Thai Tea Cookies

The great flavor of Thai Tea makes these cookies irresistible!   

Thai Tea Cookies www.createdbydiane.com

 

I love Thai Tea Bobo, I often brew it at home. Sometimes I head to a local boba shop and sip some there. Either way, it’s delicious in my book!

I recently came across “instant” Thai tea. I was curious if I’d like it, and I do it’s not as strong as the brewed version but it’s super easy to make and fun to have on a trip, you only need boiling water to make it and a package of instant Thai Tea Mix, it has cream and sugar added to it.

I talk about my love of boba tea in this post.

Curiosity got the best of me and I just had to see if I could make that great Thai Tea in cookie form, and voila…

 

they are so yummy and cut too!

And that COLOR is just perfect, don’t you think!

Have you had Thai Tea? I love going out for Thai food, there is a place nearby and I love seeing the tables lined with delicious food and Thai Tea, all pretty and orange and swirly! I rarely leave there without having one.

Thai Tea Cookies www.createdbydiane.com

 

If you don’t find the Instant Thai Tea Mix locally it’s available online HERE.

 

Thai Tea Cookies www.createdbydiane.com

 

Roll and cut out cookie dough with your favorite cookie cutter. I used a 1-1/2 inch round cutter it has both a smooth edge and a scalloped edge. I liked the scallop edged cookies best.

I can’t help it I love a cute scallop edge!

 

 

These cookies bake quickly, they are done in 7 minutes. The cookie dough does not need refrigerating, it does not spread, it’s a great cookie recipe!

Thai Tea Cookies createdbydiane.com

Thai Tea Cookies

Thai tea flavored sugar cookies with a pretty orange color that comes from instant Thai tea mix.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time7 minutes
Total Time17 minutes
Course: Dessert
Cuisine: American
Servings: 45 -1.5 inch cookies

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup butter if using salted butter don't add additional salt
  • 3/4 cup powdered sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 1.23oz packages Instant Thai Tea Mix
  • 2- 3 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt (do not add salt if using salted butter.

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400·
  • In the bowl of a mixer beat butter with sugar until combined.
  • Add in egg, vanilla, and instant Thai Tea mix and blend on medium until blended.
  • Mix in flour, baking powder, and salt.
  • Roll out dough between wax paper sheets 1/4 inch thick, cut with a 1-1/2 inch cookie cutter or cutter of your choosing.
  • Bake on parchment lined baking sheets for 7 minutes, the bottoms of the cookies will be slightly firm and lightly golden
  • Allow cookies to cool completely on baking sheets.

 

Click HERE for how to bake PERFECT Cut Out Cookies

 

Thai Tea Cookie Recipe Easy and Delicious Cookie www.createdbydiane.com

30 Comments

    1. Those cookies bake fast they are finished in a few minutes. The cookie dough does no longer need it does no longer unfold it’s a wonderful cookie recipe. The brewed model however it’s superb smooth to make and a laugh to have on a ride, you only want boiling water to make it and a package deal of on the spot Thai Tea mix it has cream and sugar brought to it.

  1. Synchronize setting is really an easy process to recover your pc setting using your microsoft account in your windows 10 pc just visit here and learn to do it step by step.

    1. Like any freshly baked cookie, allow them to be completely cool (even a day) place a towel over the baking sheets if you plan to keep them out for a day, so nothing gets on them (dust, hot air from heat, etc) Then place them in an airtight container with wax paper in between layers. They can be stored at room temperature in the container for about a week If they last that long 😉 alternatively you can store in fridge then return them to room temperature before eating and these can be frozen then completely thawed, remove them from container if there is any frozen ice in container before thawing or cookies will crumble.

    1. I adjusted the ingredient list to include the following info: If you use unsalted butter add 1/2 teaspoon of salt to the recipe. If you use salted butter don’t add additional salt.
      Thanks for letting me know there was an error.

  2. Hi, lovely cookies. Icant wait to try baking it. Can I use Thai tea leaves instead of instant packet? If so, how much should I use? Pls advise. many thanks.

    1. You won’t want to use tea leaves themselves, it wouldn’t taste good, try to find the instant variety since these are cookies making actual tea wouldn’t work either as you don’t want to add liquid to the cookies.

    1. There isn’t much if any liquid called for when making cookies, and if you add liquid you will have a very wet cookie dough and will not be able to roll them out. This recipe works out really well the way it’s written, the flavor is nice, a fun cookie to make for anyone who likes Thai Tea.

  3. My cookie dough turns out to be really dry and cracking when I try to roll it out. The cookie tasted very flour-y and a little blend. Was 3 cups flour too much?

    1. It sounds like maybe the butter and sugar we’re well mixed. Mix those two on high speed until the butter looks “fluffy” this creates air in the mixture so when you add the flour, it’s well absorbed by the butter mixture. 3 cups of flour is not too much, you may just be under mixing the dough. If you feel it’s lovely dry, whip in a tablespoon of butter to the dough. Roll it out in between wax paper, do not add more flour. You can roll the dough with your hand, it’ll warm it up, the butter will get soft and absorb more flour. I hope that helps. Also be sure you are properly measuring flour, do not pack it into the measuring cups, take a spoon and place the flour into the measuring cup, level it off evenly. Too much flour is a common mistake when measuring, 1 cup of flour should measure about 4.5 oz if you have a scale.

    1. Yes you can make 1/2 the recipe you’ll need to half the egg, mix one egg well then use one and a half tablespoons of the egg.

    1. Yes, just be sure to bring it to room temperature before rolling it out, or it will appear dry and cracked. Don’t add as much flour either, as it’s best to add a little before rolling if needed it’s harder to fix dryer dough. Roll into disk shapes and flatten and wrap well in plastic wrap, then in a plastic zipper bag to with all air removed to ensure it won’t dry out. Alternatively, you can roll and cut out the cookies, place them on a baking sheets and refrigerate them, or freeze them (then place in between wax paper sheets and into a plastic zipper bag with all air removed, then bake when needed.

  4. Hi there,
    When I saw this recipe, I was so excited and decided to try right away. But, I don’t know what I’m missing because my dough was so dry and I just couldn’t roll it nor use the cookie cutter. It seemed like either there was not enough butter or too much flour. Help please.
    Thank you.

    1. There are many factors that come into play when baking that could have changed the results. Overpacking flour into the measuring cup can give you a dryer cookie. If that happens simply roll the cookie dough in your hands that you have buttered (yes place some (up to 1 tablespoon) soft butter into your hands And roll the ball of cookie dough). It should help balance any excess flour and you should be able to roll it easily. Or place the cookie dough back in the nicer and mix for another 30 seconds, try adding a little butter, it won’t take much unless you really added an extra amount of flour.

  5. My dough had a good texture and rolled out well however the cookies were crisp and tasted very dry. While the dough was a nice thai tea colour the cookies were very pale and had no colour of the tea like your pictures. It also seemed like too much flour to me. It would be great, if possible, if you could provide the measurements of the ingrediants as well. I don’t have American cups/spoons and conversion never seems to work.

    1. here is the conversion of the cookie recipe in grams (but this recipe is double the tea cookie recipe but I measured each item for others who’ve asked for cups/grams conversion for my recipes.
      sugar cookie
      recipe in grams
      1 cup salted butter (230g)
      1 ½ cups powdered sugar (170g)
      1 egg
      2 teaspoons vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste (10G)
      5 1/2- 6 cups all purpose flour (660-720g or more if needed up to 900g)
      2 teaspoons baking powder (85g)
      1 teaspoon salt (5.69g)
      and you would then add 4-1.23 packets instant Thai tea
      As far as the color, that will depend on the Instant Thai Tea used, I linked the exact item I use. As you can see in the photos when the dough is being rolled out, it’s orange and when it’s baked still a pretty orange color. If use use a different product, you can always add a drop of orange food coloring into the cookie dough. If your cookies were dry I’d assume you added too much flour. Next time start with less flour and add flour until the dough feel nice, smooth, doesn’t crack on the edges when rolled out. Sometimes location, humidity and things like that affect baking, dryness of items. I live in a dry climate, Southern California. If your cookie dough seems dry. Add a tablespoon of butter to your hands and re roll the dough so it’s not so “flour-y”.
      here you can find more of my cookie baking tips https://www.createdby-diane.com/2017/09/how-to-bake-perfect-cut-out-cookies.html
      hope you find that helpful

    2. Hi Diane

      From the measurement in grams
      You didn’t double the flour
      Is it correct?

    3. I’m not sure I completely understand your question. Could you be more specific. This recipe is not written in grams, nor it is “doubled”. I’d like to help you with an answer.

  6. Im talking about this comment you posted for doubled the recipe and in grams
    here is the conversion of the cookie recipe in grams (but this recipe is double the tea cookie recipe but I measured each item for others who’ve asked for cups/grams conversion for my recipes.
    sugar cookie
    recipe in grams
    1 cup salted butter (230g)
    1 ½ cups powdered sugar (170g)
    1 egg
    2 teaspoons vanilla extract or vanilla bean paste (10G)
    2 3/4-3 cups all-purpose flour (413-447g)
    2 teaspoons baking powder (85g)
    1 teaspoon salt (5.69g)
    and you would then add 4-1.23 packets instant Thai tea
    As far as the color, that will depend on the Instant Thai Tea used, I linked the exact item I use. As you can see in the photos when the dough is being rolled out, it’s orange and when it’s baked still a pretty orange color. If use use a different product, you can always add a drop of orange food coloring into the cookie dough. If your cookies were dry I’d assume you added too much flour. Next time start with less flour and add flour until the dough feel nice, smooth, doesn’t crack on the edges when rolled out. Sometimes location, humidity and things like that affect baking, dryness of items. I live in a dry climate, Southern California. If your cookie dough seems dry. Add a tablespoon of butter to your hands and re roll the dough so it’s not so “flour-y”.
    here you can find more of my cookie baking tips https://www.createdby-diane.com/2017/09/how-to-bake-perfect-cut-out-cookies.html
    hope you find that helpful

    So the flour and egg arent doubled?

    1. Thanks for directing me to the exact place. I double checked the grams and when I measured the flour myself with a scale my measurement was slightly higher than what showed when I googled and looked at 3 sources, so I adjusted the comment to reflect the amount of flour I feel you’ll need. 5 1/2- 6 cups all purpose flour (660-720g or more if needed up to 900g)
      The cookie dough should feel tender and not dry, roll in a ball and pull it apart if it’s really dry and cracking it’s too dry, if it’s slightly buttery and moist texture it’ll be best. Hope that helps.
      I do not bake in grams, but have recently been asked to convert recipes and I’m sure I’m no expert on converting. Thanks for bringing it to my attention and I measured flour for another recipe and made a note on how much I feel it’ll be more realistically that relying on others peoples measurements.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recipe Rating