Cha Yen (Thai Iced Tea)

- Total Time
- 20 minutes, plus chilling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 4tablespoons loose red rooibos tea leaves (or the contents of 10 rooibos tea bags)
- 3tablespoons loose black tea leaves (or the contents of 7 black tea bags)
- 3tablespoons granulated sugar
- 10star anise pods, broken into pieces or roughly chopped
- 10whole cloves
- ½cup half-and-half
- ½cup sweetened condensed milk
- 1tablespoon vanilla extract
- Ice, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Add 4 cups water to a medium saucepan. Cover with a lid and bring to a boil. Remove from the heat. Add rooibos tea, black tea, sugar, star anise and cloves; cover and let steep, 10 minutes. Strain tea, pressing on tea leaves and spices to extract as much liquid as possible, then discarding solids. Refrigerate tea until chilled, at least 1 hour.
- Step 2
In a measuring glass, stir together the half-and-half, condensed milk and vanilla extract.
- Step 3
Fill a pint glass with ice. Add ¾ cup tea mixture and top with about 2½ tablespoons condensed milk mixture. Serve immediately.
Private Notes
Comments
How many glasses (8 oz) does this make?
In lieu of the regular black tea, I strongly suggest Lapsang-Souchong (link below), which is rich and smoky and adds an irreplaceable depth. I also like to add some cardamom pods to the steeping. https://theteaspot.com/lapsang-souchong-black-tea.html
If you have 4 cups of water plus 1/2 c H&H and 1/2 cup Cond milk that’s 5 cups or 5 servings. Assuming one actually measures out 8 ozs per serving. For a lot of people I am assuming you can double or triple the ingredients
Love this take on Thai iced tea — the rooibos adds such a nice depth. I’ve been playing with similar blends and found one from https://avodahmugsandteas.com/ that works beautifully for recipes like this. Worth checking out if you're into bold, spice-forward teas!
Made all summer long! Be sure to use a bold black tea, you’re going for the opposite of weak tea here. Tried with both half and half and coconut milk- stick with the dairy if you are able. It’s fun to tinker with the spices from batch to batch!
Made this with high school students. Big success.
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