The flavor of sweet tea is the flavor of the South. With the wafting aroma of mint and the tang of lemon, with that tooth-achingly sweet depth. I love to transform those flavors into many forms, from bourbon punches to sorbet to these cookies. They are redolent with those iconic flavors. The texture of these cookies is really that of a classic Southern tea cake, but I just couldn’t bring myself to call them Sweet Tea Tea Cakes. I can imagine nibbling these with a glass of sweet tea punch in my best flowery dress on a country veranda, surrounded by azaleas and magnolias, though I’ll admit it has been awhile since I’ve done anything like that. These cookies also share that amazing Southern trait of adaptability. These fit in anywhere. Serve these cookies on your best silver tray lined with a linen doily or pack them in a brown bag for a tailgate. Perfect for a ladies luncheon or a backyard barbecue. Just like that string of your grandmother’s pearls.
I am not generally a fan of the two-appliance recipe, but these are a very special cookie and worth the dirty dishes. After lots of experimenting, I have found that grinding the sugar with the mint in a food processor really does produce the best mint flavor and prevents the mint from turning a muddy brown.
Sweet Tea Cookies
For the Cookies:
½ cup milk
1 black tea bag (such as orange pekoe or any blend for ice tea)
½ cup loosely packed mint leaves
1 ¾ cup granulated sugar
1 cup (2 sticks) butter, room temperature
2 eggs
1 Tablespoon lemon zest
3 cups all-purpose flour
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
For the Glaze:
1 black tea bag (as above)
6 mint leaves
1 cup water
2 ½ cups powdered sugar
For the Cookies:
Preheat the oven to 350°. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
Heat the milk in the microwave for 45 seconds. Drop in the tea bag and leave to steep until completely cool. Remove the tea bag. The milk will turn a pale beige, not dark like regular tea.
Place the mint leaves in sugar in the bowl of a food processor (a small one works fine here). Process until the mint is finely chopped and combined with the sugar.
Cream the butter and mint sugar together in the bowl of an electric mixer until light and fluffy. Add the eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition and scraping down the sides of the bowl. Add the tea milk and beat until combined, then add the lemon zest and beat. Beat in the flour, baking powder and salt slowly until everything is combined, scraping down the sides of the bowl as needed.
Scoop mounds of dough onto the prepared baking sheets. I use a 2 Tablespoon cookie scoop. Bake the cookies until puffed up and golden around the edges, about 10 – 12 minutes. Leave to cool on the baking sheets for 2 minutes, then carefully remove to a cooling rack to cool completely. When one baking sheet has cooled, use the last of the dough to make more cookies.
Cool completely and glaze.
For the Glaze:
Put the tea bag and mint leaves in a measuring jug and pour over ¾ cup of boiling water. Leave to steep for 5 minutes, then remove the teabag and leave to cool completely.
Sift the powdered sugar into a bowl and add about 5 Tablespoons of the tea, a bit at a time, whisking until you have a glaze the consistency of heavy cream. Place some foil (or the parchment from the baking sheets) under the cooling racks to catch drips and spoon the glaze over the cookies. I have another trick though – I prefer to dip the top of the cookies in the glaze, swirl them around a bit, very gently, lift them out and let the excess drip off, then return to the cooling rack. I find this gives you a nice even coat of glaze. Leave the cookies until the glaze sets. The cookies can be kept in an airtight container for one day.
Make about 3 dozen cookies
Renee says
Would these cookies last longer if we only iced a few each day? Or is the cookie itself very delicate? I am thinking of making them this evening but for a Tuesday meeting.
The Runaway Spoon says
I’d store them in an airtight container between waxed paper and ice them a few hours before the meeting, so the glaze can harden.
The Devoted Classicist says
You always present the most wonderful recipes! I love a good homemade cookie.
Renee says
Thank you! I’ll take your suggestion. They sound wonderful.
flourpower says
These look so good – I am amazed that they are not on every screen porch in the south!
The Runaway Spoon says
Thank you so much! Enjoy!
Cindy B. says
I love this idea, being a Georgia girl, we love our sweet teas. Thanks for sharing 😀
Renee says
I made these tonight and they are fabulous! The cookies by themselves are light and airy but the glaze brings them to a level of perfection! May I share them (if I can figure out how to link to your page) on my facebook page?
The Runaway Spoon says
So glad you enjoyed them, and please, share the love!
RM says
I’ve been asked to bring cookies for Thanksgiving, and these sound amazing. I do not, however, have a food processor or any way to finely chop mint. Will the recipe work without mint? I’m not actually used to mint in sweet tea, so in my mind it seems like it should work…
The Runaway Spoon says
They really do need the mint. Place the mint on a chopping board and generously sprinkle with some of the sugar. Chop, chop, chop with a sharp knife until you have a very fine mix, adding more sugar if you need to.
kellie says
what type of mint?
The Runaway Spoon says
Spearmint is what I use.