Classic tiramisu in a baking dish with a generous dusting of cocoa powder and visible ladyfinger layers
🍰 Desserts

Easy Tiramisu Recipe

SarahBy Sarah Mitchell 📅 March 17, 2026🕐 30 min + chill⭐ 4.9 (6,894 reviews)
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A great tiramisu recipe is the most impressive no-bake dessert you can make — and this version is the one I've tested and refined over a dozen batches to get absolutely right. The mascarpone cream is thick and pillowy without being dense, the ladyfingers are soaked to the perfect level (moist but not soggy), and the whole thing improves dramatically overnight in the fridge as the flavors meld and the layers meld into a single perfect dessert. This is an easy tiramisu in every sense — no raw eggs, no candy thermometer, no baking at all.

At 600K+ monthly searches in the US, tiramisu remains one of the most sought-after recipes year-round. When you make it at home, you'll understand exactly why — nothing you buy in a restaurant or grocery store compares to a properly made, freshly assembled tiramisu.

The Cream: Why This Version Uses No Raw Eggs

Traditional Italian tiramisu uses a zabaglione — egg yolks whisked with sugar over a double boiler — as the base of the cream. It's delicious but intimidating, and the raw egg concern is real for many households. This recipe replaces the egg component entirely with firmly whipped heavy cream folded into mascarpone. The result is lighter, more stable, easier to execute, and completely safe for anyone. Many Italian home cooks actually prefer this approach because the cream layer holds up better over multiple days.

The non-negotiable rule: fold gently. The whipped cream is full of air you spent time building — three light folds is better than ten vigorous stirs. Overmixing = dense, heavy tiramisu.

Tiramisu being served — a perfect slice showing the two distinct ladyfinger layers and thick mascarpone cream
The perfect slice: two distinct layers of espresso-soaked ladyfingers separated by thick mascarpone cream, finished with a heavy snowfall of Dutch cocoa. The overnight chill is what makes the layers meld like this.

The 2-Second Dip Rule for Perfect Ladyfingers

This is the single technique that separates great tiramisu from soggy, collapsing disappointment. Ladyfingers are porous sponge biscuits — they absorb liquid almost instantly. Count exactly 2 seconds per side, no more. The outside should look moist and coffee-colored, but if you squeeze the ladyfinger it should still feel firm, not wet through the center. Soggy-to-the-core ladyfingers will collapse under the weight of the cream, creating a wet, porridge-like layer instead of distinct tiers. When in doubt, err on the side of under-dipped.

Coffee: Espresso Is Best, Strong Coffee Works

Two shots of espresso diluted to 2 cups total with a little water is the classic approach. If you don't have an espresso machine, brew a very strong pot of coffee — use about 3× the normal amount of grounds. Instant espresso powder dissolved in hot water (1 tablespoon per cup) is another excellent option available at any grocery store. The coffee must be completely cool before dipping — hot coffee destroys ladyfingers on contact. Make it ahead and refrigerate.

Why Overnight Chilling Is Non-Negotiable

Most recipes say "4 hours minimum, overnight preferred" and most people chill for 4 hours and wonder why their tiramisu tastes just okay. The truth: overnight tiramisu is a fundamentally different dessert. In those extra hours, the ladyfingers and cream exchange moisture and flavor until they're inseparably unified. The coffee flavor migrates into the cream, the cream softens the ladyfingers from the inside, and what starts as layers becomes a single harmonious dessert. Plan ahead. Make it the night before. You will not regret it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you make tiramisu without raw eggs?

Yes — this recipe uses whipped cream and mascarpone only, with no eggs at all. Lighter, safer, and most people prefer it.

How long does tiramisu last in the fridge?

Up to 3 days covered. Day 2 is actually the best — the layers meld beautifully after 24 hours.

Can you freeze tiramisu?

Yes — up to 3 months without the cocoa. Thaw overnight in the fridge and dust fresh before serving.

What can you substitute for ladyfingers?

Sponge cake strips, Pavesini cookies, or brioche slices work. Anything light and absorbent.

Easy Tiramisu

No baking, no raw eggs — just pillowy mascarpone cream and coffee-soaked ladyfingers. Pure Italian perfection.

4.9 out of 5 (6,894 ratings) — Click to rate

Prep Time30 min
Chill Time4–12 hr
Servings
DifficultyEasy
🛒 Ingredients

Mascarpone Cream:

  • 500g (17.5 oz) mascarpone cheese, room temperature
  • 1½ cups (360ml) heavy whipping cream, cold
  • ⅔ cup (80g) powdered sugar, sifted
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract

Espresso Soak:

  • 2 cups (480ml) strong espresso or very strong coffee, cooled completely
  • 3 tablespoons coffee liqueur (Kahlúa, optional)

Assembly:

  • 2 packages (7 oz / 200g each) savoiardi ladyfinger cookies
  • ¼ cup Dutch-process cocoa powder, for dusting
  • Dark chocolate shavings, optional
👨‍🍳 Instructions
  • 1
    Whip the cream

    Using a stand mixer or hand mixer with a cold bowl, whip the cold heavy cream and half the powdered sugar on medium-high speed to firm, glossy peaks — about 3–4 minutes. Don't over-whip to stiff peaks or the cream will become grainy. Set aside in the fridge.

  • 2
    Make the mascarpone base

    In a large bowl, beat mascarpone on medium speed for 30 seconds until smooth and lump-free. Add vanilla extract and remaining powdered sugar. Beat on medium for 1 minute until combined and creamy. Don't overbeat — mascarpone can curdle if over-worked.

  • 3
    Fold together

    Add the whipped cream to the mascarpone in three equal additions, folding gently with a rubber spatula after each. Use wide, sweeping motions from the bottom of the bowl. Stop when just combined with no visible streaks — there should still be light airiness in the cream. Cover and refrigerate while you prep everything else.

  • 4
    Dip the ladyfingers

    Combine cooled espresso and coffee liqueur in a shallow dish. One at a time, dip each ladyfinger for exactly 2 seconds per side — count it. They should be moist and coffee-colored on the outside but still hold their shape. Arrange in a tight single layer in a 9×13 inch (23×33 cm) baking dish.

  • 5
    Layer and chill

    Spread exactly half the mascarpone cream over the first ladyfinger layer, smoothing to the edges. Add a second layer of dipped ladyfingers. Top with the remaining mascarpone cream, smooth the surface flat with an offset spatula. Cover tightly with plastic wrap and refrigerate for a minimum of 4 hours — overnight (8–12 hours) is strongly preferred.

  • 6
    Dust and serve

    Just before serving, sift Dutch-process cocoa powder generously over the entire surface through a fine-mesh sieve. Add chocolate shavings if desired. Cut into squares and serve cold. The tiramisu is best on day 2.

📊 Nutrition (per serving)
410
Calories
38g
Carbs
7g
Protein
26g
Fat
0g
Fiber
85mg
Sodium