
Posted by Renée Leonard-Stainton on 1 July 2014 - 6:37pm
Lavender & Earl Grey Tea Cakes
By jove, one has a right royal treat in store with these fancy tea cakes! Don't be alarmed by the use of two rather uncommon cake ingredients here... I can assure you that these are fit for any discerning cake King or Queen! Earl Grey tea and lavender flowers pair beautifully in these moist and lightly fragrant darlings, delicately sweetened with honey and dolloped with a simple ricotta frosting. If you can't find dried lavender flowers at a health food store (or in the tea aisle at your supermarket), you can use lavender straight from your garden (or from your lovely neighbours...) If you don't have mini loaf tins, don't despair, these work equally well made in cupcake tins. Cuppa and cake...what more could one want?
By jove, one has a right royal treat in store with these fancy tea cakes! Don't be alarmed by the use of two rather uncommon cake ingredients here... I can assure you that these are fit for any discerning cake King or Queen! Earl Grey tea and lavender flowers pair beautifully in these moist and lightly fragrant darlings, delicately sweetened with honey and dolloped with a simple ricotta frosting. If you can't find dried lavender flowers at a health food store (or in the tea aisle at your supermarket), you can use lavender straight from your garden (or from your lovely neighbours...) If you don't have mini loaf tins, don't despair, these work equally well made in cupcake tins. Cuppa and cake...what more could one want?
Method
- Preheat oven to 180°C. Lightly grease mini loaf tins with butter
- In a bowl, combine the almond flour, rice flour, baking powder and salt
- In a mixer, beat butter, honey, vanilla, orange zest and 1 tablespoon of earl grey tea leaves until light and fluffy
- Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each
- In a small saucepan, heat milk and 1 tablespoon of earl grey tea leaves and 2 tablespoons of lavender until just boiled, remove from heat, cover and let steep for a few minutes until the milk changes colour. Strain out the tea leaves with a tea strainer and set the tea milk aside
- Add the combined flour mixture into the wet mixture, and finally pour in the tea milk. Mix just until blended
- Pour into the prepared tins and bake for 20 minutes, or until lightly golden on the top and a skewer comes out clean
- To make the topping, lightly whisk together honey and ricotta and then dollop or spread over cakes

This looks delicious! I can't wait to try it out.. Just wondering if you could make it in a big loaf tin or would there not be enough cake dough? Thanks!
Thanks Julia! It will work in a cake/load tin fine, you may just have to vary cooking time slightly. If you just do the old skewer in cake trick to see if it is cooked through, you should be fine :) Enjoy! x