This delightful Earl Grey Chiffon Cake is the perfect sweet treat for an afternoon snack. It’s light, spongy, and airy, with a lovely fragrance and calming citrus flavor from the bergamot orange oil in the tea. Tea-infused baked goods and chiffon cakes are very popular in Japan, and for good reason. Follow my simple techniques for a beautiful cake that’s surprisingly easy to make at home.
Have you tried Earl Grey flavored baked goods before? How about baking with tea leaves? If you haven’t, you must try this Earl Grey chiffon cake. Earl Grey is a tea blend with a delightful and calming citrus flavor. The citrus flavor comes from oil extracted from the rind of a bergamot orange.
As Earl Grey is my all-time favorite tea, all kinds of baked goods infused with Earl Grey tea are my top choices in bakeries. Given my love for sweets, I would even rank any Earl Grey flavored baked goods higher than chocolate. I am not kidding! From Earl Grey cookies, and Earl Grey pound cake to this Earl Grey chiffon, I can never resist any of them.
Tea-Infused Baked Goods
After living in the U.S., I realized tea-infused baked goods are not as popular compared to Japan. This actually motivated me to learn how to bake so that I can enjoy my favorite Earl Grey baked goods at home.
If you haven’t tried making a chiffon cake before, you will have to trust me when I say it’s one of the easiest cakes to bake. Not an experienced baker? Not to worry. I used to think it would be intimidating to bake chiffon cake as well, but it turned out to be less challenging than I had presumed. Once you understand the simple techniques, it will be one of your favorite cake recipes to bake at home.
Tips to Make Airy Chiffon Cake
The most crucial part to make a successful chiffon cake is to make perfect meringue and fold it into batter correctly.
Meringue
In Japan, the majority of recipes call for cold egg whites to make meringue (and we don’t use cream of tartar). If you already know how to make meringue with room-temperature egg whites and cream of tartar, please use your own method. Otherwise, you can follow my detailed instructions in the recipe.
Fold In
When you finish making meringue, make sure to fold in egg whites gently so the tiny bubbles don’t deflate. If you deflate the egg whites too much, the cake will not be fluffy.
How to Make the Perfect Chiffon Cake
- Have a question on chiffon cake making?
- Do you have a different size chiffon cake pan?
I answered your questions in this post.
More Chiffon Cake Recipes
Chiffon cakes are my daughter’s favorite cake because she can help me make them and we enjoy making different types together. What I like best about chiffon cakes is they are so fluffy and bouncy, and not too sweet. The sponge-like texture is exceptionally light and airy and I feel like I can gobble up half of the cake myself.
It is also slightly healthier than other types of baked goods that use plenty of butter. This earl grey chiffon cake recipe uses just 3 Tbsp. of oil. With a faint citrus aroma, it makes the perfect cake to enjoy in an idyllic afternoon when you have some good friends over.
If you love to experiment with different flavors, check out other delicious variations below:
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Earl Grey Chiffon Cake
Video
Ingredients
- 2 tsp Earl Grey loose tea leaves (for the tea powder)
- 1 Tbsp Earl Grey loose tea leaves (for the strong brewed tea)
- 6 Tbsp hot water (just boiled)
- 3 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) (yolks and whites separated)
- 85 g sugar (½ cup minus 1 Tbsp; 3 oz; divided into thirds)
- 40 ml neutral oil (3 Tbsp minus 1 tsp)
- 75 g cake flour (⅔ cup minus 2 tsp; weigh your flour or use the “fluff and sprinkle“ method and level it off; you can make Homemade Cake Flour)
- 1 tsp baking powder
For Serving
- confectioners’ sugar (for dusting; optional)
Instructions
- Before You Start: Gather all the ingredients. I highly encourage you to weigh your ingredients using a kitchen scale for this recipe. Click on the “Metric“ button at the top of the recipe to convert the ingredient measurements to metric. If you‘re using a cup measurement, please follow the “fluff and sprinkle“ method: Fluff your flour with a spoon, sprinkle the flour into your measuring cup, and level it off. Otherwise, you may scoop more flour than you need.
- Preheat the oven to 340ºF (170ºC). For a convection oven, reduce the cooking temperature by 25ºF (15ºC). You will need a 17-cm (7-inch) chiffon cake pan. If you have a different size pan, read this post to adjust the ingredient measurements. Make sure you use an aluminum pan with a removable base (read my blog post for more details). Please see my Notes at the end of this recipe for additional details on ingredients, equipment, and techniques.
- To make tea powder, put 2 tsp Earl Grey loose tea leaves in a food processor (I used a Nutribullet here). Grind them to a fine powder. Alternatively, you can use a mortar and pestle to grind the tea leaves, or put tea leaves in a bag and crush them. Transfer to a small bowl and set it aside.
- To brew strong tea, put 1 Tbsp Earl Grey loose tea leaves in a fine sieve over a bowl. Next, pour 6 Tbsp hot water over the tea leaves to steep. Let it cool, then remove the tea leaves. Measure 4 Tbsp (60 ml) of this brewed tea and set it aside.
- Separate 3 large eggs (50 g each w/o shell) into egg yolks and whites. Keep the eggs whites in a stand mixer bowl; refrigerate or freeze the bowl and egg whites for 15 minutes until cold. (It‘s okay if the egg whites are partially frozen). Tip: In Japan, we chill the egg whites to make smooth, fine-textured meringue and do not use cream of tartar.
To Mix the Batter
- Start mixing the batter. In a large bowl, beat the egg yolks and one-third of the 85 g sugar with a hand whisk. Whisk vigorously until it‘s a creamy pale yellow color.
- Add 40 ml neutral oil and 4 Tbsp brewed tea to the egg mixture. Whisk all together until combined.
- Add the powdered Earl Grey tea to the egg mixture and mix well.
- To a flour sifter or fine-mesh sieve, add 75 g cake flour and 1 tsp baking powder. Sift one-third of this flour mixture into the egg yolk mixture. Whisk by hand to incorporate the dry ingredients well. Check that there are no lumps in the batter, then sift another one-third of the flour mixture into the bowl. Mix to incorporate. Then, sift in the rest of the flour mixture and whisk until just combined; do not overmix. Make sure there are no lumps in the batter. Set aside while you beat the meringue.
To Make the Meringue
- Take out the bowl of egg whites from the refrigerator or freezer. Set the bowl on the stand mixer with a whisk attachment (I used the KitchenAid Professional Series). Start whipping the egg whites on medium-low speed (Speed 4) until the egg whites are bubbly, opaque, and foamy.Add another one-third of the sugar and continue whisking for 30 seconds. Then, increase the mixer speed to high (Speed 10) and gradually add the remaining sugar in small increments. Beat vigorously until stiff peaks form. It takes about 2 minutes of beating at high speed to reach stiff peaks. Tip: I usually pause beating when the egg whites are almost done. Take off the whisk attachment from the mixer and use it to hand-mix the looser egg whites near the bowl‘s edge into the stiffer whites near the center until it‘s all homogenous in texture. Then, put the whisk back on and continue beating.To check for stiff peaks, pull up your whisk. The meringue in the bowl or on the whisk should be firm enough to hold a peak, pointing straight up (or maybe folding over a little bit just at the very tips). By this time, the meringue should have a glossy texture, too. Tip: If you overbeat the meringue, it will become very stiff and grainy and won‘t incorporate into the batter at all.
To Fold In the Meringue
- Using a spatula or hand whisk, add one-third of the meringue into the batter. Mix well by hand until it‘s homogeneous.
- Gently fold in the rest of the meringue in 2 or 3 increments. Take care not to deflate the air bubbles in the meringue and batter as you fold. Once it‘s well combined and homogenous, fold the batter one last time and scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl to make sure there is no tea powder accumulation. The final batter should fall in ribbons when you lift the spatula or whisk.
To Bake
- Prepare an ungreased 17-cm (7-inch) chiffon cake pan. From 6–8 inches high, pour the batter into the pan at just one spot to prevent air pockets from forming. While holding the removable base in place, gently tap the pan a few times on the work surface to release any air pockets in the batter. Run a wooden skewer through the batter to release any remaining air pockets.
- Put the cake pan on the middle rack of the preheated oven. Bake at 340ºF (170ºC) for 30 minutes. To check if it‘s finished baking, insert a toothpick or wooden skewer into the middle of the cake. If it comes out clean and the top of the cake springs back when gently pressed, it‘s done. Tip: If the top of the cake gets dark too quickly, cover the top loosely with aluminum foil to prevent burning. (The cake may be too close to the heat source.)
- Remove the cake pan from the oven and gently drop the pan onto the work surface to shock the cake. This stops the cake from shrinking. To cool the cake, prepare a tall, heavy bottle with a long neck, such as a glass wine bottle. Invert the center tube of the cake pan onto the bottle‘s neck and let the cake cool completely in its pan. Cooling the cake upside down helps it stretch downward and maintain its loft.Once the cake is completely cool, run a long offset spatula around the outer edge of the pan and a small offset spatula around the inner tube. Gently take out the removable base and cake from the outer pan. Then, run the offset spatula along the bottom of the cake to release it from the base. Tip: I used to use a knife for this step, but the tip of the knife tends to poke the cake while moving around, so I now recommend using offset spatulas.
To Serve
- Invert the cake with the removable base onto a plate or cake stand. The cake will slide off the inner tube. Chiffon cake is served “upside down” with the flat bottom on top. Dust confectioners’ sugar on top, if you‘d like. Slice and enjoy.
To Store
- I strongly recommend consuming the cake sooner for the best freshness. However, you can keep the cake covered on a plate or stand at room temperature in a cooler place for 1–2 days. To keep it longer, wrap individual slices in plastic wrap or put in an airtight container and store in the refrigerator for 3 days or in the freezer for 2 weeks.
Notes
- Make sure your beaters and mixing bowl are clean and dry. A speck of oil or egg yolk on either one can minimize the volume of the beaten egg whites.
- Avoid plastic bowls, as even clean ones may hold oily residue that can affect the beaten quality of the egg whites.
- Use a bowl that’s wide enough to keep the beaters from being buried in the egg whites.
- Do not overbeat or underbeat the egg whites or your cake may fall. Egg whites should have a stiff peak, pointing straight up (or maybe a little bit folding over just at the very tips).
Nutrition
Editor’s Note: This post was originally published on June 7, 2015. The blog content has been updated with more information.
Hello Nami,
I made this cake with a bundt cake pan because I didn’t have an angel food cake pan, and the cake stuck completely to the pan! I was able to scoop it out in pieces and it was delicious, but I was wondering… is the reason it stuck because I used the wrong pan? Or maybe I did something else wrong? Egg whites not airy enough? Thank you! Megan.
Hi Megan! I’ve heard from some readers that they used a bundt cake, so you’re not the first. But I’m not too sure if they greased the pan. For a chiffon cake pan, we do NOT grease the pan. If you follow my recipe, you probably didn’t? I wonder that’s why the batter stuck to the pan… The cake is supposed to cling to the pan, so oil is not good (slippery) for chiffon cake pan. Was the cake texture fluffy? I wonder if it could rise as it should be. If you think egg white (meringue) was successful, I think the only part was the cake pan. I wish I could help, but it’s hard to know what went wrong without being in the kitchen with you… 🙂
Hi Nammi,
I love your website and the recipes. Its so generous of you sharing all your secret recipes with us all. Just wondering if I’m using a 8 inch cake tin, how should i adjust the ingredients? plus do you hv more flavor of chiffon recipe to share?
Thankssss
Vivian
Hi Vivian! Thank you for your kind words! As this is 7 inch chiffon cake and you will use 8″ pan, the cake will become flatter for sure. Are you using the chiffon cake, or regular round pan? If it’s round, I think it’s even flatter… You will need to figure out the volume and calculate how many % more.
I also have green tea chiffon cake recipe: https://www.justonecookbook.com/green-tea-chiffon-cake/
Hope this helps! 🙂
Hi Nami, I made this cake last week and really love it so much! Even though it was not as perfect as yours. I notice you mention large eggs in your recipe. How many grams is the egg? I used the 700gr eggs and I think the yolk looks smaller than yours and I am wondering whether this what caused my batter looks dryer than yours. Thank you so much for your reply and I am looking fwd to make this cake again! 🙂
Hi Nelly! Yay! I’m so happy to hear you liked this recipe!
According to this site (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_egg_sizes), American large egg is 54.4 grams (mass) and 46 mL (3.25 tbsp) (cooking yield). You will need 3 eggs for this recipe. Did you put 700 grams, or was it typo…?
Thank you Nami for this yummy recipe! I tried it yesterday, and although it tasted wonderful, my cake did not rise well. Then I noticed on the “Green Tea Chiffon” recipe that you mention that non-stick pans will not work, so that was my mistake! I really appreciate the amount of detail that you include in your directions.
Hi Tamu! Thank you for trying this recipe! Yes, if it’s non-stick pan, it’s hard to “climb up”. Some people use paper mold, which might work better than non-stick. 🙂 I’m glad to hear my recipe was helpful. 🙂
Hello!
This is a wonderful recipe, thank you Nami!
I was just wondering whether you have any advice on adapting this for an 8 inch tin instead?
Your recipe in an 8 inch tin is still wonderfully light and tasty but asthetically, it doesn’t quite reach that height!
Thanks again!
Hi Alexandra! Thank you for trying this recipe! I’m so glad you enjoyed this recipe. 8-inch measurement can be found here:
https://www.justonecookbook.com/perfect-chiffon-cake/
Hope that helps!
Hi Nami, I am new to your website. Your recipes are lovely! I want to make this earl grey chiffon cake today. Anyway, what is the song that is playing in your youtube video for this earl grey chiffon cake?
Hi Nelly! Welcome to my blog! So glad you found my site! The song is called “Crazy Like Me”:
http://www.audionetwork.com/browse/m/track/crazy-like-me_56382
I put the name of music in every video under description box on YouTube, in case you are interested in other music. 🙂
Thank you for your comment!
I am making this tomorrow! I’ve never made a chiffon cake, but I love baking with tea so I’m excited to give this recipe a go.
Hi Molly! I hope you enjoy this recipe! The meringue is the key to this recipe. Hope yours will come out well. 🙂
Everything came out perfectly! I used mini bundt and mini loaf pans. They are adorable and absolutely delicious, even according to someone who doesn’t like earl grey tea! A+ recipe.
Hi Molly! Thank you so much for your kind feedback! I’m really happy to hear you liked the recipe. And thanks for letting us know about mini bundt cake and mini loaf pans so that other readers will be able to use them. 🙂 Thank you!!
Thanks for the recipe, it was delicious! I ended up doubling the recipe because I only had a 10 inch angel food cake tin, but it worked out just fine.
Hi Michelle! I’m so happy to hear you liked this recipe and doubling the recipe worked! Thanks so much for letting me know angel cake pan worker too! 🙂
hi 🙂 your recipe looks wonderful, I was wondering if I could try it with a 23 cm pan instead!
Hi, I’ve just made this cake for tea and it’s the best chiffon cake my husband & I’ve ever eaten 😀 Thank you for the recipe ; )
Hi Frances! Thank you so much for your kind feedback. I’m happy to hear you and your husband enjoyed this recipe! Isn’t it so delicious? Wish I have a slice right now… 🙂
Very disappointed to find that I can’t sign up for your email newsletter. .co.uk email addresses are invalid apparently…
Hi Heather! I am not sure why my subscribing system didn’t add your email address but I just added your email address manually. However, you are required to “confirm” the subscription. Please check your inbox (or spam if you can’t find any email). Thank you so much for subscribing to my blog! 🙂
Hi Nami-san!
My mother once found this recipe for earl grey tea muffins and they tasted delicious! It was too bad that she lost the sheet though. Thanks to you, I can make something similar to it! 🙂 I was just wondering whether we can turn these into muffins, or just put it in a regular cake pan. Also whether we can use different tea brands because I have a collection of earl grey tea and I’m not sure whether it would change the overall flavour of the product. I’m looking forward to making this! Thanks, Nami-san!
Megumi
Hi Megumi-san!
1) Some readers told me that they tried with Russian Earl Grey and lavender earl grey and it was very good! 🙂
2) If you really want a chiffon cake, you need a chiffon cake pan…. or Angel food cake pan… The cake has to climb up so you can’t use non-stick material and you also need to invert the cake pan after baking the cake. With muffin pan, I feel it’s not optimal. However I have some readers told me to use muffin pans to make my other chiffon cake (matcha) and they loved it. So… it’s up to you. 😀
Hope you enjoy!
Thanks a lot! I made it today and it tasted delicious! I made three of them they were so good!
Megumi
I’m so happy to hear you liked the recipe! Thank you so much for your kind feedback, Megumi-san!
Hi Nami!
Nice looking cake! I hope I can make it as beautiful as you do in your recipe. Wishing you an enjoyable and safe trip in Japan with your family this Summer!
Thanks so much Marguerite! I’m sure yours will come out well! Good luck! 🙂
Hello Nami,
I just tried making your chiffon cake, and oh my it is so delicious. I just have a quick question regarding the tea. I noticed you have another chiffon cake recipe that used green tea powder, i was wondering if i can use the method for this cake but with green tea leaves instead? The reason why is because i have plenty of green tea leaves, but hardly any green tea powder where i live.
thank you very much
Hi Thuyanh! Thank you so much for trying my recipe! Yes the other recipe is Matcha Chiffon Cake (https://www.justonecookbook.com/green-tea-chiffon-cake/). Green tea powder (matcha) and green tea leaves (even though you make it to powder) are different, so you can’t substitute with ground green tea leaves. Green tea is too subtle and doesn’t have too much flavor unlike green tea powder… so it won’t work. 🙁
Can anyone pls advise what is the difference between an angel cake pan and a chiffon cake pan? Thank you.
Hi Shirley! I thought this explains well:
http://www.cupcakeproject.com/2008/04/chiffon-cake-vs-angel-food-cake.html
Hope that helps! 🙂
Thanks for sharing this, seems a brillant falvor for tea lovers! I just learnt to bake chiffon cakes 2 months ago and I’ve already baked it (with different falvors!) ~6 times, and as you said, with few simple techniques, it will turn amazing each time!
Any idea if we can use any other tea flavors (e.g., Twinings fruit teas)?
Hi Maram! I’m so happy to hear you enjoy making chiffon cakes too! The other types that I like is Matcha Chiffon Cake (recipe here: https://www.justonecookbook.com/green-tea-chiffon-cake/) and Hojicha (a type of Japanese tea). The fruity flavor sounds fabulous!
Thanks dear, will try it for sure 🙂
Hello Nami – May I ask what brand of earl grey tea leaves do you use?
Hi Alana! I use Republic of Tea brand but can be any other brand, but use good tea! 🙂
http://amzn.to/1QmF8Qf