This Earl Grey Cake is perfect for the tea lover in your life! Earl Grey infused cake layers paired with a silky vanilla bean buttercream.

There is nothing quite like having to call the fire department while you’re in the middle of making a cake. And no, this was not due to another incident with the kitchen torch. It actually had nothing to do with my baking at all (hah!), but it certainly made for a more eventful Thursday than I had planned.
It all started with an odd smell in the kitchen. I went in there late morning to start making the buttercream for this Earl Grey Cake and smelled this weird mechanical/chemical kinda smell (not gas). I thought maybe it was the landscapers with their various electric tool things (lol, I have no idea what they are called), but the smell didn’t dissipate after they left, and actually got stronger.

In typical Olivia fashion, I started to freak out, half-finished cake still sitting on the counter. I have a pretty wild imagination so I started picturing faulty wiring in the walls, smoking and starting an electrical fire (for real). Our place is 30 years old (we’ve only been here for a year) and has had some work done to it. Some of the stuff here has been DIY’d, and I have no idea what’s inside the walls.
Anyhow, due to fears of an electrical fire (lol, sigh), I went and turned off all of the breakers leading to anything in the kitchen. Sure enough, the smell faded away. This confirmed my fears that it was something electrical. So, naturally, I went to Google to see what to do. As always, Google is so helpful. No matter what you look up, you’re either dying or you’re going to die. Everything was like: “Get out of the house!”,”You’re gonna die!”, “Call the fire department”. So I did.

I had to psych myself up to do it though. The thought of a fire truck outside my door, neighbors gawking and wondering wtf was going on, I just didn’t want to deal with it. But I also didn’t want out place to burn down, so… I literally had an internal pep talk before I dialled the number.
Anyhow, the fire department arrives. I could hear their sirens as I was pacing the floor, wondering if somehow they could be discreet (lol). They checked stuff out as much as they could, using their heat sensor things, but couldn’t find anything. I was hoping they’d be like — ok, turn on each of the breakers one by one and we’ll see. Unfortunately, they said they weren’t qualified to assess that and that I’d need to call an electrician, but to leave all the breakers off. SIGH. At least I was assured that nothing was currently on fire? I guess?

So off I go to Google again to find an electrician who can come TODAY. ASAP. I was cringing at the amount I would be charged for this emergency visit. I get off the phone with the guy, who says he’ll be here in a couple hours, and turn the breaker for the fridge back on because, HELLO, I have a cake in there.
As soon as I get back upstairs I smell it again. It’s easy to get behind our fridge, so I pull it out and start smelling the outlet. LOL I am SUCH a freak/loser/whatever. I thought for sure it was coming from there, but then I hear a zap from the back of the fridge. Aha! My nose leads me to the bottom of the back of the fridge, where there is this grate, and that’s where the smell is coming from. Thank god. I was so relived it wasn’t something in the walls!!
I cancelled the electrician (yay!).

I didn’t realize at that point that the fridge had actually DIED. I thought it was just on its last legs and that we should probably look at buying one on the weekend. After the whole ordeal (and finishing this cake), I went into the freezer to get a popsicle (it was super hot that day). The popsicle was basically mush. Oh *&^%. The fridge is DEAD. Ooookay, so off I went to the appliance store (alone, Ryan was at work and the shop closes at 5:30pm, seriously) to buy one that day.
Thankfully they had one they could deliver on Saturday, so it wouldn’t be too bad. We put what we could into our (already packed and very small) second fridge/freezer, but there was still a lot left in the fridge. It was keeping things cool-ish as it died, but by Saturday morning when we opened it up, the air that came out of there was warmer than the air outside. Gross.
So, a bit of an ordeal and some food loss, but it all worked out in the end. And we finally have a new fridge, which I’ve wanted since the day we moved in. Now, let’s talk about this Earl Grey Cake, shall we? Because it’s a winner.

I’d had an Earl Grey Cake on my radar for a while now, but it seemed like more of a “Fall” type cake (cozy sweaters, warm tea, etc.), so I waited until it was closer to Fall season. The days are getting shorter and cooler (I’m actually wearing a sweater as I type this – insert happy face).
Earl Grey is traditionally a black tea that is flavored with bergamot (citrus). I say traditionally because you can now get rooibos and even green tea versions of Earl Grey. I prefer the traditional one, although mine has a bit of a twist too. My favorite is a Cream of Earl Grey which adds a hint of vanilla to the classic beverage. It really takes it to a whole ‘nother level of deliciousness. I used Cream of Earl Grey tea in the cake, but you can use any kind you like.
You don’t have to love tea to love this cake! Ryan is not a tea drinker at all, and he loved the unique flavor it has — though I will say that if you are not a fan of Earl Grey, it might not be up your alley. The Earl Grey tea is infused into the cake layers in many levels, so it is very prominent. I paired it with a simple vanilla bean buttercream to compliment the creamy Earl Grey flavors.

Tips for this Earl Grey Cake:
- If you don’t like Earl Grey tea, you can experiment with other tea flavors. I used Cream of Earl Grey for this cake.
- The Earl Grey syrup is optional (I forgot to add it even though I had it made), but it will enhance the flavor of the cake even more, and will add moisture.
- I used the tea leaves as garnish on the cake for the pictures, but do not recommend doing this as they are rather unpleasant to chew on!
- Be sure to check my Swiss Meringue Buttercream post for tips and troubleshooting.
- To help ensure your cake layers bake up nice and flat, see my Flat Top Cakes post.

Earl Grey Cake With Vanilla Bean Buttercream
Ingredients
Earl Grey Milk:
- 1 1/2 cup milk
- 1 Tbsp Earl Grey tea heaping, loose leaf
Cake:
- 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1 tsp Earl Grey tea finely ground
- 3/4 tsp salt
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 3 large eggs room temperature
- 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 cup Earl Grey milk room temperature
Earl Grey Syrup (optional):
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup water
- 1 Tbsp Earl Grey tea
Vanilla Bean Buttercream:
- 3 large egg whites
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 1/2 cups unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla bean paste
Instructions
Earl Grey Milk:
- Bring milk and tea to a boil in a small pot over med-high heat. Turn heat off and steep for 10mins. Strain and measure out 1 cup. Top up with milk if needed.
Cake:
- Preheat oven to 350F. Grease and flour three 6″ cake rounds and line with parchment.
- In a medium bowl, whisk flour, baking powder, tea,and salt until well combined. Set aside.
- Using a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, cream butter and sugar on med-high until pale and fluffy (approx 3mins). Reduce speed and add eggs one at a time fully incorporating after each addition. Add vanilla.
- Alternate adding flour mixture and Earl Grey milk, beginning and ending with flour (3 additions of flour and 2 of milk). Fully incorporating after each addition.
- Bake for approx. 35mins or until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out mostly clean.
- Place cakes on wire rack to cool for 10mins then turn out onto wire rack. Allow cakes to cool completely.
Earl Grey Syrup:
- Place sugar, water, and tea into a small pot. Bring to a boil and simmer 2 mins. Remove from heat, steep for 5 mins. Strain and cool completely.
Vanilla Bean Buttercream:
- Place egg whites and sugar into the bowl of a stand mixer, whisk until combined.*
- Place bowl over a double boiler on the stove and whisk constantly until the mixture is hot (160F) and no longer grainy to the touch (approx. 3mins).
- Place bowl on your stand mixer and whisk on med-high until the meringue is stiff and cooled (the bowl is no longer warm to the touch (approx. 5-10mins)).
- Switch to paddle attachment. Slowly add cubed butter and mix until smooth.** Add vanilla bean paste and mix until incorporated.
Assembly:
- Place one layer of cake on a cake stand or serving plate. Brush with 2-3 Tbsp of the Earl Grey syrup.
- Top with approximately 2/3 cup of buttercream and spread evenly. Repeat with remaining layers. Frost and smooth the outside with a thin crumb coat. Chill for 20mins.
- Pipe rosettes on top of desired using a 1M tip.***
Notes
** The buttercream may look like it’s curdled at some point. Keep mixing until it is completely smooth.
*** I used tea leaves as garnish on the cake for the pictures, but do not recommend doing this as they are rather unpleasant to chew on!
CP says
If I can’t grind the earl grey tea (we don’t have a grinder), it there any other alternative or can I leave it out?
Olivia says
Hi CP! I would leave it out and maybe make the Earl Grey milk stronger? That will help add more flavour.
Angie says
This cake was absolutely DELICIOUS! Subbed out milk for almond milk and didn’t have time to make the syrup. The batter was incredibly runny so I was nervous, but it ended up being both moist and light. Honestly, one of the best cakes I’ve ever made!
I have a question here – it’s my friend’s birthday coming up and I’d like to make something special for him. He absolutely loved the earl grey cake because of the texture, but I want to change it up and make something new for him. Is there a recipe you recommend? He prefers lighter flavors (white cake) and cream cheese. I was thinking of using your white cake recipe with a lemon curd filling and cream cheese frosting. Do you think that would be a good combination? Thanks!
Olivia says
Hi Angie! Weird that the batter was so runny 😮 It should be on the thicker side — glad it worked out though and that you loved it 🙂 I think the combo you have sounds delicious! The curd and cream cheese are both tangy though, but I like the combo as the CC buttercream tends to have a lot of sugar in it.
Kathy says
Just tried this recipe and I love it! The tea flavor truly comes out and is a nice change from usual cake flavors. I ended up halving the recipe and made cupcakes instead (got 9 out of ½ this recipe; baked for 17 minutes). I reduced the butter and sugar by a few tablespoons and subbed AP flour for cake.
Kathy says
Whoops, meant that I subbed cake flour for AP flour
Caroline says
Hi there, did you increase the amount when you switched to cake flour?
Olivia says
Hi Caroline! It should be fine to just swap it one for one.
Olivia says
Hi Kathy! I’m so happy you liked it 🙂 Thanks for your cupcake tips!
Theo L says
I must be a dark wizard because I tried this recipe TWO times, following it exactly, and it turned out like a hefty brick both times. I’ve never had this happen in my life!
I checked all the ingredients were in date and fresh, I made sure the temperature was right for all of them, followed the steps exactly, didn’t over mix. No idea what I did! So weird. I trust it’s a good recipe since the comments all say it turned out alright! No idea what happened.
Olivia says
Hi Theo! Oh no! I’m so sorry to hear that. It should NOT be dense like that. How do you measure your flour? I recommend spooning and levelling into the cup rather than using the cup as a scoop. The latter can pack in a lot more flour. Were your eggs the correct size? Was the batter super thick going into the pans?
Kathy says
Try using cake flour maybe!
Wendy mccarthy says
Mine came out extremely dry too and I followed the recipe with the exception of the syrup. Maybe that’s the key to making it moist? Flavor was good but damn it was DRY
Olivia says
Hi Wendy! Sorry to hear it came out dry. That would either be due to overbaking or too much flour. How do you measure your flour? I always recommend spooning flour into the cup and leveling it off rather than using the cup to scoop it. The latter can add too much flour to a recipe. The syrup would definitely help add moisture though!
Rose says
Is it ok to use the stuff in the actual tea bags?
Olivia says
Hi Rose! Yes, you can use that.
Suk1988 says
Hi is it better to use caster sugar or granulated sugar (from the uk) and is all purpose flour the same as plain flour?
For the cups measurement is it LEVEL cups?
Olivia says
Hi there! Caster sugar is finer than granulated — you can use that but it might be a bit sweeter. I *think* AP is the same as plain but I’ve never used it myself. Yes to level cups but there is a metric converter at the bottom of the list of the ingredients too! 🙂
Li says
Hi! Just wondering if I want to make a 2x8inch cake, do I need to 1.5x the batter or will this current amount be suitable?
Olivia says
Hi Li! The cake recipe as-is will also work for two 8″ cake pans, so not changes needed.
Li says
Thank you! Will the layers be thinner or about the same?
Also just wondering is it OK to make the Earl grey milk like a day ahead and just keep it in the fridge until needed?
Olivia says
Hi L! The layers will be slightly thinner, but just barely. And yes you can make the milk a day ahead and keep it in the fridge. Just be sure to bring it to room temp before using in the cake 🙂
Hope says
I made this for a theme cake for my daughter’s 13th birthday. It was amazing. She was so thrilled that I used the chatacters favorite tea as the cake flavor. Thank you for this fantastic recipe. Even those who don’t care for tea, enjoyed the cake. I’m making it again for my birthday.
Olivia says
Hi Hope! Thanks so much for the wonderful feedback, I’m so happy everyone loved it 🙂
AH says
hi! i doubled the recipe for 9 inch pans for two layers (i should’ve done three, i misread one of your comments). how long should i bake it for?
Olivia says
Hi AH! It depends on how thick the layers are — how full were the pans?
Billy says
I’m curious as to how long too since I will be doing this for two 9 inch pans. And how much will I need to increase the ingredients by to do it as I dont wanna waste anything.
Olivia says
Hi Bill! The recipe as-is would work fine for two 8″ pans, so it will be a bit thinner in the 9″. I would 1.5x the recipe (change the Servings to 18 to get the proper amounts). Let me know how it turns out!
Kelly says
This recipe looks devine!!
I am wanting to use this recipe for baby shower cupcakes. I am using the tulip cupcake holders. Do you think this recipe would work? If so what is your suggestion on how far to fill the cupcake holders? What temp and how long to bake? How many cupcakes will this recipe make? Will the icing be okay to travel in a car for 4hrs? Thank you in advance.
Olivia says
Hi Kelly! I think this recipe will work great! I haven’t used those cupcake liners myself, but I wouldn’t fill more than 2/3 full. Maybe do a couple test cupcakes — one at 1/2 full and the other at 2/3 and see which you like better? The temp should stay the same but start checking them at 15mins or so (depending on how much batter you use). The recipe will make 18-24 depending on size. For transport — I would chill or freeze them first so the buttercream is very firm and transport in a cooler or a car with A/C if possible. Let me know how they turn out!
Mitch says
I am making this cake today for a baby shower but I am a bit unsure about the double boiler part for the buttercream. I don’t have a double boiler but just putting the mixing bowl over a pot of boiling water should work right. Or no?
Olivia says
Hi Mitch! Yes, totally. Just put the bowl (ideally metal not glass) over a pot with 1-2″ of simmering water. I have a more detailed post about it here: https://livforcake.com/swiss-meringue-buttercream-recipe/
Jane K says
Would it make a difference if I used oat milk and whole wheat flour for this recipe?? Thank you!
Olivia says
Hi Jane! It would affect the flavour, but otherwise should be fine if you like those flavours!
Wes says
Would the measurements be the same if I used matcha?
Olivia says
Hi Wes! Yes, it should be the same.
Traci says
I made a version of this cake for our wedding last weekend — and it was amazing! I made 2 6″ stacked gluten-free early grey tea cakes with lemon curd and a Swiss Meringue Buttercream (from another LivForCake recipe), flavored with about 5 TBPS of Elderflower Cordial. It really was spectacular! I can’t wait to try some others – thanks Olivia, this is one of my favorite sites with spot on recipes!
Olivia says
Hi Traci! Thanks for the sweet comment and for your tips! I can’t wait to hear what you try next 🙂
Chris says
Hi there,
I cannot wait to try this, my Mums favourite thing is Blackcurrant tea, so I’m trying it with that. So excited to see how it turns out! Thank you for sharing!
Olivia says
Hi Chris! Love that, let me know how it turns out 🙂
Natasha says
This looks absolutely amazing! Can’t wait to try this out. However, I noticed a discrepancy in the number of egg whites used when I switched from the US customary units to the metric one. It says 3 in one but 4 in the other. How many should we be using?
Olivia says
Hi Natasha! Thanks for calling that out, I’m not sure why it was doing that! I ran the converter tool again and it should be fixed. I used 3 egg whites for the buttercream. 4 would also work though — it would just make more and the buttercream would be a bit whiter 🙂
Shahirah says
Hi dear just wondering if this cake freezes well. Thank you.
Olivia says
Hi Shahirah! Yes. Properly wrapped the cake will freeze well for months.
Cheryl says
Great cake. I put my own spin and did a cream cheese frosting in umbre of purple. It was a big hit.
Olivia says
Hi Cheryl! Love the CC frosting and the purple ombre. I bet it looked beautiful!
Giulia says
Hello,
I don’t have a stand mixer and I don’t have a paddle attachment… is there any possible way I can make this cake without using it?
Olivia says
Hi Giulia! If you have a hand mixer you can make the cake no problem. The buttercream will be a challenge without a stand mixer though. I don’t recommend it as it will take a long time to make.
Claudia says
Hi Liv,
I was just wondering if I reduce the serving size of the cake from 12 to 6, do I still need 3 6″ baking pans and the same cooking time? Thanks so much!
Olivia says
Hi Claudia! No, if you reduce the serving size you should reduce the pan size too and possibly adjust the baking time. For ease, I would recommend doing 2/3rds of the recipe (set servings to 9) and using two 6″ pans. Baking time should be similar then.
Bonnie says
Can I use cake flour instead of all purpose? Would any ingredient ratios need ti be changed if I did so?
Thanks, Bonnie
Olivia says
Hi Bonnie! Cake flour will work just fine. No changes needed to any ingredients, just swap the flour.
Laura says
Hi- My 2.5 year old son helped me make this yummy cake. It didn’t rise very well and I’m wondering if it’s because the baking powder is old or because it took us a loooong time to actually get all of the ingredients into the mixer…haha. I would definitely make this cake again. Thanks for sharing the recipe!
Olivia says
Hi Laura! Definitely test your baking powder, but also is it possible the cake batter was overmixed? That can cause for a denser cake. Also when measuring yoru flour, be sure to spoon and level it rather than scooping.