Brown Butter White Chocolate Matcha Cookies

It’s been such a long time since I’ve revisited this matcha cookie recipe. I first developed this recipe for matcha cookies a few years ago when I was first beginning my love affair with matcha and specifically matcha desserts. That love has since grown, so I wanted to take a chance to improve this recipe with all the knowledge I’ve gained in the past few years. I tested this recipe a few times over the past week, and made some huge adjustments that improved not only the texture but taste of this recipe.

Ingredients, Substitutions & Adjustments
I’ve added notes and tips to the ingredient list, so make sure to read through them.
- Flour – This is the main dry ingredient. The balance between this ingredient and butter are what helps create the perfect cookie texture.
- Baking soda – Baking soda helps the cookie spread. Make sure to use baking soda, not baking powder.
- Salt – Brings out the flavor of the other ingredients.
- Matcha powder – The addition of matcha powder balances out the sweetness of the sugars in this cookie. It also gives the cookie its pretty green color. My favorite matcha brand is Aiya Matcha. I used their culinary grade matcha powder for this recipe. Use cookingtherapy10 to get 10% off your purchase!
- Butter – I used browned butter for this recipe. Brown butter is when you heat butter on the stove until it turns a golden yellow color and brown specs begin to form at the bottom of the pan.
- White sugar – White sugar encourages browning and spread in the cookie.
- Brown sugar– Brown sugar adds moisture and makes the cookie more chewy.
- Vanilla extract – Adds flavor to the cookie. You can substitute vanilla extract with vanilla paste.
- Eggs – I used room temperature eggs in this cookie recipe because they are easier to incorporate.
- White chocolate chips – Any type of white chocolate should work for this recipe!

Tools you will need for these matcha cookies
- 2 baking sheets – You will need 2 baking sheets so your cookie dough can be placed 2 inches apart. Be careful not to crowd the baking sheet.
- 2 mixing bowls – One is for dry ingredients, and one is for wet ingredients.
- Parchment paper – Parchment paper makes it easier to clean your baking sheets after you’re done baking, and it prevents your cookie from sticking to the baking sheets.
- 1 3 tablespoon ice cream scoop – An ice cream scoop makes scooping cookie dough so much easier. I would highly recommend it.

Making my matcha cookies
These matcha cookies take a little bit of patience and time, but they are well worth it. Then brown your butter. Use a light colored pan to heat your butter over medium heat until it turns a golden yellow color. Pour it into a heat proof bowl and set aside. Next step is to combine your dry ingredients. Combine flour, baking soda, salt, and matcha powder into a medium-sized bowl. Make sure to sift your matcha powder to prevent clumping. Set aside.
Combine your brown butter, brown sugar, and white sugar into a large bowl. Add in your vanilla extract and eggs. Whisk until it is a light and creamy texture (~1 minute). Finally combine your wet and dry ingredients and stir with a spatula until a green dough forms. Add in your white chocolate chips and combine.
Rest your dough for 1 hour in the fridge to allow the liquid to rehydrate the dough. (If you want flatter cookies, rest the dough for less time) This will allow your cookies to bake more evenly. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. After resting, use a 3 tablespoon ice cream scoop to scoop cookie dough onto your baking sheets. Bake for 10-12 minutes. You are looking for the bottoms to be a light brown color. Once out of the oven, cool for 10 minutes before transferring onto a cooling rack. Cool the cookies for another 15 minutes before serving. Cooling the cookies will help the cookies hold its shape.

Tips for making the best matcha cookies
Make sure the brown butter is not too hot
Cool down the butter before combining with the rest of your wet ingredients, so the heat from the butter doesn’t cook the eggs. Additionally, butter that’s too hot will create a greasier cookie.
Why do I use brown butter?
Brown butter creates a cookie with a crispy outside and a chewy center. It also adds an extra nutty flavor to the cookies.
Which pan should you use to brown butter?
Make sure to brown your butter in a light coloured pan so you can see the color of the butter as it browns. This helps to prevent you from burning the butter.
Why do you need to sift the matcha powder?
Sifting the matcha powder prevents clumps from forming and results in a more even green color.
How to get the perfect thin, chewy texture
Whisk your wet ingredients until you get a light and creamy mixture. This is the key to getting crispy and chewy cookie. If you are looking for a crispier texture, see my crispy matcha cookie recipe.
Rest the dough in the fridge for at least 30 minutes
Resting the dough allows the liquid to distribute throughout and ensures the cookie bakes more evenly. It also helps to cool down the dough, so your butter melts at a slower rate. The faster your butter melts, the more your cookies spread in the oven. If you want a really chunky cookie, add more flour. If you like a thinner cookie, rest it for a shorter amount of time.
Use an ice cream scoop to scoop the dough
The key to getting consistent round cookies is an ice cream scoop. It is the cleanest, most efficient way to form the cookies.
Use an oven thermometer
The other key to getting perfect cookies is the correct temperature. The other reason my cookies used to burn is that my oven is 50 degrees higher than what it says on the oven dial. That’s why getting an oven thermometer was a life changer. It’s a $7 well worth it.
How do you store cookie dough?
Freeze cookie dough for safe storage and pull out in case of cookie emergencies. You don’t need to thaw them before baking. Simply put them on a baking sheet and throw them in the oven.
How do you store cookies?
Cookies can be stored at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 3 days. They can be stored up to 7 days in the fridge and 2 months in the freezer. A good hack for storing soft cookies like these is add a piece of white bread to the container. The moisture from the bread helps the cookie keep its texture.

Did you make my matcha cookies?
If you made this dish, I would love to see!
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Get the Recipe:
Brown Butter White Chocolate Matcha Cookies
Ingredients
- 2 cups + 2 tbsp all purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking soda
- ½ tsp salt
- 2 tbsp matcha powder, see note 3
- 1 cup unsalted butter
- ½ cup granulated sugar
- 1 cup light brown sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 2 eggs, room temperature
- 1 cup white chocolate chips
Equipment
Instructions
- Brown your butter. Heat your butter over medium heat until it turns a golden yellow color. Pour butter in a heat proof bowl to cool. As the butter cools, it will get darker in color.
- Combine flour, baking soda, salt, and matcha powder in a medium size mixing bowl. Mix well and set aside.
- Next add in white sugar and brown sugar to your butter. Mix to combine. Once well combined, add in your eggs and vanilla. Whisk together. Whisk until you get a light and creamy texture (~1 minute). This is the key to getting a crisp and chewy cookie.
- Once the wet ingredients are well mixed, slowly add in the dry ingredients from step 3. Combine with a spatula until a green dough forms.
- Add in the white chocolate chips and mix until they are well incorporated.
- Let the dough rest in the fridge for 1 hour.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
- Cover 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. Use a 3 tablespoon (1.5 oz) ice cream scoop to scoop cookie dough onto baking sheets. Cookies should be 2-3 inches apart.
- Bake for 10-12 minutes.
- Let cookies cool for 10 minutes before putting them on a cooling rack.
- Cool cookies for another 15 minutes before serving.
Notes
- Rest your dough in the fridge for at least 1 hour. Cookies spread more when the fat melts faster. Cooling down the dough will prevent the fat (ie. butter) from melting too fast, creating a chunkier cookie. The flavor also improves as it rests. If you like a thinner cookie, rest it at room temperature or in the fridge for less time.
- Some people have mentioned that the cookies don’t have enough matcha in them, and I think the biggest culprit for that is the quality of your matcha. I use Aiya culinary grade matcha which holds its flavor and color really well in the oven.
- Update 10/20/24
- I have updated the metric units in response to comments that they were not accurate.
- I have also increased the matcha quantity from 1 tbsp to 2 tbsp to balance out the sugar in the recipe and improve the green color. Feel free to still use 1 tbsp if you want a lighter matcha taste.
- Update 3/15/23
- Many people have mentioned they’ve had issues with spreading. A cookie spreads because the butter is melting too fast and/or the balance of wet to dry ingredients. Because of this issue, I added an additional 2 tablespoons of all purpose flour to the recipe and increased the resting time in the fridge to 1 hour to reduce the spreading. If you want a flatter cookie, don’t add the additional 2 tablespoons and rest for less time.
- Additionally, I have tested many cookie recipes since developing this one and have found that the texture and flavor of cookies in general is better if you rest the dough for 24 hours. This will further reduce the spreading. This dough can rest in the fridge for up to 72 hours.
MANY people commented on how great this cookie was in my holiday cookies box this year. The extra work ans high quality matcha really are worth it. I only used 1 tablespoon and it was already super “matcha-y”. Definitely chill dough overnight, no spreading issues.
If you make this, increase the matcha and decrease the sugar. Maybe try doubling the matcha and half the sugar, but I’m not sure on the exact change.
I found that sugar was the main flavour and matcha was a background taste.
Greate recipe still 🙂
Thanks for trying the recipe and sharing your experience!
A bit too sweet for me. I followed the recipe with the additional edits and the 2 TBS of Matcha powder. I let the dough chill for around two hours and used sifted ceremonial grade Matcha powder. The dough tasted perfect but once baked it was too heavy- the majority of the cookie taste is butter, sugar, and white chocolate
Thanks for trying the recipe!
Absolutely amazing, followed the recipe to a T! Definitely saving this to make in the future!
Omg thank you! I’m so glad you liked them!
Hello Becca! I really want to make these for my teacher tomorrow, but I don’t know how it’s gonna turn out. Maybe some tips for a beginner? Thank you so much!
I’m also scared that my local store doesn’t have the same matcha and I also don’t have 24 hours to let the dough sit. Do you have any matcha powder recommendations other than the one you linked and is it fine if I don’t have the 24 hrs for the dough?
Thank you again!
Hi Kiki! Don’t worry! You can use whichever matcha powder you can find, but I’ve seen the one I recommend at Whole Foods if you have one in your area. You can also let the dough settle for an hour!
Thank you so much!
Hello Becca! I really want to make these for my teacher tomorrow, but I don’t know how it’s gonna turn out. Maybe some tips for a beginner? Thank you so much!
Honestly I have tried making normal choc-chip cookies, or cookie trays etc, but this is by farrrr the best cookie recipe if you want that soft but crispy cookies, that’s not too thin or thick, sweet or dull. Thanks so much!!
Oh wow thank you so much! I’m so excited you like them!
I want to add these to my holiday cookie menu. How long will these last at room temperature after they are baked.
They will last up to 3 days at room temperature in an airtight container. Let me know how it goes!
So good!! I sprinkled a tiny bit of sea salt on top to balance the sweetness. The whole family love it, even some who never tried Matcha before.
I love that hit of sea salt on top. Thank you so much for making them!
Loved the recipe! However, a bit sweet for my taste. Should I reduce the brown or granulated sugar the next time I bake this?
Yes if you would like it less sweet! That or add a little more matcha since it has a bitter flavor.
Hello! I’ve made your recipe before and got raving reviews! I want to try making these cookies in a dinosaur shaped cakelet pan. How you suggest I go about doing that? Each cakelet cavity is 1.4 in in depth and holds about 1/3 cup. Thanks for your help!
That sounds amazing! I am not sure how long it should bake to be honest. I would guess 20-25 minutes? I would look for browning on the edges as a visual sign it’s done.
Hello. So I made this today but with a few adjustments and it didn’t turn out as I expected. I followed the recipie but I used 1/2 of the conversion . And instead for the measurements for both sugars and I lowered it to 1/3 cup of both brown and white sugar. I also used salted butter instead of unsalted cause I didn’t have any and I opted out of using the salt. I originally baked it @ 350° for 10’minutes but when I took it out it came out super greasy and wet on the bottom of the cookies so I baked it for an additional 3 minutes and then let it cool to room temp and it turned out okay. But when I tasted it I didn’t taste the matcha mostly butter. I only put 1 tbsp of matcha maybe that’s why ? I had some leftover dough and I added 1tbsp of flour and 1 more tbsp of matcha and mixed that into my dough ? Do you think this will help with the wetness of the overall cookie and the matcha taste ?
The cookies will be softer when they come out of the oven. When it cools down, it will be more solid. You can add more matcha powder to improve the matcha flavor, and if you do prefer a chunkier cookie, I would add more flour.
Last year, I made several “try-and-error” batches due to the composition of available ingredients and oven behaviour (…flour US Europe, Convection/fan assisted classic “top-botton heat”).
Today I just I grabbed all my notes I made for your recipe, and hey: it turned out the way wanted 🙂 Chunky, inside soft, and not brown (was my main issue, especially with fan assisted heating). – I swapped baking soda with baking powder (I just don’t like this ‘soda’ taste’), 3/4 of chocolate with macadamia nuts (enough sugary) and used 160C/325 Fahrenheit with classic heating.
Thanks for sharing your recipe, Becca! I also really appreciate that you adjust and publish the ‘improvements’ of the recipe based on user’s feedbacks, which you received. It really helps the what and why (also to crosscheck my own adjustments). Until now I’ve rarely seen that on the other food blogs.
Thank you so much for the feedback and for making the recipe! It really does help improve my recipes and makes them better for everyone!
so good! consistently scrumptious, never tasted cookies this good.
Amazing! Thank you for making the recipe!
butter/flour ratio way off, cookies immediately spread in the oven, I even refrigerated the dough for longer. disappointed
I have made this recipe a few times , the cookies are delicious ! brown butter is a game changer awesome flavour with the matcha.
thank you for sharing
Hi Ana. I’m so excited that these cookies have become apart of your cookie rotation! Thank you so much for making it!
Hi, it’s my first time making cookies myself and this is very beginner friendly and yummy! However, I highly recommend decreased sugar. Thanks for the recipe, I enjoyed it a lot
Amazing! I’m so glad you enjoyed the recipe!
Was a bit too sweet so I would recommend reducing the sugar a little especially because with white chocolate in it will already be sweet enough!
Thanks for sharing your experience!
How many cookies can you make with this recipe?
16 cookies. Let me know if you try the recipe and how it turns out!
Crazy good – the tips are so so helpful
Amazing! I’m so glad you found the tips helpful!
These were so delicious! I didn’t have any white chocolate on hand so after the cookies had baked and cooled I dipped half the cookie in dark chocolate and sprinkled with flaky sea salt – soooooo good!
Yum! I love that idea!
The brown butter makes it taste like a weed cookie with out the weed. I wouldn’t recommend unless you like the taste of weed cookies with out the weed.
Hi Vanessa. I’m sorry about the taste! Is it possible the butter was slightly burnt?
I followed the recipe and put the cookies in the fridge for 1h (+an extra 20 mins) and found spreading was a real issue. I think there is just too much butter in this recipe-my other cookie recipes which make the same amount of cookies don’t have nearly as much (125g). Nevertheless, the taste is great. I would just adapt it to use less butter.
Hi Sarah. Thanks for sharing your experience with the recipe!
How would I adjust the receipt if I wanted it to be less sweet?
You can either add more matcha which is bitter or you can reduce the brown sugar. You can also opt to use all light brown sugar which is less sweet than dark brown sugar.
If I reduce the sugar, should I also reduce the butter? And do u happen to know by how much? Like if I were to use 3/4th of the amount of sugar listed, then how much butter should I add?
I have made these cookies at least 5 times and they turn out DELICIOUS every time!! Just make sure you use decent matcha because the one time I used poor quality/incorrect matcha powder (the Rishi brand), the cookies turned out very bland. My favorite reasonably priced one to use is the Mighty Leaf turmeric spiced matcha!
Wow thank you for continuing to make this! I will also echo your experience with high quality matcha powder. It does make a difference!
These cookies are really good and every time I make them I get told that these are the best cookies they’ve had! The recipe is also easy to follow and it’s pretty simple. However I reduced the sugar to only 1cup because the white chocolate chips are already sweet so it kinda balances. But overall this is a really good recipe!
I’m so glad you like and continue to make this recipe! That’s so exciting for me! Thank you for making it and sharing your experience!
Delicioussss
Thank you! I’m glad you enjoyed it!
This is the first time I followed a recipe to the T! Usually I add my own flair but something told me, “follow this recipe” now I know it was a whisper from the Gods. The first cookie and the moans and groans ensued. The 2nd cookie I was prepared. I grabbed a mug of cold milk, a blanket, and a spot on the couch. To the ones commenting the cookie is raw or the INSANE comment mentioning baking for 15 more mins (blasphemous) I have to guess you don’t bake much. Cookies finish cooking as you let them cool. I know shocker. I’m in love with this recipe and I can not think of a way to make it any better. Amazing and I’m so thankful. My inner child is fulfilled today
Wow thank you so much for setting the scene and telling us how you experienced these cookies! I love it. I’m so glad you love this recipe!
Good base recipe! Made these cookies twice, the first time kept everything as is and they turned out a bit flatter and too sweet, but still nice and chewy.
Second time I used less sugar – 1/2 cup brown sugar, 1/4 cup white sugar, and 1/4 cup matcha latte mix (which is mostly sugar). I also didn’t brown my butter that much since I didn’t want it to overpower the matcha and swapped the choc chips for a bar that I roughly chopped. Kept the flour and chill time exactly the same and they turned out great! People loved them.
Thank you for making the recipe and sharing your adjustments!
If I chill the dough already balled up in the fridge for a few days then do I need to let it go back to room temperature before putting in the oven? Because the ball dough feel pretth hard at right out of the fridge
I would let it sit at room temperature for a couple minutes. It’s a tricky balance. The dough should be cold, but not hard as a rock.
I made these according to metric measurements (I switched out half the chips with macadamia nuts though), and would recommend reducing the total sugar by about 1/4 cup, and remove 1-2 tbsp of butter. It was INCREDIBLY sweet and almost greasy feeling, felt like the wet/dry ratio was off. I rested the dough for 2 hours. It wasn’t unpalatable, but far too sweet.
Hi Connie. Thanks for sharing your experience!
I thought these were delightful. I followed all instructions precisely. When it came to refrigerating the dough, I followed the suggestion to chill for 24 hours. (That usually works best for most all my cookies)
Before baking, I sprinkled with a bit of raw sugar, and after baking, while still warm, I sifted a smidge of matcha order on top. (Birthday cookies)
Thank you
Ohh! I love the sprinkling of raw sugar. Adds an extra crunch! Thank you for trying the recipe!
Thank you for the good, easy, and delicious recipe. I have just had the first taste of them and will definitely keep a batch frozen. Highly recommended.
Hi Polina. Thank you so much for making this recipe! I’m so excited you like them!
Made these today and let them rest for almost 20 hours! Came out sooo sweet and chewy, perhaps i would lessen the amount of sugar next time. They tasted great, but I think it was because of the matcha powder I used that the matcha taste didn’t come out at all. is it possible to substitute some flour for the matcha powder or not?
You can add more of the matcha powder…1 tbsp more without affecting the structure of the cookie.
I silghtly changed the recipe. I used ground vanilla bean since I had no extract and heated it with the butter after slowly browning it right before pouring the mix in a bowl, used white flour instead of all-purpose and of course sieved all the dry ingredients, actually twice. I was baking for a chef who would’ve lectured me for an hour if I wouldn’t have sieved them and it was already enough of a risk to use that recipe, I never even heard of browned butter before. Either way, he instantly started a rant about how he could use those for desser creations, it was the first time he didn’t have a single suggestion for a change in anything I baked so far so that’s a big compliment from his side. I still do see potential for improvement in my result, personally I’m unhappy about my choice of matcha powder, but the recipe itself is really great, I enjoy it a lot too!
I’m so glad you enjoyed it! I’m glad the chef didn’t have anything to say. I say that’s a win!
I have always followed this recipe whenever my daughter craves for matcha cookies, but every time, I had to extend the baking time up to 15 mins because I feel like the inside is still raw. It’s chewy (though I love this texture) but I could tell it is not yet fully cooked. Can you give me an advice how to spot if the cookie is raw or cooked? Aside from the toothpick method.
Thanks for using this recipe! If you feel like the center is too raw for you, you can add another tablespoon of flour. To spot if the center is undercooked, I usually look at the color. It’s a darker green when it is undercooked.
Very yummy, perfect texture
I’m so glad you enjoyed these!!
Brown butter is a game changer!!! I was scared that I was going to burn it, my saucepan was wayyy too small and it bubbled up such that I couldn’t see anything except pale yellow bubbles. Definitely use a pan that’s wider than it is tall, with a light coloured bottom.
For me they’re a bit too sweet, I’ll defs try the recipe again but maybe sub out some sugar for a bit more matcha powder. The cookies are amazing when they’re fresh out of the oven and warm, though if you want to taste the matcha the flavour really comes out once they cool down. On the other hand, my brother said they were the best cookies he’d ever had 🙂
Thanks for the recipe!
Thank you for making the recipe! So glad you and your brother enjoyed them!
Made these cookies last night. Incredibly sweet to the point where the matcha flavour is barely there. They also baked very thin.
After adding some extra flour to my remaining dough the cookies didn’t flatten and were the sweetness I liked, I could also taste the matcha flavour (which is delicious). I followed the metric measurements for the recipe, maybe this was my issue?
If you decide to make these again, you could reduce the sugar or add more flour like you did to your remaining dough.
Made these to take to work, they are very good. I let the butter brown a little too much so the cookies ended up being a little more brownish instead of greenish like the picture, but the taste was great! (also use good white chocolate and good matcha)
Thanks for the recipe and the feedback about the white chocolate and matcha! I cannot echo that more! Better quality ingredients (if you can afford them because things are expensive!) do make a huge difference!
Looking forward to try it. 1 cup unsalted butter in grams, please?
I’m worried if it’s going to be too sweet. I’ve noticed you adjusted the recipe taking into considerations the comments. I don’t intend to add the white chocolate, I think it steals the flavor of the matcha cookies. Considering it, ½ cup granulated sugar and 1 cup light brown sugar will make a very sweet cookie? Thanks in advance, your site is beautiful.
PD- It would be nice to have the recipe also in grams, not only in cups/spoons.
227 grams of unsalted butter is equal to 1 cup. If you look above the ingredients, you can change the measurements into metric units. Let me know how it goes!
I love these cookies so much!! Most compliments received !! Thank you for this delicious recipe <3
I’m so glad you enjoyed them! Thank you so much for trying the recipe!
How far in advance can we make and refrigerate the dough before baking?
72 hours
Making it for the second time right now!! Super good and got many compliments last time I made it, even from people that hate matcha! Will definitely be making this any time I have a large crowd <3
I love hearing that! I’m so glad it’s part of your collection of entertaining recipes 😊
Best recipe of matcha cookies I found yet ! The explanation and the recommandations you have in the beginning are super helpful for beginners at cooking just like me haha.
The cookies where super tasteful and delicious. I found my ice cream scoop at Canadian Tire and it worked well. I used a normal oven as well.
Thank you so much for this recipe, its going in my recipe book !
Makes me excited to hear! I’m so glad this recipe has a place in your recipe book! It’s an honor!
The recipe itself was good. Everyone liked how it came out taste wise, but idk why my cookie spread so thin that you can see the shape of the white chocolate chips. Any suggestions?
That means the batter was too wet so I would add another tablespoon of flour. Let me know if you try it.
My son rates this an 11/10! great snack for the
What! I love that! Thank you for making it!
This is my first time baking a matcha cookie and I followed this recipe and I promise it is delicious, crispy outside and chewy inside and I added 2 tsp of matcha powder to make the matcha really tasty,I made it perfect for me..thank you for the recipe 🥰🍪
I love the adjustment you made to make it perfect for you! That’s what baking is about imo! Thank you for making the recipe!
Can I interchange the flour to gluten free? If so do I have to change anything else?
Yes, if the gluten free flour is a 1:1 substitute for all purpose flour. It should say it on the label.
Very good recipe! Texture of the cookies is amazing. One thing though, i found it too sweet so maybe i have to reduce the sugar next time, but that’s just a preference.
Thanks for making the recipe! I’m so glad you enjoyed it! Definitely feel free to reduce the sugar! Note that it will change the texture of the cookie however. Alternatively, you could add more matcha which has a bitter flavor to balance out the sweetness.
Made the cookies tonight and they’re great!! The taste is lovely, however the matcha is pretty vague. Also it’s very fatty, the butter content is very high and if you’re not a super sweet tooth it might even be too sweet for you! Thank you for this amazing recipe!!
Thank you for making it and sharing your experience! If the matcha flavor isn’t enough, feel free to add more matcha!
Love them
I’m so glad you love them!
this is the best cookie recipe i´ve ever tried. they came out perfect!
Thank you for the kind words! I’m so glad they came out perfectly!