Tres leches cake is basically a sponge cake that’s been soaked in three kinds of milk (usually evaporated milk, condensed milk, and heavy cream) and then topped off with a layer of whipped cream. These cakes are incredibly moist and decadent.
Evaporated milk and condensed milk are both usually found in traditional thai tea recipes, making the drink more creamy and sweet. I thought the natural milky, creamy flavor of a tres leches cake would pair perfectly with the strongly spiced flavor of thai tea and I quickly came up with this thai tea tres leches cake recipe!
The recipe contains multiple steps due to all the different components that go into the cake, but the end result is definitely a show stopper. The cake drips with the beautiful thai tea flavor. Having it all pool at the bottom of any plate and then lusciously topped with light and airy thai tea flavored whipped cream.
Cake Thai Tea Soaking Liquid Thai Tea Whipped Cream Thai Tea Whipped Cream Cake Thai Tea Soaking Liquid AssemblyIngredients
Instructions
5 comments
How was the flavor? Was it alike Thai tea? I was thinking of playing with it a bit to make a chai tea of sorts. Thank you for this original recipe! I’m in love with the simplicity and tact.
Overall it has a pretty strong thai tea flavor! Most of that is thanks to the soaking liquid so I’m sure it’ll work out well if you incorporate chai tea or other teas into there!
Thank you. This is exactly what I’m looking for! I appreciate you.
Hello, I found the cake to be incredible. I added powered sugar instead of granulated, because I would be outdoors and powdered sugar has corn starch in it which helps the frosting to stay . The whipping held the entire day outdoors. In addition I used tazo chai tea because the additives in the Thai tea are scary. I also blended up the tazo chai tea and powdered the top of the cake. It was beautiful. The cake was firm and held when I transfered it to a larger cake glassware. I had a serving dish with boba to add on top and people really loved it. Thank you!
Do you think it would work as a layered cake if I did a couple of 8″ rounds, or would it be too moist to keep it’s structure? thanks