Tea Cakes, A Brief History - The Local Palate (2024)

From baptisms and funerals to protests and wars, these cookies have seen Southerners through it all

Outside the South, the words “tea cake” meananycake served with tea. But to Southerners, tea cakes are more than that. They are the nostalgic cookies—crispy and golden around the edges, soft and cake-like inside—that are perfect for tea, or just about anything else you choose to drink.

Originating as the classic Quaker jumble more than 250 years ago, the tea cake morphed into its pillowy, wonderful self once baking soda and baking powder came along. Early tea cakes went by names like Jackson Jumbles and Democratic Tea Cakes, powerful monikers for a cookie. And depending on where you grew up and what was in your larder, the tea cake might have been slightly salty from lard, rich from butter, or fluffy from vegetable shortening. It might have been stamped into rounds or dropped with floured hands like a biscuit onto a pan. It might have been scented with lemon, sometimes nutmeg, always vanilla. And that recipe was yours, as distinct as DNA. It spoke about your family history. And like your social security number, you didn’t share it.

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For my book, American Cookie, I interviewed a half dozen cooks who were known for tea cakes, and none of them would offer their recipes. It was through sheer experimentation that I figured out how to make them. And in that journey, I learned of their unique place in the South where family stories were swapped and politics discussed. In fact, one of our country’s earliest tea cakes were the Edenton Tea Party Cakes, served in Edenton, North Carolina, in 1774 by a group of women protesting the British tax on imported tea. They baked these revolutionary little cakes, but they didn’t sip British tea that day.

Tea cakes are most associated with the enslaved people of the South who baked them for slaveholders—and for their own families, too. When many of them left the South after the Civil War, they took their recipes with them; tea cakes have been baked and talked about in African American kitchens for generations.

Today, old-fashioned tea cakes are still made for family reunions and holidays. And we also bake little cakes like the 1830s’ Marguerites—tiny sugar cookies dabbed with jam and cloaked in browned meringue. Or we bake ladyfingers, or cookies called “teas.” My grandmother in Tennessee was known for her cookie called Purcell’s Afternoon Teas. I have tried to find the origin of this recipe but have come up short. I remember it as my grandmother’s cookie for special guests. It was topped with a pecan half or a candied cherry at Christmas.Baking them each year reminds me of her.

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Just take a glance at nineteenth- and twentieth-century cookbooks and you’ll see that tea cakes have been in the room throughout American history. They were served before the Revolutionary War, when presidential campaigns began, during Prohibition and the women’s suffrage movement, for religious gatherings, at barn raisings and baptisms, and to console after funerals. But tea cakes themselves are more backstage than front. They’re soft, little cakes with a rich history that tie us to the generations of people who baked them before us.

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Purcell’s Afternoon Teas

My grandmother Dee made these cookies all year for special events. The recipe is old enough that it most likely originated with her mother. Dee baked them for birthdays, summer parties, and ladies’ events like book club and bridge and church. They pair well with iced tea, and hold their own on the Christmas sideboard with all the fruitcakes, decorated cookies, and eggnog.

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Edenton Tea Party Cakes

On October 25, 1774, Penelope Barker invited fifty-one women from five counties in Eastern North Carolina to come to the Edenton home of Elizabeth King for a party. There would be tea cakes, but no tea because the ladies were protesting the British Tea Act of 1773. They signed a petition to say “in proof of [our] patriotism” they would not bring British tea or cloth into their homes “until such time that all acts which tend to enslave our Native country shall be repealed.” It was a silent protest and served as the first recorded organized political event for women.

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Chocolate Cardamom Tea Cakes

It’s doubtful that the cooks of yesteryear incorporated chocolate or cardamom into their tea cakes. When chocolate did finally make its way into cake baking, it was first as a glaze—think the Boston Cream Pie—and then in chunks (Toll House Cookies, for instance). Today, it’s everywhere. In this recipe, the cocoa serves as a type of flour, adding color and flavor.

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Marguerites

If you top a nutmeg-scented sugar cookie with a dab of fruit jam, then pile on meringue and bake until lightly browned, you have a Marguerite. This was a cookie baked in wealthy households where sugar was available and jam was put up from summer fruit. The following recipe is adapted from one in The Carolina Housewife by Sarah Rutledge, published in 1847. It’s remarkable that nearly 200 years later her method has stood the test of time.

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Old-Fashioned Tea Cakes

If we go back to 1872 whenAnnabella P. Hill wrote her book,Mrs. Hill’s Southern Practical Cookery and Receipt Book, tea cakes were leavened with a little baking soda, rolled thinly, and baked in a hot oven. You could say they were offshoots of British tea “biscuits” or cookies, except they had been Americanized with the addition of this new leavening.

The Edenton Tea Party Cakes, Old-Fashioned Tea Cakes, and Marguerites recipes appear with permission from American Cookie, by Anne Byrn (Rodale/Penguin Random House, 2018.)

This story was originally published in the November 2018 Issue.

Tea Cakes, A Brief History - The Local Palate (2024)

FAQs

Tea Cakes, A Brief History - The Local Palate? ›

Tea cakes are most associated with the enslaved people of the South who baked them for slaveholders—and for their own families, too. When many of them left the South after the Civil War, they took their recipes with them; tea cakes have been baked and talked about in African American kitchens for generations.

How does Tea Cake manipulate Janie? ›

Tea Cake has the personality to make Janie think that maybe this man might give her the sort of love for which she has been waiting. Tea Cake leads Janie to discover things about herself she never knew in her years with Nanny, Logan, or Joe. He teaches her how to play checkers, how to handle guns, and how to shoot.

What is Tea Cake's real name in their eyes were watching God? ›

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).

What is the history of the Tea Cake? ›

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.

Which best describes Tea Cake's intent in mentioning Janie and Mrs. Turner to Mr. Turner? ›

He wants Mr. Turner to encourage Mrs. Turner to find fulfilling activities.

How did Tea Cake abuse Janie? ›

Instantly jealous, Tea Cake preemptively whips Janie in order to make sure she doesn't cheat on him. Upon observing Janie's bruises, Sop-de-Bottom and other men around the muck express jealousy to Tea Cake, as they too desire control over a woman like Janie.

What does Tea Cake teach Janie to do while they are waiting for the beans to grow? ›

He plans to pick beans during the day and play guitar and roll dice at night. As the season begins, Tea Cake and Janie live a comfortable life. They plant beans, Tea Cake teaches Janie how to shoot a gun, and they go hunting together. She eventually develops into a better shot than he.

Did Janie truly love Tea Cake? ›

They are able to resolve these class differences when Janie reveals to Tea Cake that she wants to be with him, no matter where he is or who his friends are. Yet again, Janie realizes her powerful love for Tea Cake, especially after his absence and his injuries. She feels a "self-crushing" love for her husband.

What did Tea Cake do with Janie's $200? ›

He tells a relieved Janie that he did indeed take her $200. He had never had so much money in his life before and decided to put on a party. He partied with all the railroad hands and spent all but $12.

What does Tea Cake's death symbolize in Their Eyes Were Watching God? ›

The moment of Tea Cake's death, though horrible for Janie to endure, reflects how much she has grown as a person and how secure she has become.

What was tea cakes story? ›

In fact, one of our country's earliest tea cakes were the Edenton Tea Party Cakes, served in Edenton, North Carolina, in 1774 by a group of women protesting the British tax on imported tea. They baked these revolutionary little cakes, but they didn't sip British tea that day.

Is Tea Cake black? ›

Tea cakes are a traditional African American treat that dates back to the 1600s.

Is Tea Cake white or black? ›

In the Southeastern United States, a teacake is a traditional dense large cookie, made with sugar, butter, eggs, flour, milk, and flavoring. They are particularly associated with the African-American community and were originally developed as an analog of the pastries served to guests by white women when entertaining.

Why does Mrs Turner try to refuse Tea Cake's help? ›

Turner directly bashes Tea Cake for being darker skinned than Janie, and implies that her own brother would be a better fit for Janie because he has straight hair and light skin. She talks to Janie because of Janie's skin color: Mrs. Turner has finally found somebody who is good enough for her company.

Why does Mrs Turner disapprove of Tea Cake? ›

Mrs. Turner does not approve of Tea Cake because his skin is too dark and thinks Janie should be with her brother, instead. Mrs. Turner doesn't believe it when Janie tells her she and Tea Cake have a real love and so much fun together.

Why does Tea Cake whip Janie? ›

Tea Cake begins to identify Janie as his possession. Because he feels threatened after Janie meets Mrs. Turner's brother, he strikes his wife to reassure himself that Janie belongs to him and no one else.

What does Tea Cake decide to do to assert his control over Janie? ›

It is then that Tea Cake conceives a plan that involves slapping Janie. For him, slapping his wife is an assertion of his role as a husband, and it is a gesture that the other migrants, as well as Mrs. Turner, will understand.

Is Tea Cake a good or bad influence on Janie? ›

His presence makes Janie more confident in her desire to gain independence, and his support makes her believe that her ideas make sense and may come true soon. However, at the same time, Tea Cake does not want to leave Janie and chooses a form of control that is not always clear to the reader.

How does Tea Cake repay Janie? ›

The money that Tea Cake took from Janie will be replaced through Tea Cake's skill in gambling.

How does Tea Cake make Janie practice shooting? ›

How does Tea Cake make Janie practice shooting? shoot little things to make her aim better. she shoots rifle,pistol and shotgun and she became a better shooter than him. Why does Janie make dessert every night?

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