A good matcha cupcakes recipe balances the bitter, grassy edge of ceremonial green tea powder with enough sugar and fat to keep the crumb tender. You get a dessert that tastes distinct from vanilla or chocolate but still reads as a familiar cupcake. This version uses a straightforward butter-based batter and a tangy cream cheese frosting so the matcha stays the star without turning chalky.
The method below is built for home ovens and standard muffin tins. You don't need a stand mixer or special pans, just a steady hand when folding the dry ingredients. If you follow the weights and the doneness cues, the result is a moist cupcake with a clean green color and no bitter aftertaste. If you enjoyed this, our contact is worth trying next. Making this matcha cupcakes at home is surprisingly straightforward once you know the key steps.
Why You'll Love These Matcha Cupcakes
- Clear green tea flavor from real matcha, not artificial coloring or extract
- Soft crumb that stays moist for three days thanks to buttermilk and butter
- Simple cream cheese frosting that cuts the earthiness without being too sweet
- One bowl for dry mix, one for wet, then a quick fold — minimal cleanup
- Works as a base for toppings like berries or white chocolate shavings
Ingredients You'll Need
- 120 g cake flour — low protein keeps the crumb fine and soft
- 10 g ceremonial grade matcha powder — sifted to remove clumps
- 1 tsp baking powder — gives lift without a soda tang
- 1/4 tsp salt — rounds the sweetness
- 115 g unsalted butter, room temperature — for structure and mouthfeel
- 150 g granulated sugar — balances matcha bitterness
- 2 large eggs, room temperature — bind and add richness
- 120 ml buttermilk, room temperature — adds moisture and tender crumb
- 1 tsp vanilla extract — backs the tea note
- 200 g cream cheese, cold — frosting base
- 60 g unsalted butter, room temperature — frosting body
- 180 g powdered sugar — frosting sweetness
Ingredient Substitutions
Cake flour: Replace with 100 g all-purpose flour plus 20 g cornstarch for a close approximation. All-purpose alone makes a tighter crumb, so the cornstarch lowers protein and mimics cake flour's softness. You'll see a slightly less delicate bite but the cupcakes still rise well. The matcha cupcakes works well for weeknight cooking when time is limited.
Buttermilk: Use 120 ml whole milk with 1 tbsp lemon juice, rested 5 minutes. The acid mimics buttermilk's tenderizing effect, though the flavor is a touch less tangy. Expect similar moisture but a marginally denser top. Storing leftover matcha cupcakes correctly keeps it tasting good for days.
Ceremonial matcha: Swap for 12 g culinary matcha if that's what you have. Culinary grade is more bitter and less sweet, so cut sugar by 10 g to avoid harshness. The color stays green but the aroma is grassier and stronger. For the best results with this matcha cupcakes, read through all the steps before starting.
Cream cheese: Use 200 g mascarpone for a softer, less tangy frosting. Mascarpone whips lighter and holds shape poorly in heat, so chill the piped cupcakes. The flavor turns milky rather than sharp, which some prefer with bitter tea. For another easy option, check out our recipe dietary.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Heat the oven to 180°C / 350°F and line a 12-cup muffin tin with paper liners. Sift cake flour, matcha, baking powder, and salt into a bowl to break clumps.
- Beat 115 g butter and 150 g sugar on medium speed for 3 minutes until pale and fluffy. This traps air for a light crumb.
- Add eggs one at a time on low speed, mixing 20 seconds each, then pour in vanilla. Stop when the batter looks smooth, not split.
- Alternate adding the dry mix and buttermilk in three additions, starting and ending with dry. Fold on low speed just until no streaks remain — do not overmix.
- Divide batter into liners filling each two-thirds full. Bake 18–20 minutes until tops spring back and a toothpick comes out clean.
- Cool in the tin 5 minutes, then move to a rack. Beat cold cream cheese, 60 g butter, and powdered sugar 2 minutes until thick, then pipe onto cooled cupcakes.
Pro Tips
Always sift matcha twice before mixing; lumps turn into dark green specks that taste bitter. A fine mesh strainer takes 20 seconds and fixes the most common color complaint.
Use room temperature dairy so the batter emulsifies instead of curdling. Cold eggs added to creamed butter can seize the mix and give a uneven crumb.
For a stiffer frosting that holds a swirl, chill the bowl and beaters 10 minutes first. This technique from The Kitchn keeps cream cheese from going soupy in a warm kitchen.
Rest the raw batter 5 minutes before scooping so the flour hydrates and the tops bake flat. Skipping this step often leaves a domed, cracked surface under the frosting.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Using hot water to dissolve matcha ruins the volatile notes and turns it brown. Keep the powder dry and mixed into flour so it stays bright and grassy.
Overbaking by even 3 minutes dries the crumb and amplifies bitterness. Pull the tin when a toothpick shows a few moist crumbs, not when it's bone dry.
Piping frosting onto warm cupcakes melts the fat and slides off. Wait until the centers feel room temperature to the touch before decorating.
Serving Suggestions
Pair these with a cup of sencha or barley tea to echo the green tea theme without adding sugar. The plain hot drink cleanses the palate between bites.
Top each with a single arrabbiata style candied ginger cube for a spicy contrast that cuts the dairy. A light dusting of extra matcha also sharpens the look.
For a dessert board, set them beside puttanesca style olive cookies to balance sweet and savory guests. Keep cupcakes on a cool platter so the frosting stays set.
Storage and Reheating
Unfrosted cupcakes keep in an airtight container at room temperature up to 2 days or refrigerated up to 4 days. Frosted ones should go in the fridge up to 3 days because of the cheese.
You can freeze unfrosted bakes freeze for up to 2 months wrapped in foil. Thaw at room temperature 1 hour, then frost fresh for best texture.
To serve cold frosted cupcakes warmer, leave them out 15 minutes before eating; do not microwave or the cream cheese weeps. Discard anything left out beyond 2 hours.
Recipe Variations
White Chocolate Version
Fold 40 g melted white chocolate into the batter after the eggs for a creamier sweet base. The added fat lowers the matcha edge and gives a paler crumb. Bake the same time but check the center at 18 minutes since chocolate adds moisture.
Vegan Swap
Replace eggs with 2 tbsp ground flax plus 6 tbsp water and use oat milk with 1 tbsp vinegar instead of buttermilk. Coconut oil stands in for butter to keep the crumb tender. Expect a slightly denser bite and a softer dome, but the green tea flavor holds.
Berry Topped
Press a fresh raspberry into each liner before baking so the fruit steeps into the top. The tart berry offsets the earthy powder and adds a red speck contrast. Use pinwheels style sliced strawberry if raspberries are out of season.
Double Matcha
Add 1 tsp matcha to the frosting for a two-layer tea hit and deeper green swirl. The extra powder makes the topping faintly bitter, so add 10 g more powdered sugar. This suits drinkers who want a stronger nepa style tea note in dessert.