Cakes & Bakes: Earl Grey yogurt cake

Slice of Earl Grey yogurt cake with pot of tea | H is for Home #EarlGrey #yogurtcake #teacake #yoghurtcake #loafcake #tealoaf #recipe #EarlGreytea #tealeaves #cooking #cookery #baking

This is the ultimate loaf cake to have with an afternoon cuppa. My attempt at Earl Grey yogurt cake was a roaring success.

Earl Grey yogurt cake dry ingredients | H is for Home

I really like Earl Grey (and Lady Grey) tea – I don’t know why I don’t drink it more often. It lends a beautiful fragrance to to the loaf. I thought that actual tea leaves in the recipe would make the cake chewy or bitty. However, so long as you remove any of the thick or stalky bits, it’s absolutely fine.

Earl Grey yogurt cake mixture in a stand mixer | H is for Home

A sprinkling of Demerara or granulated sugar over the top just before it goes into the oven ensures a lovely crunchy top.

Sprinkling sugar on the top of uncooked Earl Grey yogurt cake | H is for Home Sprinkled sugar on the top of uncooked Earl Grey yogurt cake | H is for Home

The original recipe recommends toasting slices of the cake and spreading it with butter – it didn’t last long enough for me to try that out.

Cooked Earl Grey yogurt loaf cake | H is for Home

I took a few slices to my weekly crafty afternoon meet-up and was duly asked for the recipe – so it was a double success!

Click here to save the recipe to Pinterest

Slice of Earl Grey yogurt cake with pot of tea | H is for Home #EarlGrey #yogurtcake #teacake #yoghurtcake #loafcake #tealoaf #recipe #EarlGreytea #tealeaves #cooking #cookery #baking
Earl Grey yogurt cake
Serves 6
Cook Time
1 hr
Cook Time
1 hr
Ingredients
  1. 220g/7¾oz vegetable oil, plus more for pan
  2. 250g/9oz all-purpose flour
  3. 1½ tsp salt
  4. ½ tsp baking powder
  5. ½ tsp bicarbonate of soda
  6. 2 large eggs
  7. 250g/9oz granulated sugar
  8. 245g/8½oz plain whole-milk yogurt
  9. 3 tbsp loose-leaf Earl Grey tea or tea from bags
  10. 2 tsp vanilla extract
  11. 1 tbsp raw or granulated sugarEarl Grey yogurt cake ingredients
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Instructions
  1. Preheat the oven to 160°C/ 325°F/ Gas mark 3
  2. Lightly coat a 9x5" or 8½x4½" loaf tin with vegetable oil and line with parchment paper, leaving an overhang on the long sides
  3. Sift flour, salt, baking powder and bicarb into a medium bowl to combine
  4. Vigorously whisk the eggs and granulated sugar in a large bowl for 1 minute. The mixture should be pale yellow and frothy
  5. Whisk in the yogurt, tea leaves and vanilla extract
  6. Gradually stream in the vegetable oil, whisking constantly until incorporated
  7. Add the dry ingredients and whisk to combine
  8. Scrape the batter into the prepared pan and smooth the top. Gently tap the tin against surface to eliminate any air bubbles
  9. Sprinkle evenly with the raw or granulated sugar
  10. Bake the cake until a skewer or toothpick inserted into the centre comes out clean - about 1 hour
  11. Allow to cool for 15 minutes in the tin, then run a butter knife or offset spatula between the cake and tin to release
  12. Lift it out using the parchment overhang and transfer to a wire rack
Notes
  1. Serve warm or room temperature (or even better, toast slices and slather them with butter!)
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Adapted from Bon Appétit
Adapted from Bon Appétit
H is for Home Harbinger https://hisforhomeblog.com/

Price Points: Loose leaf afternoon tea

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Selection of loose leaf afternoon tea

We love to punctuate the day with a few cups of strong tea. The 4 o’clock sit down with tea & biscuits or slice of cake is a particular pleasure. It’s the time to take a moment – rest the feet if we’ve been on them, reflect on the day, think about what’s next – an enjoy the hot cuppa of course.

Our daily brew is usually supplied by Taylor’s loose leaf Yorkshire tea which we like and is readily available in any supermarket. We haven’t sampled the Whittard Robert Fortune as yet, but it sounds good. We were actually given a present of some Fortnum & Mason Queen Anne blend a while ago – it was delicious and immediately became a favourite.

  1. Taylors of Harrogate Yorkshire leaf tea – £2.10 (250g)
    A proper brew. Pure and simple. To give our blend its refreshing flavour, strength and colour we use top quality Assam and African teas.

  2. Queen Anne tea – £9.95 (250g)
    Created in 1907, our bicentenary year, this popular blend commemorates the reigning sovereign in the year that Fortnum & Mason first began. The smooth blend of carefully selected TGFOP Assam and Ceylon FBOP teas produces a strong, smooth tea that is refreshing at any time of day.

  3. Robert Fortune Blend – £8.00 (100g)
    Something of a hero in the world of tea, Robert Fortune was the James Bond of the British tea trade… We’ve tracked Fortune’s travels with a blend of teas from India and China, adding a delicate touch of high-grown Himalayan tea and an elegant homage of white Camellia tea flowers. You’ll find the rich, fruity notes of Chinese Yunnan tea is a superb match for the varieties first cultivated by the British in northern India – all in all, it’s a tea which tells a story, and a rather delicious one at that.