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Thursday
Feb212013

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

Somewhere between the gentle rolling hills and foggy mists of England, I fell in love with black tea. After moving to the United Kingdom for a few months, surrounded by a new culture and colorful accent, afternoon tea seemed like a very British tradition to experience. Up until this point, I had never been much of a tea drinker, perhaps only stealing a cup of chai when my mother set the teapot to boil, but I still felt like I would grow to enjoy it.

Originating from a nation of coffee drinkers, tea sounded like a fresh, bright alternative to the acidic touch of a rudimentary coffee maker.

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

I remember my first trip to a British supermarket well. I paced up and down the aisles with an unusual level of fascination with the food lining the shelves. When I reached the tea section, I needed to take a moment to look over the vast display, feeling overwhelmed with choosing a place to begin my tea journey. I looked over different boxes in earnest, but with no concept of the difference between Earl Grey and Rooibos or English and Irish breakfast tea, it all felt as foreign to me as the new country I was in. I eventually snatched a box of PG Tips off the shelf, gambling with my future in tea.

Since that very first cup, brewed hot and fresh in my small dorm kitchen, I have not been able to turn back since. Black tea had utterly captured my heart.

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

Even now, I much prefer a mug of black tea to a mug of black coffee. On the weekends, when the morning is slow and responsibilities have been forgotten, I boil the water and brew the tea, adding a splash of milk and a drizzle of honey. You could, in many ways, call it my drink of choice.

Last weekend, while sipping a mug of tea and watching a winter storm turn the world white outside my window, I envisioned the flavors of my cup of tea as a slice of cake. Staying warm in my apartment, I started up the oven and turned my faint imaginings into a reality, creating a lovely little cake for two. My boyfriend, a strong believer in the powers of a good cup of coffee, fought me for the final piece. I think that speaks more about this cake than anything else.

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream is a cup of tea turned into a slice of cake. The black tea cake is made by pouring the contents of three tea bags into warmed milk and allowing it to brew before adding the milk into the cake batter, tea leaves and all. The batter takes on a wonderful color, with specks of tea leaves to add a unique twist. After baking, the cake is topped with a honey buttercream that keeps the flavor without so much of the sweetness. The cake and buttercream taste just as their namesake, giving the classic cup of tea a new life. Tea lovers, this cake is just for you.

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Black Tea Cake with Honey Buttercream

Yields 9-inch cake (2 5-inch cakes or 18 cupcakes)

Black Tea Cake
1 cup (235 ml) milk
3 tablespoons black tea (or the contents of 3 tea bags)
1/4 cup (55 grams) butter, room temperature
1 cup (225 grams) granulated sugar
2 large eggs
1/4 cup vegetable oil
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 3/4 cups (175 grams) cake flour
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (180 degrees C). Grease a 9-inch round cake pan.

Warm the milk until near boiling on the stove or in the microwave. Cut open the tea bags and add the tea directly into the milk. Allow to cool.

In a large mixing bowl, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Beat in the vegetable oil and vanilla extract. Gradually add in the cake flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Stir in the tea brewed milk, mixing until batter is uniform and smooth.

Transfer batter to prepared pan and bake for 30-40 minutes (18-22 minutes for cupcakes), or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean. Remove from the oven and allow to cool before frosting or serving.

Honey Buttercream
1/2 cup (110 grams) butter, room temperature
3 tablespoons honey
2 cups (250 grams) powdered sugar
Pinch of salt

In a large mixing bowl, beat the butter and honey until smooth. Add the powdered sugar and salt and continue mixing until the frosting comes together. If the frosting is too runny, add more powdered sugar until it reaches the right consistency. Likewise, if the frosting is too stiff, add more honey (or a splash of milk) to thin it out. If the frosting is too sweet, add a pinch more salt until the desired sweetness is achieved.

Spread or pipe the honey buttercream onto the cooled cake and serve.

Reader Comments (64)

Just made it! The cake fell apart but it tastes absolutely amazing. Thanks so much!
08.16.2013 | Unregistered CommenterHannah
Wow what a delicious one, I really want to eat this... love this post.
Hi. I was thinking of using this tea: http://www.spicesandtease.com/btvanillahazelnut.html
Would we just leave it as is in the milk? Or should we grind it up first or drain it out or what?
09.3.2013 | Unregistered CommenterAnonymous
Anonymous-- I'd suggest grinding it up and just leaving the tea leaves in the cake-- it will add more flavor.
09.3.2013 | Registered CommenterKristin Rosenau
Thank you for such delicious tea time, we cannot miss it, the pics are beautiful, a real invitation for greed:)
I've made these twice now...they're soooooooooooooo good. Not too sweet, not crumbly, you can taste the tea and the milk and the vanilla. It's wonderful.
This one's a keeper FORSURE. :]
12.7.2013 | Unregistered CommenterCheryl
I used a lovely black chai blend to make this cake (yes, a bit of a cop out, but it needed to stand up to strong flavors in the lunch). I'm making it again for Christmas lunch this week! It will be a perfect addition to our back yard celebrations here Down Under--sweet but spicy and an unexpected addition! The chai is a chunky blend including whole cloves, so I steeped it in the milk in a fun tea strainer that let through the smallest particles but not the whole spices.
12.21.2013 | Unregistered CommenterEmilie
I have recently become an avid tea drinker (bought my first tin of loose-leaf Earl Grey the other day!), and this cake has piqued my curiosity enough that I want to make it now! It looks absolutely charming. I can't even imagine how delicious it must taste!

xoxo

Sophie
01.3.2014 | Unregistered CommenterSophie
Kristin, I just made these as cupcakes......the recipe had been haunting me ever since I read it! And no wonder it haunted me, these are THE BEST TASTING cupcakes I have made in a while!!! The honey buttercream is delicious!!!! Thanks for such a fantastic recipe!!
01.19.2014 | Unregistered CommenterSusan
I asked for someone to make this cake for my birthday. My friend surprised me by making it in cupcake form! It's one of the best cupcakes I've ever had! I'm an avid tea drinker and APPROVE THIS RECIPE.
02.2.2014 | Unregistered CommenterAnna
Amazing idea! See my experience on my blog (:
02.8.2014 | Unregistered CommenterLidya
Just made this cake with chai OMG how yummy i halved the mixture to make much smaller cakes unfortunately they sunk a little in the middle but i am a big believer in imperfection being perfection lol. As a Brit i most heartedly approve of this cake :)
02.9.2014 | Unregistered Commenterclaire
Great post! One of my friends sent me your link, thinking I'd like the cake recipe, (which of course, i do!) but I keyed into something more interesting---->You mention staying in the UK for several months. Have you written more about that experience? I'm hoping to do the same, and am currently in the research stage of making it happen!
Thanks!
02.26.2014 | Unregistered Commenterkaren
I just made this! I made it in an 8" square pan because I don't have a 9" round and used part brown sugar and white sugar and added a bit of cocoa powder. It came out tasting very delicious, only thing is that it domed up a lot and did not look as dark as yours, despite the addition of cocoa powder. I guess because I removed my tea leaves (they were loose leaf tea, so not finely ground and would no be appetizing inside the cake), it did not turn out as dark. Otherwise, it takes very good. I did not make buttercream yet but I bet it would be absolutely delicious! Thanks for sharing this great black tea cake recipe with us!
03.28.2014 | Unregistered CommenterPauline

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