Honey Salabat Tea Cake

Updated Aug. 29, 2024

Honey Salabat Tea Cake
Chris Simpson for The New York Times Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Sophia Eleni Pappas.
Total Time
1 hour 40 minutes, plus cooling
Prep Time
10 minutes
Cook Time
1 hour 30 minutes, plus cooling
Rating
4(145)
Comments
Read comments

In the Philippines, ginger is both spice and medicine, often administered as salabat, a simple tea of fresh ginger root. Here, tea is transformed into tea cake. Arlyn Osborne, in a recipe from “Sugarcane: Sweet Recipes From My Half-Filipino Kitchen,” begins by brewing a much stronger tea than you would ever drink. The goal is to distill enough ginger to perfume and possess the cake’s every crumb. When straining the tea, press forcefully and patiently, to extract as much of the ginger’s life force as you can. (If you don’t get half a cup’s worth, add water.) More ginger follows, in powdered form, whisked into flour, and crystallized, to stud the top of the cake, after the glaze has run down the sides. Other ingredients play important roles — lemon with its streak of sun, honey mellow and deep, sour cream delivering reliable richness — but the soul of the cake is ginger. —Ligaya Mishan

Featured in: A Rich, Gingery Tea Cake With Restorative Powers

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Ingredients

Yield:One (9-by-5-inch) loaf cake

    For the Cake

    • Cooking spray, for greasing the pan
    • ½cup/80 grams diced peeled fresh ginger (from about 8 inches/85 grams ginger)
    • cups/219 grams all-purpose flour
    • 2tablespoons ground ginger
    • 1teaspoon kosher salt
    • ½teaspoon baking powder
    • ½teaspoon baking soda
    • ½cup/175 grams honey
    • ½cup/105 grams neutral oil
    • ½cup/100 grams granulated sugar
    • ¼cup/60 grams sour cream
    • 2large eggs, at room temperature
    • Grated zest of 1 large lemon (about 1 tablespoon) plus 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice
    • 1teaspoon vanilla extract

    For the Glaze and Garnish

    • Generous ¾ cup/100 grams powdered sugar
    • 1tablespoon honey
    • 2teaspoons fresh lemon juice
    • 2tablespoons finely chopped crystallized ginger, for garnish
Ingredient Substitution Guide
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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Heat oven to 350 degrees. Grease a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan with cooking spray and line with parchment paper, leaving overhang on long sides.

  2. Step 2

    Make the salabat (fresh ginger tea): In a small saucepan, add ¾ cup/180 milliliters water and the diced ginger and bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce to a very gentle simmer and cook for 5 minutes, letting the flavors infuse. Turn off the heat, cover with a lid and let steep for 10 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Place a fine-mesh sieve over a small liquid measuring cup and strain mixture, pressing with a rubber spatula to extract the salabat. (You should have ½ cup/120 milliliters. If you have less, add water.) Let cool for 10 minutes.

  4. Step 4

    Prepare the cake: In a medium bowl, whisk together flour, ground ginger, salt, baking powder and baking soda.

  5. Step 5

    In a large bowl, whisk together cooled salabat, honey, oil, sugar, sour cream, eggs, lemon zest, lemon juice and vanilla. Add flour mixture all at once and whisk until just combined. The batter will look like pancake batter.

  6. Step 6

    Scrape the batter into the prepared loaf pan. Bake until golden and a wooden skewer inserted into the cake’s center comes out clean, about 1 hour. Cover loosely with foil for the last 10 minutes of baking to prevent overbrowning.

  7. Step 7

    Transfer pan to a wire rack set inside a foil-lined sheet pan (this will catch the glaze later) and let cool for 20 minutes. Using parchment overhang as handles, lift cake onto wire rack. Discard parchment and let cake cool completely.

  8. Step 8

    Make the glaze: In a small bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar, honey, lemon juice and 1 teaspoon water. Drizzle glaze down the center of the cooled cake and spread outward, letting gravity pull long drips down the sides. Top with crystallized ginger. Let glaze set before slicing and serving.

Ratings

4 out of 5
145 user ratings
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Comments

There is no reason to buy or use spray-on cooking oil. Pour some vegetable oil onto the pan and spread all over with a paper towel. Easy. Or use butter or margarine. You can skip the parchment paper too. Fewer things cluttering up the kitchen.

Nope! Peeling ginger really isn't necessary, especially if you're going to steep it and then strain the ginger pieces out of the liquid. I don't even peel ginger when it's going in a stir fry. The papery peel just disappears as it cooks.

The parchment paper makes it possible to remove the cake from the pan by lifting it out in one piece rather than dumping and risking the likelihood of pieces sticking to the pan and ruining the cake. Bakers spray is more effective than butter or margarine which tends to be absorbed by the cake or burn on the pan. There are reasons for specific procedures. Just because something has been done a certain way for hundreds of years doesn't mean that is the most effective way of doing things today.

Delicious!! Labor intensive for the result. It was amazing, but better served as a bread, toasted and buttered, than as a cake.

This is an amazing cake that I've made several times for lots of friends. The first time I made it I had printed several recipes and glanced at another recipe which called for a tablespoon of molasses, which I added. I do believe it added a rich, deep flavor. Also, as a fan of the Great British Baking Show, I always use stem ginger (balls in sugar syrup) rather than crystallized ginger to chop and decorate the top.

Made to recipe aside from using olive oil (because that’s what I have of course) and it is delicious- the ginger flavor is in a category of its own thanks to the salabat- delicious!

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Credits

Adapted from “Sugarcane: Sweet Recipes from My Half-Filipino Kitchen” by Arlyn Osborne (Hardie Grant, 2024)

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