--- Watch Rick Stein making his traditional fruit tea loaf in season 3 of Rick Stein's Cornwall, 8.30pm Thursdays on SBS Food from 6 April to 8 June, with episodes available at for 30 days after they air. ---
“It’ll be all lovely and plumpcious,” says Rick Stein as he sets a bowl of fruit to steep in tea.
Plumpcious. What a great word, Rick Stein! And such a good fit with the comforting, uplifting nature of a slice of tea loaf – which is what he’s making when he uses that wonderfully evocative adjective, pouring hot tea over dried fruit and leaving it to plump up, ready to add to the cake batter.
“It’s my firm belief that a slice or two of tea loaf with butter and plum compote is simply the best pairing of a cup of tea ever,” says Stein, working in his kitchen after a visit to a Cornish tea plantation, in the latest series of Rick Stein’s Cornwall.
“I really think afternoon tea without a slice of cake is not worth having really and what I particularly like is a cake with fruit in it. I suppose the sort of master cake with fruit is Christmas cake, but actually, during the year, I just love this tea loaf. What I really like about it is you can taste the tea in it and it makes it that bit different.”This brings us to an interesting point about tea loaf – it’s a tricky thing to define.
Rick Stein samples his freshly made tea loaf Source: Rick Stein's Cornwall
Tea loaves are, along with tea breads and tea cake, part of a family of lovely bakes, often but not always made with dried fruit. The Oxford Companion to Food describes tea breads and tea cakes as a family of “yeast-leavened baked goods considered suitable for afternoon tea or high tea in Britain, including many spiced, fruited and enriched breads and buns”. But there are many ‘tea cakes’ and ‘tea loaves’ that don’t use yeast, too, especially here in Australia. (An aside, for those who love old recipes: Wondering about tea cakes send me on a lovely visit to the older books on my shelf. I am particularly enchanted with a 'Tea Cake' recipe in a treasured 1945 CWA cookbook, which has given me a whole new appreciation for the idea of spreading butter on tea cake/loaf. In this recipe, the bottom side of the still-warm cake, now forming its top after being turned out, is spread thickly with butter and sprinkled with spiced sugar and chopped nuts, with the mixture sets as it cools).A tea loaf is usually loaf shaped, but some loaf-shaped versions are called tea cakes (like the pictured above). Some are iced, some are not. And some versions use tea, like Stein’s, but many do not.
Mulberry tea cake Source: Michelle Crawford
Confused? Don’t worry about it. Whether you make Rick Stein's fruit loaf (with tea), a traditional Irish barmbrack (also with tea), or a clever ‘Use it all’ loaf (without), the key thing is that they are all lovely with a cup of tea.
Here are some of the SBS Food team's favourites to try:
Barmbrack Source: Donal's Kitchen Hero
Potato tea loaf Source: Destination Flavour
Rick Stein's fruit loaf with plum spread Source: Rick Stein's Cornwall
Date and nut loaf from Monday Morning Cooking Club Source: Harper Collins
Use it all loaf Source: Murdoch Books / Cath Muscat
Lemon raspberry loaf Source: Mary Makes It Easy
Tea cakes, too
Apple tea cake Source: Plum Books / Luisa Brimble
And jam to serve...
Raspberry chia jam Source: Simon & Schuster