step
Step 1: Make the Matcha Soaking Syrup
- Sift 2 tbsp matcha powder into a shallow bowl — never skip sifting, it eliminates lumps completely
- Add 2 tbsp sugar and mix with the dry matcha
- Pour in ⅓ cup warm water at 175°F / 80°C — hotter water will make your matcha bitter and dull in color
- Whisk vigorously with a small whisk or bamboo chasen until fully dissolved and smooth
- Stir in 1 tsp vanilla extract
- Set aside and let it cool to room temperature

Pro Tip: If you see green lumps floating, your water was too hot or the powder wasn’t sifted. Start over — lumps show through the cream layers and ruin the presentation.
Step 2: Prepare the Mascarpone Base
- Place room-temperature mascarpone in a large mixing bowl
- Add powdered sugar and vanilla extract
- Mix gently with a rubber spatula until just smooth and combined
Important: Do NOT use an electric mixer on mascarpone. It splits easily and becomes grainy. A spatula is all you need here.
Step 3: Whip the Heavy Cream
- Make sure your bowl and beaters are cold (put them in the freezer for 10 minutes)
- Pour in the cold heavy cream
- Beat with an electric mixer on medium-high speed until soft peaks form
Soft peaks = the cream holds a shape, but the tip gently folds over when you lift the beater. Stop here. Overwhipped cream will make your filling grainy and stiff.
Step 4: Build the Two-Tone Cream
This is the step that makes this recipe truly special.
- Gently fold half the whipped cream into the mascarpone base using slow, wide circular motions
- Divide the mascarpone mixture into two equal bowls:
Bowl A — White Cream:
- Fold in the remaining plain whipped cream
- This will be your top layer
Bowl B — Green Matcha Cream:
- Sift 1 tbsp matcha powder directly over the mixture
- Fold gently until the color is uniform and streak-free
- This will be your bottom layer

Step 5: Assemble the Layers
Use an 8×8 inch (20×20cm) square dish or a deep loaf pan for taller, more dramatic layers.
Layer 1 — First Cookie Base:
- Hold each ladyfinger horizontally
- Dip it into the matcha syrup for exactly 1 second per side
- Do not soak — just a quick dip
- Arrange in a tight, single layer at the bottom of your dish
- Break cookies to fill gaps if needed

Layer 2 — Green Matcha Cream:
- Spoon the green mascarpone cream over the cookies
- Spread evenly with an offset spatula
- Smooth the surface completely
Layer 3 — Second Cookie Layer:
- Repeat the quick-dip process with remaining ladyfingers
- Arrange over the green cream layer
Layer 4 — White Cream:
- Spread the white mascarpone cream over the second cookie layer
- Smooth the top with your spatula
- Optional: drag a toothpick or skewer lightly through the surface to create a subtle marble effect

The #1 mistake people make: Over-soaking the ladyfingers. They continue absorbing moisture in the fridge. A 1-second dip is genuinely enough — trust the process.
Step 6: Chill — Don’t Skip This
- Cover the dish tightly with plastic wrap
- Refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours
- For best results: overnight, 8–12 hours
During this time:
- The ladyfingers soften and absorb the cream
- The layers firm up and hold their shape
- The flavors meld together into something incredible
This is where most matcha tiramisu fails happen. Slicing too early gives you a runny, formless mess. Patience is the secret ingredient.
Step 7: Dust, Slice, and Serve
- Remove from fridge 10 minutes before serving
- Sift 1–2 tbsp matcha powder generously and evenly over the entire surface
- Clean the edges of the dish with a damp cloth for a clean, professional look
- Use a long, thin-bladed knife — run it under hot water, dry completely, then slice
- Wipe the blade between every single cut for clean, photo-worthy slices

Plating idea: Serve on small Japanese ceramic plates with a dusting of extra matcha and a white chocolate curl. It elevates the presentation instantly.
Expert Tips for Perfect Matcha Tiramisu Every Time
Choose the Right Matcha — It Matters More Than You Think
Not all matcha is created equal, especially for desserts.
| Matcha Type | Best For | Use in This Recipe? |
|---|---|---|
| Ceremonial grade | Tea drinking | ❌ Too delicate — flavor gets lost in dairy |
| Premium culinary grade | Desserts, lattes | ✅ Perfect choice |
| Budget culinary grade | Basic baking | ⚠️ Only if fresh and bright green |
Look for: bright, vivid green color — not yellow or khaki
Smell for: fresh, grassy, slightly sweet aroma — not hay-like or dusty
Recommended brands: Jade Leaf Culinary Matcha, Ippodo Cooking Grade, Maeda-En
Storage tip: Keep your matcha in an airtight container in the freezer. Exposure to heat, light, and air kills both color and flavor fast. Read more in our complete matcha storage and buying guide.

Get Perfect Slices Every Time
- Use a knife with a long, thin blade (not serrated)
- Run under hot water before cutting
- Dry completely — water streaks the matcha surface
- Wipe between every cut with a clean cloth
Make-Ahead and Storage Guide
| Storage Method | Duration | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Refrigerator (covered) | Up to 3 days | Flavor and texture peak after 24 hours |
| Freezer (whole dish) | Up to 2 weeks | Wrap in plastic + foil |
| Freezer (individual slices) | Up to 2 weeks | Wrap tightly; thaw in fridge overnight |
Never thaw at room temperature — the mascarpone cream will weep and separate.
Delicious Variations to Try
Vegan Matcha Tiramisu
Replace mascarpone with soaked cashews blended with coconut cream and lemon juice. Use plant-based ladyfingers or gluten-free sponge slices. Increase chill time to 6 hours minimum.
Mini Matcha Tiramisu Cups

Assemble in small glasses or mason jars for individual portions. No slicing required — just layer and serve. Perfect for parties and effortlessly shareable on social media. We have a full tutorial on mini dessert cups for parties that shows exactly how to scale this recipe down.
Strawberry Matcha Tiramisu
Add a thin layer of fresh strawberry compote between the cookie and green cream layers. The red-green color contrast is visually stunning and tastes incredible.
White Chocolate Matcha Tiramisu
Fold 50g of melted, cooled white chocolate into the white cream layer. It adds richness, rounds off matcha’s bitterness, and creates a luxurious mouthfeel.
Yuzu Matcha Tiramisu
Add 1 tsp yuzu juice and a little yuzu zest to the soaking syrup for a bright, citrusy Japanese twist that pairs beautifully with the earthy matcha.
Matcha-Mochi Layered Tiramisu
For a texture twist inspired by our mochi ice cream recipe, swap the bottom ladyfinger layer with thin slices of matcha mochi. The chewy texture against the creamy mascarpone is unforgettable.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does matcha tiramisu have coffee?
No. Matcha tiramisu is completely coffee-free. The ladyfingers are soaked in a matcha green tea syrup instead of espresso. It’s a great option for people who are caffeine-sensitive or simply don’t enjoy coffee-based desserts.
What does matcha tiramisu taste like?
It tastes like a light, creamy cheesecake with a gentle earthy bitterness from the matcha. The mascarpone keeps it rich, while the green tea cuts through the sweetness and keeps it feeling fresh. It’s less heavy and more delicate than classic coffee tiramisu.
What is matcha tiramisu exactly?
Matcha tiramisu is a Japanese-Italian fusion dessert that replaces the traditional espresso and cocoa powder in Italian tiramisù with matcha green tea syrup and matcha powder. The structure remains the same — layers of soaked ladyfingers and mascarpone cream — but the flavor profile is entirely different: earthy, grassy, and subtly sweet instead of bitter and coffee-forward.
Can I make matcha tiramisu without mascarpone?
Yes. Substitute with 8 oz cream cheese + 2 tbsp heavy cream + 1 tbsp sour cream, beaten until smooth. The texture will be slightly denser and the flavor tangier — closer to a green tea cheesecake — but still delicious.
How long does matcha tiramisu last in the fridge?
Properly covered, it keeps well for up to 3 days in the refrigerator. The flavor and texture actually improve after 24 hours, which makes it perfect for making ahead.
Why is my matcha tiramisu bitter?
The most common causes are:
- Low-quality matcha — dull, yellowish powder with a hay-like smell
- Water that’s too hot — above 185°F / 85°C burns the matcha and intensifies bitterness
- Too much matcha powder — stick to the exact amounts in the recipe
- Old matcha — oxidized powder loses its sweetness and turns bitter
Can I freeze matcha tiramisu?
Yes. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap then foil. Freeze for up to 2 weeks. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator — never at room temperature, as the mascarpone cream will weep and separate.
Is matcha tiramisu gluten-free?
The mascarpone cream is naturally gluten-free. To make the entire dessert gluten-free, use certified gluten-free ladyfingers (available in specialty stores) or substitute with thin slices of gluten-free sponge cake. You might also like our collection of gluten-free dessert recipes.
Why are my layers not holding their shape?
Either the cream was overwhipped or underwhipped, or the dessert wasn’t chilled long enough. Make sure you reach soft peaks only, and always chill for a minimum of 4 hours before slicing.
How to make matcha tiramisu without alcohol?
This recipe is already 100% alcohol-free. Traditional tiramisu often includes Marsala wine or rum, but our matcha version uses vanilla extract for depth instead. If you want extra complexity without liquor, try adding ½ tsp almond extract or folding melted white chocolate into the cream.
What to serve with matcha tiramisu?
Because matcha tiramisu is rich and creamy, it pairs beautifully with:
- Hot sencha or hojicha tea
- Cold yuzu lemonade
- A small scoop of black sesame ice cream
- Fresh seasonal berries (strawberries or raspberries cut the richness perfectly)

Nutrition Information
Per serving (based on 10 servings)
| Nutrient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Calories | ~340 kcal |
| Carbohydrates | 28g |
| Protein | 6g |
| Total Fat | 23g |
| Saturated Fat | 14g |
| Sugar | 16g |
| Sodium | 85mg |
Values are estimates and may vary based on specific brands used.
Final Thoughts
Matcha tiramisu is one of those rare recipes that manages to be visually stunning, deeply flavorful, and genuinely easy to make — all at the same time. Whether you’re a lifelong matcha lover or just matcha-curious, this dessert will absolutely win you over.
The Double Matcha Method, the two-tone cream layers, the perfectly soaked ladyfingers — every detail in this recipe exists for a reason. Follow the steps, trust the chill time, and you’ll end up with a dessert that looks like it came from a high-end patisserie.
If you enjoyed this recipe, explore our growing collection of no-bake Asian dessert recipes — from yuzu posset to black sesame cheesecake.
Made this recipe? Leave a comment below and let us know how it turned out. And if you share it on social media, tag us — we feature the best reader creations every week. 7
Love TikTok-famous desserts? Explore our complete viral baking trends 2026 guide for no-bake treats, sourdough bakes, and copycat classics. LINK ANCHOR: viral baking trends 2026 LINK URL: https://www.totaltastes.com/viral-baking-trends-2026/

Matcha Tiramisu Recipe (The Ultimate No-Bake Green Tea Dessert)
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Step 1: Sift matcha into a shallow bowl. Add sugar and warm water at 175°F. Whisk vigorously until fully dissolved and smooth. Stir in vanilla extract. Set aside to cool to room temperature.
- Step 2: Place room-temperature mascarpone in a large bowl. Add powdered sugar and vanilla. Mix gently with a rubber spatula until just smooth. Do NOT use an electric mixer.
- Step 3: Beat cold heavy cream in a chilled bowl until soft peaks form. The tip should gently fold over when you lift the beater. Stop immediately.
- Step 4: Fold half the whipped cream into the mascarpone base. Divide mixture into two bowls. Fold remaining plain whipped cream into one bowl (white layer). Sift 1 tbsp matcha into the other bowl and fold until uniform (green layer).
- Step 5: Quickly dip each ladyfinger into the matcha syrup for exactly 1 second per side. Arrange in a tight single layer in an 8×8 inch dish. Spread the green cream evenly. Add a second layer of dipped ladyfingers. Spread the white cream on top and smooth.
- Step 6: Cover tightly with plastic wrap. Refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours, ideally overnight (8–12 hours).
- Step 7: Sift 1–2 tbsp matcha powder generously over the top. Slice with a long, thin knife run under hot water and dried completely. Wipe the blade between every cut.







