Chamomile Tea Cake With Strawberry Icing
Published April 17, 2022

- Total Time
- 2¼ hours, plus cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
Advertisement
Ingredients
- ½cup/115 grams unsalted butter
- 2tablespoons/6 grams chamomile tea (from 4 to 6 tea bags), crushed fine if coarse
- 1cup/240 milliliters whole milk
- Nonstick cooking spray
- 1cup/200 grams granulated sugar
- ½teaspoon coarse kosher salt
- 2large eggs
- 1large lemon
- 2teaspoons baking powder
- 1teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- 1½cups/192 grams all-purpose flour
- 1cup/124 grams confectioners’ sugar
- ½cup/8 grams freeze-dried strawberries
Preparation
- Step 1
In a small saucepan, melt the butter over medium heat. Add 1 tablespoon chamomile to a large mixing bowl. Pour the hot melted butter over the chamomile and stir. Set aside to steep and cool completely, about 1 hour.
- Step 2
Use the same saucepan (without washing it out) to bring the milk to a simmer over medium-high heat, keeping watch so it doesn’t boil over. Remove from the heat, and stir the remaining 1 tablespoon chamomile into the hot milk. Set aside to steep and cool completely, about 1 hour.
- Step 3
Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan with the nonstick cooking spray and line with parchment paper so the long sides of the pan have a couple of inches of overhang to make lifting the finished cake out easier.
- Step 4
Add the sugar and salt to the bowl with the butter, and whisk until smooth and thick, about 1 minute. Add the eggs, 1 at a time, vigorously whisking to combine after each addition. Zest the lemon into the bowl; add the baking powder and vanilla, and whisk until incorporated. Add the flour and stream in the milk mixture while whisking continuously until no streaks of flour remain.
- Step 5
Transfer the batter to the prepared pan and bake until a skewer or cake tester inserted in the center comes out clean (a few crumbs are OK, but you should see no wet batter), 40 to 45 minutes. Cool in the pan on a rack for 30 minutes.
- Step 6
While the cake cools, make the icing: Into a medium bowl, squeeze 2 tablespoons juice from the zested lemon, then add the confectioners’ sugar. Place the dehydrated strawberries in a fine-mesh sieve set over the bowl and, using your fingers, crush the brittle berries and press the red-pink powder through the sieve and into the sugar. (The more you do this, the redder your icing will be.) Whisk until smooth.
- Step 7
If needed, run a knife along the edges of the cake to release it from the pan. Holding the 2 sides of overhanging parchment, lift the cake out and place it on a plate, cake stand or cutting board. Discard the parchment. Pour the icing over the cake, using a spoon to push the icing to the edges of the cake to encourage the icing to drip down the sides dramatically. Cool the cake completely and let the icing set.
Private Notes
Comments
The cooking spray helps hold the parchment in the pan. Otherwise it can be difficult to get it to lie flat… it just wants to spring out of the pan. Instead, you can crumple the parchment before using, then reflatten it. The crumpling helps it behave itself.
This was such an easy, DELIGHTFUL recipe. The strawberry frosting is not to be skipped, and the crumb is perfect with just a hint of lemon. I ended up having to bake mine for about 50 minutes to cook through.
Dumb question, maybe, but will mixing this in a mixer work OK? Recovering from shoulder issues- can't wisk.....
this tea cake was so delicious! I'm not usually one to leave a review but I absolutely had to with this recipe. the cake itself was so moist and perfectly bouncy. I was a bit nervous because I haven't had the best luck with tea cakes recently- they've all been super dense and dry but this was the complete opposite. I had an overload of fresh strawberries that I needed to use for the glaze but I would love to make this recipe again and use the freeze dried strawberries.
Followed the recipe exactly. It’s a perfect cake to serve for guests, take to a brunch, or drop off at a friend’s house. Cute, buttery, and bright. If you want light pink icing like the picture, use the dried berries sparingly.
This one is part of my regular baking rotation now. So easy, and so delicious. I almost never have chamomile on hand, but this works beautifully with Earl Grey or other black teas.