Cake of the Day: Matcha Chocolate Mousse Cake

Through the end of March, we bring you Matcha Madness, a series in which we share our favorite matcha-based recipes. If you’re as mad for this green tea as we are, stay tuned for more. Below, Nik Sharma of A Brown Table shares the recipe for a decadent cake made with white chocolate matcha mousse and homemade chocolate “leaves.”

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All Photos Courtesy of Nik Sharma of A Brown Table

My matcha obsession is in overdrive! This cake involves two types of chocolate and green tea, all creamy and smooth. You can make the cake ahead of time and then prepare the mousse on another day. Then, eat it all up in one day!

Matcha Chocolate Mousse Cake
Yields one 9-inch cake

Chocolate leaves:
4 leaves from a non-toxic plant, 2 small and 2 large ( I used lemon tree leaves)
1/4 cup white chocolate chips
1 teaspoon matcha powder
1/4 cup dark chocolate chips (60% cacao)

Wash the leaves under cold running tap water to remove any debris and dirt. Dry the leaves carefully by patting them down with a dry kitchen towel. Keep aside on a baking tray lined with a sheet of parchment paper.

Boil some hot water in a small pan, remove the pan from the stove and place a small heat-proof bowl with the white chocolate and matcha powder and mix until the chocolate has melted and the matcha has mixed in completely to form a light green color. Using a pastry brush, brush the underside of one large and one one small leaf cleaned earlier with a thin layer (not too thin or they will break easily) of the melted chocolate. Place the leaves on the parchment paper from the first step.

In another bowl, melt the dark chocolate and paint the remaining two leaves just as you did with the white chocolate-matcha mixture. Place the leaves on the tray of parchment paper. Place the entire tray in the refrigerator to harden for at least 10 minutes.

Remove the tray from the refrigerator once the chocolate has hardened on the leaves. Carefully, peel the leaf away from the chocolate to reveal the molded chocolate leaf. Store the leaves carefully in the refrigerator until needed. (Note: Be careful handling the leaves after they set, since chocolate can melt quickly when exposed to body heat from our fingers, especially the dark chocolate.)

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Dark chocolate sponge layer cake:
3/4 cup (3 3/4 ounces) all purpose flour
1 tablespoon cornstarch
1/4 cup (3/4 ounces) unsweetened dark cocoa powder
5 large eggs, cold
3/4 cup (6 1/4 ounces) sugar
1 tablespoon vanilla extract
6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted and cooled
A little extra butter to grease a baking sheet

Line an 18-inch X 13-inch baking tray with parchment paper and grease it with the extra butter. Keep aside until ready to use. Place a wire rack on the middle shelf of the oven and preheat to 325°.

Whisk the flour, cornstarch and cocoa powder in a medium-sized bowl and then sift the mixture onto a separate sheet of parchment paper four times. Keep aside until ready to use.

Place the eggs and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer and using the whisk attachment, whisk on medium-high speed until the eggs have tripled in volume and the entire mixture becomes pale and creamy. This should take about 5-6 minutes. Remove the bowl from the mixer.

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Sift half of the flour mixture over the whipped eggs and fold carefully with a silicone spatula using an outward to inward motion. Make sure you reach the bottom of the bowl when folding to get the dry ingredients incorporated into the wet ingredients. Add the rest of the flour by sifting and fold in the same fashion until a few flecks of dry ingredients are barely visible.

Pour the vanilla and melted butter from the side of the bowl into the batter and fold the entire mixture in two sweeping motions. Transfer the mixture onto the prepared baking sheet and using an offset spatula even the surface carefully. The mixture will deflate a little but not too much. Place the pan in the oven and bake for 15 minutes, turing the tray halfway through baking. The center of the cake should be firm and spongy to touch. Remove the tray from the oven when done and allow to cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes. Remove cake with parchment paper from the pan and allow to cool completely. Then wrap the cake with cling film and refrigerate or freeze until needed.

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Matcha white chocolate mousse filling (adapted from Food and Wine):
1 cup heavy whipping cream
1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin
4 tablespoons water
2 tablespoons matcha powder
4 large egg yolks
4 tablespoons sugar
8 ounces white chocolate, melted and cooled

Place the cream in a large mixing bowl and whisk with an electric hand mixer on meidum-high speed until the cream forms stiff peaks. This should take about 3-4 minutes. Cover the bowl with cling film and refrigerate to chill before use.

In a small mixing bowl, pour the gelatin over two tablespoons of water and allow to bloom. Heat the remaining water in another small mixing bowl and mix the matcha powder to form a smooth paste. Pour this mixture over the gelatin and stir until you get a smooth liquid.

Place the egg yolks in a large mixing bowl with the sugar and whisk on medium-high speed until the yolks become pale and creamy for about 4-5 minutes. The mixture will thicken considerably. During the last 30 seconds, pour the gelatin mixture from the side of the bowl and whisk this into the eggs. Finally, whisk in the melted chocolate until completely combined. Fold in half of the chilled whipped cream using sweeping outward to inward motion with a silicone spatula (just like you did for the genoise cake). Fold in the remaining cream and keep aside.

Cake assembly:
4 tablespoons melted dark chocolate
1 generous tablespoon snow sugar (read my tips above on how to prepare it)
Extra matcha powder to dust (I used a little under 1 1/2 tablespoons for a light coat)
A handful of fresh ripe raspberries

Cut a 9-inch circle of the prepared and pre-chilled/frozen chocolate genoise cake. (Note: You can also just use the ring of the pan to cut the circle, before you line the side of the pan with the strip of parchment paper.)

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Take a 9-inch X 2 1/2-inch circular springform pan. Cut one 9-inch circle and a 28-inch X 2-inch strip of parchment paper. Line the base of the pan with circular sheet of parchment paper. Using a very little amount of vegetable oil or melted butter, line and stick the strip of parchment paper around the ring of the pan. Assemble the pan together with the ring.

Place the cake on the base of the lined pan. Using a brush, coat the exposed surface of the cake with a little bit of the melted chocolate in a thin layer. It does not have to perfect, you want just enough to prevent the cake from getting too soggy. Allow to cool until the chocolate has hardened and set, this will happen fast depending on how cold the cake is. If the chocolate is taking too long to set, freeze the entire pan with the cake for 2-3 minutes until hardened.

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Pour the mousse filling over the cake after the chocolate layer has hardened. Level and smooth the surface with an offset spatula. Cover the pan with clingfilm and refrigerate for at least 4 hours to overnight. You can also freeze the cake at this point.

Freeze the cake in the pan for at least 2 hours before decorating. To release the cake, unlock the springform pan. Dust the surface the cake first with a thin layer of the snow sugar and then with the matcha powder using a tea strainer. There should be no visible white spots from the snow sugar. Then slowly unwrap the parchment paper from the sides of the cake. Slide the cake onto a cake board and decorate with the prepared chocolate leaves and a few fresh raspberries. Cut the chilled mousse cake with a sharp serrated knife (Note: It is easier to get nice clean cuts using a sharp serrated knife on a frozen mousse cake, just wash the knife between each cut to keep it clean.)

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More cakes infused with tea flavors:

Masala Chai Apple Cake

Green Tea Crêpe Cake by ‘Oh Sweet Day!’

Black Tea With Honey Buttercream Cake