This Matcha Chiffon Cake is spongy, moist, and light as a cloud. Its lightly sweet flavor balances perfectly with earthy and savory notes from Japanese green tea powder. With its soft green matcha color, you’ll love this popular Japanese cake as a light afternoon snack.
Making chiffon cake was one of my dreams since I started baking regularly last year. I always thought it was going to be difficult to make a chiffon cake. However, after some lengthy experiments with my Castella recipe, this Matcha Chiffon Cake (抹茶シフォンケーキ) was a lot easier than I expected.
If you are new to chiffon cake, it is a very light sponge cake made with vegetable oil, eggs, sugar, flour, and whatever flavor you want to add. You beat the egg whites and fold them into the oil-based cake batter so that the cake will get a fluffy texture.
Tips on Making Matcha Chiffon Cake
1. Use the correct chiffon cake pan.
The best types are the aluminum ones with a removable base (Do not use non-stick bakeware for chiffon cake – it will not work).
I bought 17-cm and 20-cm aluminum chiffon cake pans while I was in Japan because I wanted to follow a Japanese chiffon cake recipe. If you are interested in the same pan and know someone in Japan who can receive the package for you, you can purchase one from Rakuten (かっぱ橋浅井商店つなぎ目のない17cmシフォンケーキ型). They are great!
Or, you can order this 17-cm aluminum chiffon cake pan online from Nihon Ichiban which ships internationally.
If you have a different size chiffon cake pan, then check the conversion of the ingredients in this post.
2. Do not grease the mold.
The cake needs to cling to the sides and center of the pan for support as it rises or it will collapse.
3. Use good matcha.
You want to be able to taste the subtle matcha flavor, so I recommend using good quality matcha (green tea powder). When it comes to chiffon cakes, I like them to be simple. No sweet frosting necessary. A good reason to enjoy more than 1 slice.
You only use 3 tablespoons of oil for this recipe, so you can expect a very light cake. If no one was looking, I would probably eat the entire 17 cm (about 7 inches) cake all by myself!
If you follow the recipe closely, you can expect a fluffy, light, and moist Matcha Chiffon Cake. It turned out just like the chiffon cake that I have tried in Japan and dreamed of making myself.
If you are a fan of not-so-sweet desserts, this is for you. Knowing how easy it is to make chiffon cakes now, I am going to try making other flavors soon. What would be your favorite flavor?
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Matcha Chiffon Cake
Video
Ingredients
- 3 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (yolks and whites separated)
- 85 g sugar (½ cup minus 1 Tbsp; divided into thirds)
- 40 ml neutral oil (3 Tbsp minus 1 tsp)
- ¼ cup water
- 75 g cake flour (⅔ cup minus 2 tsp; weigh your flour or use the “fluff and sprinkle“ method and level it off; you can make Homemade Cake Flour)
- 1 heaping Tbsp matcha (green tea powder) (1 level Tbsp matcha weighs 6 g)
- 1 tsp baking powder
Instructions
- Before You Start: I highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for this recipe. Click on the “Metric“ button at the top of the recipe to convert the ingredient measurements to metric. If you‘re using a cup measurement, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour with a spoon, sprinkle the flour into your measuring cup, and level it off. Otherwise, you may scoop more flour than you need.
- Gather all the ingredients. Separate the egg yolks and egg whites from 3 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell). Keep the eggs whites in a stand mixer bowl; refrigerate or freeze the bowl and egg whites for 15 minutes until cold. (It‘s okay if the egg whites are partially frozen). Tip: In Japan, we chill the egg whites to make smooth, fine-textured meringue and do not use cream of tartar.
- Preheat the oven to 340ºF (170ºC). For a convection oven, reduce the cooking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC). You will need 1 17-cm (7-inch) chiffon cake pan. If you have a different size pan, read this post to adjust the ingredient measurements. Make sure you use an aluminum pan with a removable base (read my blog post for more details). Please see my Notes at the end of this recipe for additional details on ingredients, equipment, and techniques.
To Mix the Batter
- Start mixing the batter. In a large bowl, beat the egg yolks and one-third of the 85 g sugar with a hand whisk. Whisk vigorously until it‘s a creamy pale yellow color. Then, add 40 ml neutral oil and ¼ cup water and beat with a whisk to combine.
- To a flour sifter or fine-mesh sieve, add 75 g cake flour, 1 heaping Tbsp matcha (green tea powder), and 1 tsp baking powder. Sift one-third of this flour mixture into the egg yolk mixture. Whisk by hand to incorporate the dry ingredients well. Check that there are no lumps in the batter, then sift another one-third of the flour mixture into the bowl. Mix to incorporate. Then, sift in the rest of the flour mixture and whisk until just combined; do not overmix. Make sure there are no lumps in the batter. Set aside while you beat the meringue.
To Make the Meringue
- Take out the bowl of egg whites from the refrigerator or freezer. Set the bowl on the stand mixer with a whisk attachment (I used the KitchenAid Professional Series). Start whipping the egg whites on medium-low speed (Speed 4) until the egg whites are bubbly, opaque, and foamy.
- Add another one-third of the sugar and continue whisking for 30 seconds. Then, increase the mixer speed to high (Speed 10) and gradually add the remaining sugar in small increments. Beat vigorously until stiff peaks form (see the next step for how to check). It takes about 2 minutes of beating at high speed to reach stiff peaks. Tip: I usually pause beating when the egg whites are almost done. Take off the whisk attachment from the mixer and use it to hand-mix the looser egg whites near the bowl's edge into the stiffer whites near the center until it‘s all homogeneous in texture. Then, put the whisk back on and continue beating.
- To check for stiff peaks, pull up your whisk. The meringue in the bowl or on the whisk should be firm enough to hold a peak, pointing straight up (or maybe folding over a little bit just at the very tips). By this time, the meringue should have a glossy texture, too. Tip: If you overbeat the meringue, it will become very stiff and grainy and won‘t incorporate into the batter at all.
To Fold In the Meringue
- Using a spatula or hand whisk, add one-third of the meringue into the batter. Mix well by hand until it‘s homogeneous.
- Gently fold in the rest of the meringue in 2 or 3 increments. Take care not to deflate the air bubbles in the meringue and batter as you fold. Once it‘s well combined and homogeneous, fold the batter one last time and scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl to make sure there is no matcha accumulation. The final batter should fall in ribbons when you lift the spatula or whisk.
To Bake
- Prepare 1 ungreased 17-cm (7-inch) chiffon cake pan. From 6–8 inches high, pour the batter into the pan at just one spot to prevent air pockets from forming. While holding the removable base in place, gently tap the pan a few times on the work surface to release any air pockets in the batter. Run a wooden skewer through the batter to release any remaining air pockets.
- Put the cake pan on the middle rack of the preheated oven. Bake at 340ºF (170ºC) for 30 minutes. To check if it‘s finished baking, insert a toothpick or wooden skewer into the middle of the cake. If it comes out clean and the top of the cake springs back when gently pressed, it‘s done. Tip: If the top of the cake gets dark too quickly, cover the top loosely with aluminum foil to prevent burning. (The cake may be too close to the heat source.)
- Remove the cake pan from the oven and gently drop the pan onto the work surface to shock the cake. This stops the cake from shrinking. To cool the cake, prepare a tall, heavy bottle with a long neck, such as a glass wine bottle. Invert the center tube of the cake pan onto the bottle‘s neck and let the cake cool completely in its pan. Cooling the cake upside down helps it stretch downward and maintain its loft.
- Once the cake is completely cool, run a long offset spatula around the outer edge of the pan and a small offset spatula around the inner tube. Gently take out the removable base and cake from the outer pan. Then, run the offset spatula along the bottom of the cake to release it from the base. Tip: I used to use a knife for this step, but the tip of the knife tends to poke the cake while moving around, so I now recommend using offset spatulas.
- Invert the cake with the removable base onto a plate or cake stand. The cake will slide off the inner tube. Chiffon cake is served “upside down” with the flat bottom on top.
To Serve
- I serve the Matcha Chiffon Cake as is, but you may dust the top with confectioners‘ sugar, if you‘d like (optional). Slice and enjoy.
To Store
- I strongly recommend consuming the cake sooner for the best freshness. However, you can keep the cake covered on a plate or stand at room temperature in a cooler place for 1–2 days. To keep it longer, wrap individual slices in plastic wrap or put in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for 3 days or in the freezer for 2 weeks.
Notes
- Make sure your beaters and mixing bowl are clean and dry. A speck of oil or egg yolk on either one can minimize the volume of the beaten egg whites.
- Avoid plastic bowls, as even clean ones may hold oily residue that can affect the beaten quality of the egg whites.
- Use a bowl that’s wide enough to keep the beaters from being buried in the egg whites.
- Do not overbeat or underbeat the egg whites or your cake may fall. Egg whites should have a stiff peak, pointing straight up (or maybe a little bit folding over just at the very tips).
Hi B.Chan! I’m so happy this recipe worked out for you! The texture is really perfect – I made many times and every time the texture comes out perfectly. 🙂 No, chiffon cake is not from Japan, but we’re crazy about it. 🙂
Dear Nami, I tried this recipe into cupcakes liners but unfortunately they just collapsed in the middle. Do you have any suggestion?
Thank you for share your lovely recipes.
Hi Karla! I’m not an expert in baking but there are two things you need to think about to make chiffon cake.
1) The batter needs to be able to climb up the sides of the pan. That’s why we don’t grease the pan. Is it possible to use the muffin pan instead? Non stick material is better for chiffon cake.
2) The upside-down cooling method is necessary to prevent the cake from falling. How did you make the cupcakes upside down? As I mentioned in 1, maybe muffin pan might work?
Hope this helps. 🙂
Thanks for your reply, Nami! I´ll try muffin pan, as you suggest. And I´m sorry, but I didn´t follow this important step of cooling them upside down… They didn´t have that delicious crack on top as yours, but they were round on top. After a couple of minutes they crashed, rsrs… Thank you again!!
Hi Karla! Please don’t be sorry. 🙂 It’s a good sign that the cake did rise. Next time try to make it upside down so that you can prevent from falling. The material of cake pan (chiffon cake pan) is also important because it can’t be slippery (which is why we do not grease). Good luck! 🙂
Hello Nami,
Thanks for sharing this recipe. I have tried to make it but i substituted matcha with cocoa powder, and they are just as tasty. The only problem is…. I seem to always have too much dry ingredients left ( i try to put them into the egg yolk mix a little at a time), and before I could finish pouring all the dry ingredients, the egg yolk mixture is already way too thick. does the amount of flour actually matters to how it turns out?
Thanks Nami. i’d like to try it with earl grey tomorrow 🙂
Hi Wita! Cocoa powder and matcha powder is a bit different in terms of weight. My guess is that matcha powder is lighter than cocoa, so you need more wet ingredients in order to include more cocoa powder. I haven’t made a cocoa version so I’m not sure how much you would need to get the perfect texture. Yes, it matters for the final result to have the right amount of ingredients. 🙂
This is an excellent recipe Nami! I can’t believe I made a chiffon cake successfully at the first time. And I have made it a second time just to prove that it was not by sheer luck 🙂
My nephews have requested a chocolate version. Should I just replace the matcha powder with the same amount of cocoa powder? Thanks for making me a happy baker 🙂
Hi Alana! Yay! It’s actually very simple to make, right? Only part we need to pay attention is to make meringue. I haven’t made chocolate chiffon cake before. But I’d include chocolate besides cocoa powder to make it more rich taste (otherwise, I think it will be light). I haven’t tested it yet so it’s hard to say the amount. You might want to look for chocolate chiffon cake recipes and compare this recipe then maybe test it out… Sorry I can’t help much. 🙁
GREAT MAKING THIS FOR SCHOOL!!!!
Hope you enjoy it! 🙂
Hi Nami, I have come to “eat” your lovely chiffon cake, looks so soft and fluffy, am going to pin this for future reference:) Love the video!
Thank you for pinning Jeannie! 🙂
Hi Nami, I have a question regarding the amount of sugar that you list in the recipe, it seems like 75 g (3 oz, or 2/3 cup and take away 1 tsp.) sugar doesn’t make sense to me. I weighted with 2/3 cup gave a 144 g or 5 oz of sugar not 75 g or 3 oz like you stated it… anyway, I baked the cake… it turned out great and waaayyyy too sweet for our taste… please confirm if I am wrong or not… hope to make it again with your help. Thanks!!!
Frances, thank you so much for your comment. I know this cake is NOT so sweet, so I knew something was wrong. I just checked my notebook and it says 85 g (3 oz, 1/2 cup – 1 Tbsp.)!! SO sorry!!! I think I got messed up with the flour amount (75 g and 2/3 cup… from there). My note is correct because I always use my note to make this recipe. Thank you so much for spotting the error. Did you add 144 gram? >_< Ahhh! 85 g should be perfect. I'm very sorry Frances!
Hi Nami, I am loving your recipes. Just wondering if I can reduce the sugar for the egg whites? and how far can I reduce it too..
Hi Siu! Thank you! Hmm I don’t recommend it, but if you decide to do, please adjust to reduce slowly and see the result?
Nami,
What exactly is cake flour? Over here in Australia we have Plain Flour and Self Rising Flour. I am going to make your cake tomorrow so I would like to double check. Thank you 🙂
Hi Amelia!
Cake flour is a low gluten flour while self-rising flour is just all-purpose flour with baking powder (leavener) already mixed in the flour.
You can make cake flour too. To make 1 cup cake flour, put 2 Tbsp. cornstarch in an empty 1-cup measure. Then add all-purpose flour till the top. Sift the mixture 2-3 times to evenly distribute the cornstarch.
Hope that helps, and that you like the chiffon cake! 🙂
Thank you!
I did end up making the cake but it turned out more of a sponge with subtle green colouring than the nice green moist cake you made. No idea what went wrong, but I have pictures.
Here it is: http://imgur.com/BGBtl3L
Hi Amelia! Thank you for sharing the picture! Besides the size difference of our cake pans, it’s actually hard to see the texture from the photo (as it looks good!). Do you think you could improve meringue? To be more fluffy? It adds more air into the cake which helps cake texture to be fluffier than dense texture. Hope that helps. 🙂
This looks super tasty! Matcha is my favourite in everything 🙂
I like the way it used oil instead of butter too, its much easier to mix
Hi Lava! Thank you so much! Me too, I love everything with matcha! And it’s lighter because of a little bit of oil. 🙂
Thanks Nami for this simple, quick and easy Green Tea Chiffon cake. I love this cake so much. Look forward for more chiffon cake recipe.
Thank you so much Vicky! I’ll work on other recipes as well. Thanks so much for your feedback! 🙂
Hi Nami,
Thanks for sharing this recipe. I’m excited to try it. Need a few clarifications :-
1. The egg yolks look big. Can I know the weight of one egg? The eggs I have here weight about 60 – 65gm per piece. I think that’s very small??
2. Can I substitute green tea powder with Milo powder or chocolate powder? What should I take note when choosing other substitutes?
3. Can I bake this in a cup because my chiffon cake tray is not as tall ?
Thanks and hear from you soon! 🙂
Rgds,
Felicia
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Hi Felicia! Please find my answers below.
1. I’ve never majored eggs in gram (sorry!). According to Wiki (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_egg_sizes), large egg is 57 gram. And according to this site (http://www.pastryscoop.com/category/look-it-up/eggs/), the large egg is 55 gram.
2. I think it will work as long as the weight is same. Volume can be different.
3. Hmm.. good question. I think as long as the cup is not big, it should work. If it’s large, it takes more time to cook in the middle, but as long as it’s decent size… but can you flip upside down after being baked? Also I recommend aluminum texture or paper for the baking pan to get the best result.
Hope that helps. 🙂
Hi Hideko! Thank you so much. Me too. I love matcha and azuki in sweets. 🙂
Matcha chiffon cake? Yes!! Do you think a black sesame chiffon cake is possible? That would be my second choice for a chiffon cake. Yum!
Thank you Donna! I put that down in my list. 🙂
I am not sure if I follow the instructions for sugar, you said 1/3 went into yolk and 1/3 went into whites, what about the remaining 1/3? Many thanks for your clarification.
Hi Ashley, The remaining sugar is going to the egg whites slowly in small increments. Step 5.
Thank you very much for trying the JOC recipe!
Hi Nami like everything else this looks good too still need to buy Matcha green tea lol. Since your asking about chiffon flavor request but it is not in season anymore maybe during summer could you try mango chiffon cake for me please ty? In fact I got mango puree and mango pulp at home that I made mango mousse for experiment (it came out good) <3
Hi Tina! Mango Chiffon sounds good…except for I got allergic all the sudden after I made my Mango Lassi Popsicles! I need to stay away from mango for a while (so sad!)… but thanks for the suggestion! Maybe one day when I can eat mango again!
This sounds so good. I would also like Pandan flavour but I am having difficulties finding the Pandan leaves here in the Vancouver area. I’ve heard the extract isn’t as good.
Hi Patricia can you use Pandan extract just like the vanilla extract it should taste the same I got one at home and bought in my local Filipino store just a suggestion take care.
Hi Tina! Thank you so much for your feedback! I’ll also look into the extract. As I had never tasted pandan flavor from pandan leaves *yet*, I may not notice the difference. I need to find some real pandan flavored dessert soon! 🙂
Hi Patricia! I’d love to try Pandan flavor too. In my nearest Asian store, they sell Pandan leaves in frozen section. Have you checked the freezer area? I had no idea until someone told me. 🙂 Otherwise it looks like only option is an extract… :/