The first time I had green tea in sweets was during our trip
to Hong Kong a few years ago. We loved the fast-paced, cafeteria-like bakeries
we found on almost every corner. During one quick stop, I picked up a green tea
cake with red bean filling, and loved it.
If you do a search for matcha green tea there is no shortage
of sweets and bakery creations on food blogs. I’m actually a bit late to the
party, but for good reason. I had a difficult time finding the powder around
here. I tried to find it when I made the Green Tea Bubble Tea last year without success.
Now I know why.
Since my first experience with green tea baked goods was in Hong
Kong, I was associating it with the wrong culture (shame on me). When Matcha Factory
contacted me to offer a sample, I learned a thing or two, most importantly that
matcha green tea is of Japanese origin.
I’d wanted to bake with it for a while so I gladly took them
up on the offer. Matcha tea is ground, shade grown, steamed tea leaves. It’s
full of antioxidants, and like most other Asian ingredients, it boasts a
variety of health benefits. If that isn’t enough, it also turns everything it
contacts into a beautiful shade of green. I definitely need more of this in my
kitchen.
When it came to bake goods, just about every idea I had for
the matcha tea had been done before, and done well. I first set out with the
idea of a tea cake. I wanted to use some of this year’s gooseberries sent from
my parents.
I posted about gooseberries last year. If you are unfamiliar
it is a small round fruit with an internal texture of a blueberry, but a skin
more like a grape. They are tart, and great for a something a little different
in baked goods.
My cakes are more like a rich, sweet, chewy cookie, and I’m
not complaining. The tart gooseberry filling turned out to be perfect for them.
Cookies or cakes, I’m sold on adding matcha tea to baked
goods. I loved some of the recipes I found on the company’s website such as the Matcha Butter and Matcha Salt. Next
up I’m going to use it in a morning shake or maybe a latte.
Matcha Tea Cookies with Gooseberry Filling
1 1/3 cups Demerara sugar
¾ cup (1 ½ sticks) unsalted butter, melted
1 egg
½ tsp almond extract
1 1/3 cup unbleached all purpose flour
½ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp salt
1 tsp matcha green tea powder
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F, and lightly grease a 9 x
13 in baking dish.
In a mixing bowl, whisk together the sugar and melted butter,
until combined. Next, whisk in the egg until incorporated and add the almond
extract. In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, salt and
matcha tea.
Add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, and stir
until all is combined. You will end up with a thick batter, kind of like a very
soft sugar cookie dough.
Press the batter/dough into the baking dish, and smooth it so
that it is evenly spread to the corners.
Bake for 18 – 20 minutes, until the edges begin to brown and
the center is set. Remove from the oven and cool completely.
Gooseberry Filling
1 ½ cups gooseberries, defrosted if frozen
2 tbsp Demerara sugar
¼ cup water
Combine all ingredients in a medium sauce pan and bring to a
boil. Once the berries have burst and it begins to thicken, remove from the
heat. Allow to cool for about 5 minutes.
Transfer to a small food processor, or you can use an
immersion blender in the pan. Blend until smooth and no skins can be found.
Transfer back to the sauce pan and continue to cook over
medium to medium-high heat until the filling becomes thick and spreadable. Set
aside to cool completely.
Use a round cookie cutter to cut the cooled matcha tea
cookies, or cut into squares. You will get about 16 (8 cookies) with a 1 ½ inch
cutter. You will get more if you choose to make squares.
To assemble, spread a small amount of the filling on one
cookie, and top with another just before serving.
Disclosure: A free Matcha Tea sample was sent to me by the Matcha Factory. I was not required to post about it and received no compensation for doing so. All thoughts and opinions are my own.






6 comments:
I'm imagining the texture and flavors of these cookies and am positively drooling! I love that you added a little almond infusion there also. Fabulous.
I love everything with matcha, your tea cookie sound good!
These sound really good!
hese look so yummy!!
I've always wanted to do some baking with matcha! These are so pretty! My market actually had gooseberries for the first time this week - I never had them before. Love how you made them into a filling! Unique flavors.
Matcha is one of my favourites! I like adding a little powder to my green smoothies. It pairs really nice with blueberries as well, so they might make a great alternative filling.
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