Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (2024)

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Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (1)

Do you ever crave a simple homemade cookie made with lots of tasty flavors? This recipe fits the bill! It's an old fashioned tea cake made with Steen's Syrup for a sweet molasses-like taste. The original instructions say to mix the dough with your bare hands. A little messy, yes, but worth the extra cleanup.

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A friend recently asked if I had a recipe for Tea Cakes and I told her, "No, but I know who does!"

These Tea Cakes are a flat, dense, large cookie. These "Mama's Tea Cakes" were introduced to me by my mother-in-law, Clarice Hartshorn. She often gets asked for her to make more by those who taste them.

Mom found the recipe for these traditional southern molasses (or syrup) flavored pastries from a cookbook published in 1978. It was by the Women of First Assembly of God in Minden, LA. So this recipe comes from Louisiana by way of my Mississippi mother-in-law.

Here's a picture of her find taken from that cookbook.

Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (2)

As you can see, the amount of flour is not listed in the ingredients but rather it says to mix in a large bowl of sifted flour (by hand).

Hand Mixing

When I asked Mom what this meant she said that's how they used to mix their cookie dough. I thought about her mother and how I used to watch Mamaw make biscuits in a wooden bowl full of self-rising flour.

Mamaw would take the bowl out from the cabinet, remove the dishtowel that covered it and make a well in the center with the back of her hand. Then she'd add shortening and buttermilk (without measuring) into the well and work them into the flour until the dough was the consistency she desired. Those biscuits were a work of art as she'd pat them into rounds and lay them onto an iron skillet before popping them into a hot oven.

After covering the bowl of flour back up and returning it to the cabinet she'd then retrieve the skillet from the oven and turn those cooked biscuits onto a plate to serve with butter and her homemade cane syrup. It was always an intimidating process that kept me from even attempting to make homemade biscuits until later in my married life.

Well, I did finally learn how to master making biscuits and I share the recipe here in this Foolproof Biscuit Making 101. You should give them a try. So easy and less mess since I use a spoon to mix!

I regret not letting Mamaw teach me her way. I can still hear her giggle when I'd decline her offer. So don't be like me and shrink back from making these "Mama's Tea Cakes" the way this recipe gives instructions to.

Let's get our hands dirty and work with the dough until it's stiff enough to roll into a ball.

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Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (3)

Mama's Tea Cakes

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Cookies flavored with Steen's Syrup for an old fashioned molasses taste.

  • Total Time: 35 minutes
  • Yield: 72 cookies 1x

Ingredients

UnitsScale

7 ½ cups sifted all-purpose flour

3 ½ teaspoon baking soda

4 ½ teaspoon baking powder

¼ teaspoon salt

¾ cup sugar

4 teaspoons ground ginger

2 eggs

2 ½ cups pure cane syrup (molasses may be substituted)

1 cup salted butter, softened

Instructions

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

In a large bowl, mix together flour, baking soda, baking powder, salt, sugar, and ginger.

Make a well in the center of the flour mixture and add eggs, butter, and syrup.

Mix together the ingredients with your hands until well blended.

Roll dough in between hands to make 1" - 1 ½" balls then place onto a cookie sheet and flatten with fingers into round disk.

Bake for 12 - 15 minutes.

Remove cookies from cookie sheets and place on cooling rack to cool.

Notes

Make balls small or large, according to your preference.

  • Author: Louisiana Woman
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 12-15 minutes
  • Category: Sweets, Desserts
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: American

Recipe Card powered byMama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (4)

  • Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (5)
  • Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (6)

My mother-in-law rolls them into a 1 to 1-½ inch ball in her hands before flattening them to bake. They do expand a little after baking.

  • Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (7)
  • Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (8)

When I asked her what kind of syrup she uses I was so happy to hear her say Steen's Syrup. You know that made my Louisiana heart smile!

Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (9)

"That some achieve great success, is proof to all that others can achieve it as well."

Abraham Lincoln

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Comments

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  1. Mona

    I halved the recipe and left out the ginger. Made them in my round biscuit pan and we LOVE them!!!!

    Reply

    • Louisiana Woman

      Thanks for letting me know! My husband is not a fan of ginger so I’m glad to know that’s a good option. Glad you enjoyed them!

      Reply

Mama's Tea Cakes • Louisiana Woman Blog Sweets-recipes (2024)

FAQs

What are tea cakes made of? ›

Tea cakes are soft roll-out cookies that are tender, chewy and pleasantly dense. They are a cookie with a cake-like texture. The ingredients are very simple (flour, sugar, butter, milk, nutmeg, and eggs), and the gentle flavor of nutmeg is what makes these so special.

How to make tea from a tea cake? ›

To brew, bring fresh, filtered water to about 190℉, dislodge 1 teaspoon of the Pu-erh cake and steep for 3 minutes. Discard the leaves and enjoy.

What is the history of tea cakes? ›

A question we are commonly asked here at the Texas Tea Cake Company is "What is a tea cake?" According to historians, the American tea cake was created over 200 years ago by African slaves in the southeastern United States. Tea cakes were initially made by plantation cooks for the guest of white slave owners.

Why is tea cake called tea cake? ›

Afternoon tea began in the 1840s as a tradition of having a tea in the afternoons as a way to stave off hunger until the dinner meal was served. Along with quality tea, “tea cakes" were served with all kinds of appetizers that included mini sandwiches and other pastries as well.

What is the white stuff in tea cakes? ›

The Tunnock's Teacake is a sweet food often served with a cup of tea or coffee. It was developed by Sir Boyd Tunnock in 1956. The product consists of a small round shortbread biscuit covered with a dome of Italian meringue, a whipped egg white concoction similar to marshmallow, although somewhat lighter in texture.

What are tea cake sweets? ›

With a strong following in the Midlands, Gray's Teacakes (Tea Cakes) are a coconut flavour chewy sweet made by the same company is Gray's Herbals. Ingredients - Allergens listed in bold. Sugar, Glucose Syrup, Sweetened Condensed Milk, Margarine, Vegetable Fat, Coconut, Salt, Flavour.

What is another name for tea cake? ›

Although they are widely known, tea cakes have not always gone by this name. They are referred to as currant buns or spiced buns in some regions of the UK. Similar baked goods have different names in other nations.

How do you keep tea cake moist? ›

Using an air-tight container is the best and easiest way to keep your cake from getting exposed to air. However, if you don't have one of those, you can wrap your cake in cling film, or if it's iced, place a large inverted bowl over it to trap the air.

Why is my tea cake crumbly? ›

Why Is My Cake Crumbly? Your cake may be dry and crumbly from adding too much flour, undermixing, or baking your cake in too hot of an oven.

How do you eat tea cakes? ›

The most popular way to eat a teacake in Scotland is to eat the soft filling first and then the biscuit on the bottom according to our survey of 1 000 Scots – more than a quarter of us take the soft option. Just 7% of us start with the biscuit first before the soft filling.

Are tea cakes African American? ›

Tea cakes are an integral part of African American food culture. Originating over 250 years ago, these cookies were a recipe passed down verbally through generations. In fact, one of America's earliest tea cakes were the Edenton Tea Party Cakes.

What is Tea Cake real name? ›

Vergible Woods, known as Tea Cake, is the third husband of Janie Crawford, the protagonist of Zora Neale Hurston's novel Their Eyes Were Watching God (1937).

Why did tea cake go crazy? ›

Tea Cake's health deteriorates and the rabies warp his mind, filling him with delusional, paranoid thoughts. Janie doesn't tell him about the doctor's diagnosis. When she sneaks off to see if the medicine has arrived, Tea Cake accuses her of sneaking off to see Mrs.

What's the difference between a sponge cake and a tea cake? ›

Tea cakesare typically denser than sponge cakes as they contain more butter and are often made with a lower amount of rising agents like baking powder.

Who invented tea cakes? ›

Sir Archibald Boyd Tunnock, CBE (born 25 January 1933), is the current owner of Tunnock's, a family-owned confectionery business based in Uddingston, South Lanarkshire, UK. He is the grandson of the firm's founder, Thomas Tunnock, and inventor of the company's famous teacake, which was first produced in 1956.

What's the difference between tea cake and regular cake? ›

Tea cakesare typically denser than sponge cakes as they contain more butter and are often made with a lower amount of rising agents like baking powder.

Are tea cakes healthy? ›

Tea cakes contains 120 calories per 28 g serving. This serving contains 7 g of fat, 1 g of protein and 15 g of carbohydrate. The latter is 11 g sugar and 0 g of dietary fiber, the rest is complex carbohydrate. Tea cakes contains 3 g of saturated fat and 10 mg of cholesterol per serving.

What is a Teacake in England? ›

'Teacake' in England means a yeast raised sweetish bun with fruit, toasted and buttered and eaten with a cup of tea; in Scotland a teacake usually means the Tunnock's biscuit, marshmallow and chocolate delicacy.

What is the difference between a bun and a Teacake? ›

Teacakes are often larger and flatter with a slightly harder consistency, meaning they can be enjoyed with a range of condiments, including jams and marmalades. A Hot Cross Bun is softer, with more spices baked in, so is often just enjoyed with butter.

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