White Chocolate Matcha Cookies
These cookies are the comfort-food version of a tea ceremony — chewy, slightly grassy matcha cookies studded with melty pockets of white chocolate. They’re not dainty or precious; they’re a little rustic, a little stained with flour, and somehow perfect with a mug of strong coffee or a frothy matcha latte. If you like a cookie that tastes a little grown-up but still plays well with kid hands, this is your jam.
My husband calls these “the green cookies” and will actually fight me for the last one like it’s a tiny jewel. The kids started stealing them out of the jar for school snacks and once brought them to a bake sale where they vanished in minutes. I used to think matcha desserts were only for fancy cafés until one rushed weeknight turned into me mixing dough with a toddler on my hip — now they’re a staple, especially on lazy Sundays when I’m too sleepy to bake anything complicated but still want something special.
Why You’ll Love This White Chocolate Matcha Cookies
– An addictive combo of grassy matcha and mellow white chocolate — unusual but totally approachable.
– Soft, slightly chewy centers with edges that crisp just enough; they please both cookie purists and crumb-lovers.
– Fast to mix, forgiving to bake, and perfect for making ahead or freezing for “emergency dessert situations.”
– Pretty as heck for brunch or an afternoon pick-me-up, and they make a great gift in a tin.

Kitchen Talk
I learned that matcha likes to be treated gently — sift it, then sift it again if it looks clumpy. White chocolate can be temperamental; I’ve had it bloom if baked too hot or melt into sad streaks if too warm. Pro tip: if you forget to chill the dough it’ll spread like crazy, so pop it in the fridge for even 15–30 minutes if you’re in a rush. Also, I once swapped half the butter for coconut oil in a panic—turns out it made the cookies taste tropical and weird, so don’t do that unless you want island vibes.
MORE OF OUR FAVORITE…
Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics: Get plain all-purpose flour and real baking soda/powder — fresh leaveners = even texture and predictable spread.
– Fats & Oils: Use unsalted butter for the best flavor control; if you only have salted, reduce added salt slightly.
– Chocolate: Pick high-quality white chocolate chunks or chips — cheaper white chocolate can be waxy and overly sweet.
– Sweeteners: A mix of white and brown sugar gives chew and flavor; if you use only white sugar, cookies will be flatter and crisper.
– Nuts & Seeds: If you like a little crunch, macadamias or chopped pistachios play beautifully with matcha — buy raw and chop yourself.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Make the dough a day or two ahead and keep it wrapped in the fridge; chilling deepens the flavors and controls spread.
– Shape cookie dough balls and freeze them on a tray, then transfer to a bag: bake from frozen with a minute or two extra.
– Store pre-portioned dough in an airtight container or zip bag — label with date so you don’t forget when you made it.
– For busy mornings, bake a batch on the weekend and keep them in the freezer for quick school snacks or coffee-side treats.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a cookie scoop so all cookies are the same size and bake evenly — no eyeballing required.
– Pre-measure dry ingredients into a bowl and cover; when ready, just add wet stuff and mix.
– Bake two trays at once if your oven handles it, but rotate them halfway through for even browning.
– If you’re short on chill time, pop the shaped dough on a freezing tray for 15–20 minutes — faster than the fridge.
Common Mistakes
– Overmixing the dough: I did this once and ended up with cakier cookies; stop as soon as the flour is incorporated.
– Not sifting matcha: clumps become bright green specks that don’t taste great — sift it to avoid bitter pockets.
– Baking at too high a temp: white chocolate can brown or separate; if the edges darken quickly, lower the oven next batch.
– Underbaked center panic: let cookies cool on the sheet for a few minutes — residual heat finishes the center without overcooking the edges.
What to Serve It With
– A strong cup of coffee or an iced latte for balance.
– A creamy matcha latte if you want to double down on green vibes.
– Vanilla ice cream sandwiched between two cookies for an instant dessert.
– Simple fruit salad or sliced strawberries to cut the sweetness.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use room-temperature eggs and butter unless your recipe says otherwise — they incorporate more smoothly.
– Sift matcha and flour together to avoid pockets of flavor or lumpy dough.
– Salt timing matters: add it to the wet mix so it disperses evenly.
– Don’t overcrowd the sheet — leave space for gentle spreading.
– If your cookies spread too much, chill the dough longer and bake on a cooler sheet.
Storage Tips
Store cooled cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3–4 days; pop a slice of bread in the container if you want to keep them soft. You can freeze baked cookies for up to 2 months — thaw at room temperature or warm briefly in a low oven. Eating them cold? Totally fine. Cold cookie dipped in coffee = zero shame and zero regrets. For breakfast? Absolutely acceptable.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap white chocolate for milk or dark chocolate if you want less sweetness — dark turns it into a more grown-up treat.
– Brown the butter for a nutty, caramelized flavor that pairs beautifully with matcha.
– For gluten-free, use a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend (add a pinch of xanthan if your blend lacks it) — texture will be slightly different but still delicious.
– Vegan option: try vegan butter and a flax egg, but expect a slightly different crumb and less lift.
– If you’re out of matcha, a teaspoon of green tea powder won’t do — culinary matcha is worth grabbing for the flavor.
Frequently Asked Questions

White Chocolate Matcha Cookies
Ingredients
Cookie Dough
- 2 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 1/2 tablespoons culinary-grade matcha powder, sifted
- 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 3/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 14 tablespoons unsalted butter
- 3/4 cup packed light brown sugar
- 2/3 cup granulated sugar
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
- 1 large egg
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 3/4 cups white chocolate chips or chunks
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Brown the butter: Add butter to a light-colored saucepan over medium heat. Melt, then simmer, stirring, until the milk solids turn golden and the butter smells nutty, 4–6 minutes. Scrape into a large mixing bowl, including the browned bits, and cool 10 minutes until just warm.
- Combine dry ingredients: In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, baking soda, and salt. Sift the matcha over this mixture and whisk again to evenly distribute. Tip: Sifting matcha prevents green clumps and keeps the color bright.
- Whisk sugars into the cooled brown butter until glossy and thick, about 45–60 seconds. Stir in vanilla and almond extract.
- Add the egg and the extra yolk, whisking until the mixture is smooth and slightly lightened, about 30 seconds.
- Fold in the dry mixture with a spatula until a few floury streaks remain. Add 1 1/2 cups of the white chocolate, folding just until no dry spots remain. Cover and chill the dough 20–30 minutes, until scoopable (chill a bit longer if your kitchen is warm).
- While the dough chills, heat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
- Portion the dough into 1.5-tablespoon mounds (about a #40 scoop) and arrange on the sheets with 2 inches of space. Lightly flatten each mound to about 3/4-inch thick. Press a few of the remaining white chocolate pieces onto the tops.
- Bake 9–11 minutes, rotating the pans halfway, until edges look set and the centers are still soft and pale. Do not overbake—carryover heat will finish them.
- Cool on the sheets for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to finish cooling. If you like, sprinkle a tiny pinch of flaky sea salt on the hot cookies for contrast.
Notes
Featured Comments
“Impressed! Clear steps and family favorite results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“New favorite here — will make again. shareable was spot on.”
“Impressed! Clear steps and will make again results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“This playful recipe was so flavorful — the nutty really stands out. Thanks!”
“Made this last night and it was family favorite. Loved how the family favorite came together.”
“Made this last night and it was will make again. Loved how the charred came together.”
“Super easy and turned out amazing! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
“This creamy recipe was turned out amazing — the quick really stands out. Thanks!”
“Impressed! Clear steps and will make again results. Perfect for busy nights.”
“Super easy and turned out amazing! My family asked for seconds. Saving this one.”
