Matcha White Chocolate Cottage Cheese Cookie Dough

Macros
290 calories
18g protein
13g fat
26g carbs
matcha no bake cookie dough in cup

This white chocolate is a recipe made with simple ingredients like cottage cheese, almond flour, vanilla , matcha, sweetener, and white chocolate chips.

It is thick, creamy, sweet, and meant to be eaten cold like traditional cookie dough, but without raw eggs or raw all-purpose flour. The cottage cheese gets blended smooth first, so you do not get curds in the final dough.

I tested this two ways, and the texture was much better once I fully blended the cottage cheese before adding the dry ingredients. The first batch clumped because I added the almond flour and before the cottage cheese base was smooth. Once the base was blended, the dough came together much better.

This version uses matcha and white chocolate, but the same cottage cheese cookie dough recipe can be used for other flavors too. Add peanut butter for a peanut butter cookie dough version, dark chocolate chips for a more classic dough, or stevia and sugar-free chocolate chips if you want to lower the sugar.

If you love high- dough recipes, try these next:

jacob with his matcha cookie dough

Why You'll Love This Recipe

  • High Protein: Cottage cheese and protein powder both help boost the protein content.
  • No Baking Needed: This is an recipe, not a baked cookie recipe.
  • : This version uses almond flour instead of wheat flour.
  • Simple Ingredients: Cottage cheese, protein powder, almond flour, sweetener, matcha, and white chocolate chips.
  • Sweet Tooth Friendly: It works when you want something sweet but still want protein.
  • Easy to Make Thicker: Add more almond flour or protein powder if the dough has too much liquid.
  • Good as a Dip: Eat it with a spoon, use it as a dip, or scoop it into bites.

The Cottage Cheese Blending Strategy

The most important step is blending the cottage cheese until completely smooth.

Cottage cheese has curds, and if you just stir it into a bowl, the cookie dough will taste chunky. Blending it with the sweetener turns it into a creamy base that mixes much better with almond flour and protein powder.

Once the base is smooth, the almond flour and protein powder thicken it into a scoopable dough. If the dough still feels too wet, add another tablespoon of almond flour or protein powder until it reaches the texture you want.

matcha no bake cookie dough scooped in glass

Most cottage cheese cookie dough recipes are made to taste like chocolate chip cookie dough. This one uses matcha and white chocolate, which gives it a different flavor and color.

The matcha adds an earthy green tea flavor. The white chocolate chips add sweetness. The almond flour gives the dough body, while the blended cottage cheese keeps it creamy.

It is not a baked cookie dough. It is closer to a high-protein cookie dough dip or edible cookie dough that you eat cold from the refrigerator.

Not much, as long as you blend it well.

The cottage cheese flavor is strongest if you leave the curds whole. Once it is blended smooth and mixed with vanilla protein powder, sweetener, matcha, and white chocolate chips, the flavor becomes much more dessert-like.

If you are sensitive to the cottage cheese taste, use a mild cottage cheese and add a little extra vanilla extract or sweetener.

matcha no bake cookie dough scooped

It has the same idea as traditional cookie dough, but the ingredients are different.

Traditional cookie dough usually uses butter, sugar, flour, vanilla extract, eggs, and chocolate chips. This version uses blended cottage cheese, almond flour, protein powder, matcha, sweetener, and white chocolate chips.

The texture is thick and scoopable, but it will not taste exactly like raw chocolate chip cookie dough. It is more of a high-protein edible cookie dough recipe with a matcha white chocolate flavor.

Key Equipment

Beast Blender: You need a high-powered blender to break down the curd texture completely. If you skip this, your dough will have tiny chunks of cheese.

Digital Kitchen Scale: Cottage cheese can vary in density. Weighing everything ensures your dough sets up thick instead of runny.

Silicone Spatula Set: Perfect for folding the heavy dough and scraping the blended base out of your blender jar without wasting any.

Cookie Scoop Set: Gives you clean, even portions so you can store them as single-serve bites in the fridge.

Ingredient Deep Dive & Strategy

matcha no bake cookie dough ingredients

Cottage Cheese: Creates the creamy base once blended smooth. It also adds protein.

Vanilla Protein Powder: Adds protein and helps thicken the dough. A whey/casein blend usually gives the thickest texture.

Almond Flour: Gives the dough body and helps it feel more like cookie dough. This recipe uses 3/4 cup almond flour, but you can add more if needed.

Matcha Drink Packets: Add matcha flavor and color. If using plain matcha powder, start with less and sweeten to taste.

Sugar-Free Maple Syrup: Adds sweetness and helps the cottage cheese blend smoothly. Regular maple syrup, honey, agave, stevia, or another sweetener can also work.

White Chocolate Chips: Add sweet little bites that balance the matcha.

Vanilla Extract: Optional, but it helps the dough taste more like dessert.

Salt: A small pinch balances the sweetness.

matcha no bake cookie dough on counter

What Can I Use If I Don't Have Protein Powder?

You can make cottage cheese cookie dough without protein powder, but the texture and protein content will change.

To replace protein powder, try adding more almond flour or oat flour until the dough thickens. Start with 2 to 3 extra tablespoons, then adjust from there.

The flavor will be less sweet if your protein powder was sweetened, so you may need more maple syrup, stevia, or another sweetener.

Without protein powder, this becomes more of a cottage cheese edible cookie dough than a high-protein cookie dough.

Can I Substitute Flour for Protein Powder?

You can use flour to help thicken cookie dough, but do not use raw all-purpose flour unless it has been heat-treated first.

For no-bake cookie dough, almond flour and oat flour are easier options because they are commonly used in edible cookie dough recipes. Coconut flour can also work, but you need much less because it absorbs a lot of liquid.

If you use coconut flour, start with 1 tablespoon at a time.

1. Blend the cottage cheese base

Add cottage cheese, sugar-free maple syrup, vanilla extract if using, and a pinch of salt to a blender.

Blend until completely smooth. The mixture should not have visible curds.

2. Add to a bowl

Pour the smooth cottage cheese mixture into a medium bowl.

Use a spatula to scrape the blender well.

3. Add the dry ingredients

Add the vanilla protein powder, 3/4 cup almond flour, and matcha drink packets.

Stir until a thick cookie dough forms.

4. Adjust the texture

If the dough feels too wet, add more almond flour or protein powder one tablespoon at a time.

If the dough feels too dry, add a small splash of milk or a little more syrup.

5. Fold in white chocolate chips

Add the white chocolate chips and fold them into the dough.

6. Chill or serve

You can eat it right away, but the texture gets better after chilling in the refrigerator for 20 to 30 minutes.

Serve it with a spoon, roll it into bites, or use it as a dip.

matcha no bake cookie dough in cup

You can eat this several ways:

  • Straight from the bowl with a spoon
  • Scooped into small bites
  • As a dip with apple slices
  • Spread onto rice cakes
  • Mixed into Greek yogurt
  • Topped with extra white chocolate chips
  • Frozen into little cookie dough bites

If you want it to feel more like a cookie dough dip, leave it slightly softer. If you want bites, chill it first so it firms up.

Troubleshooting & FAQ

Your cottage cheese may have too much liquid, or your protein powder may not absorb much moisture. Add almond flour or protein powder one tablespoon at a time until the dough becomes thick and scoopable.

Not much if you blend it well. The matcha, vanilla protein powder, syrup, white chocolate chips, and salt help make it taste more like dessert.

Yes, this version does not use raw eggs or raw all-purpose flour. It is meant to be an edible cookie dough recipe.

This recipe does not use raw eggs or raw wheat flour, but pregnancy food safety can be personal. Use pasteurized dairy when needed and follow your doctor's guidance.

Can I bake this into ?

No. This recipe is meant to be eaten as edible cookie dough. It will not bake like regular in the oven.

Yes, but it will have less protein. Use extra almond flour or oat flour to thicken the dough and add sweetener to taste.

Mix protein powder with a creamy base like blended cottage cheese, Greek yogurt, or nut butter, then add almond flour or oat flour until it thickens into dough.

Can I use normal flour?

For no-bake cookie dough, do not use raw all-purpose flour unless it is heat-treated. Almond flour or oat flour is easier for this recipe.

Can I add peanut butter?

Yes. Peanut butter, cashew butter, or almond butter can be stirred in for a richer dough. Start with 1 to 2 tablespoons.

Can I use coconut flour?

Yes, but use much less. Coconut flour absorbs a lot of moisture, so start with 1 tablespoon and add more only if needed.

Can I use stevia?

Yes. Stevia can work as the sweetener, but you may need a little extra liquid because syrup also helps the cottage cheese blend smoothly.

jacob scooping the cookie dough

Substitutions & Variations

ComponentSwap Options
Cottage CheeseGreek yogurt
Almond FlourOat flour, heat-treated flour, or a small amount of coconut flour
Protein PowderExtra almond flour or oat flour
Sugar-Free SyrupMaple syrup, honey, agave, stevia, or monk fruit sweetener
Matcha Packets1 to 2 tsp matcha powder
White Chocolate ChipsDark chocolate chips, cacao nibs, coconut, or pistachios
Peanut ButterCashew butter or almond butter

Storage

Store cottage cheese cookie dough in an airtight container in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.

The dough gets thicker after chilling, so the texture may be better the next day.

You can also freeze it. Scoop the dough into bites with an ice cream scoop or cookie scoop, freeze on a tray, then transfer to a freezer bag or airtight container.

Let frozen bites sit at room temperature for a few minutes before eating.

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The Final Verdict & Share

This matcha white chocolate cottage cheese cookie dough is thick, creamy, and easy to make once you blend the cottage cheese first. It satisfies a sweet tooth, gives you a protein boost, and works as a spoonable dessert, dip, or chilled cookie dough bite. Make it once, chill it for the best texture, and tag me if you try it.

matcha no bake cookie dough

Matcha White Chocolate Cottage Cheese No Bake Cookie Dough

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A high-protein, no-bake cookie dough made with blended cottage cheese, almond flour, matcha, and white chocolate chips.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Total Time 5 minutes
Servings: 2 servings
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Calories: 290

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup cottage cheese
  • 2 scoops protein powder whey/casein blend preferred
  • 2-3 tbsp sugar free maple syrup
  • 1 dash salt
  • 3/4 cup almond flour
  • 2 packets instant matcha drink packets
  • 1/4 cup white chocolate chips folded in

Method
 

  1. Add the cottage cheese, sugar-free maple syrup, and a dash of salt to a blender and process until completely smooth with no curds remaining.
  2. Transfer the smooth base to a bowl and mix in the protein powder, almond flour, and instant matcha drink packets until a thick dough forms.
  3. Gently fold in the white chocolate chips using a spatula until distributed evenly.
  4. Portion into balls using a cookie scoop and enjoy immediately, or chill in the fridge to let it firm up.

Nutrition

Calories: 290kcalCarbohydrates: 18gProtein: 26gFat: 13g

Notes

Matcha White Chocolate Cottage Cheese No Bake Cookie Dough Tips & Expert Strategy

TEXTURE NOTE: These should be soft, thick, and scoopable, mimicking a true raw cookie dough consistency.
SUBSTITUTION WARNING: Swapping the almond flour for coconut flour will absorb way too much moisture and make the dough crumbly; stick to almond or oat flour.
BETTER LATER NOTE: This recipe improves significantly after chilling in the fridge for 20-30 minutes as the flours fully hydrate and firm up the core.
SERVING TIP: Warm individual portions for 5 to 10 seconds in the microwave if you want a slightly softer, melt-in-your-mouth texture.

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Jacob Hensley Founder of BakedLean
Meet jacob, aka

bakedlean

I started BakedLean as a passion project to make healthier, high-protein versions of classic desserts and comfort foods.