The Noble Origins of Afternoon Tea

Published 2022-08-02
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RECIPE
4 eggs
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (225g) caster sugar
2 sticks (225g) softened salted butter
A little less than 2 cups (225g) flour
2 teaspoons baking powder (Optional)
A Pinch of salt
Jam

1. Beat the butter until fluffy, then cream together with the sugar. Whisk the salt (and baking powder if using) into the flour and mix together with the butter mixture until somewhat combined.
2. In a separate bowl, whisk the eggs until very frothy, then mix with the butter/flour until well combined. If it is not a stiff but pourable batter, add milk in, one tablespoon at a time, until it is.
3. Spread the mixture in a well buttered rectangular pan and bake at 350°F/175°C for 15-20 minutes or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean.
4. Let the cake cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then turn out onto a wire rack and let cool completely.
5. Cut the cake into small finger then slice each finger in half to form a sandwich. Spread jam on one half and replace the other half on top. Sprinkle with powdered sugar and serve with tea.

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Subtitles: Jose Mendoza | IG @worldagainstjose

PHOTOS
Afternoon tea at Windsor Arms: ~Bani~, CC BY 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Crumpets - Iain Farrel vis Flickr
Petits fours: By Thomas Claveirole from Paris, France, upload by Herrick - Petits Fours / Finger Food, CC BY-SA 2.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=3179435
Cucumber Sandwich: James Petts from London, England, CC BY-SA 2.0 creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons
Scone: By Takeaway - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=29933107
Isabella Beeton's Book of Household Management: By wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/obf_images/41/48/a868… wellcomeimages.org/indexplus/image/L0042710.html, CC BY 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=36107779
Twinings Tea House: By Elisa.rolle - Own work, CC BY-SA 4.0, commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=57761902

#tastinghistory #afternoontea #victoriaspongecake

All Comments (21)
  • @TastingHistory
    This cake was one of the first things I ever saw on The Great British Bake Off and that’s what inspired me to start baking. So in a way, Tasting History owes it all to the Victoria Sponge. 😁
  • @DragongodZenos
    Max: "I want to keep this history light." Also Max: "The poor lady was shamed and died from a tumor."
  • @dearyvettetn4489
    I had a similar tumor at 9-months old. It was called Wilms tumor. My grandmother was a nurse and demanded that my parents take me to the pediatrician and I was admitted to the hospital immediately for surgery. My abdomen was enlarged and my dad just thought I ate too much. I am forever greatful to my grandmother who could be a bit of a mean girl herself, but her insistence and determination saved my life 🙏🏽 🥰 RIP Nana ❤
  • @1stGruhn
    Older varieties of wheat were 'softer' than what is generally available as all purpose today. You'd have to get a soft wheat similar to cake flour to begin to get close to some of those varieties. Plus, hand mixing isn't as rigorous as electric... so less gluten development from the softer wheat and lesser mixing might have formed a softer cake.
  • @ItsYaBoiV
    When I was a child, my mom read Beatrix Potter to me, and the Hobbit, and both instilled in me this love of a fantasy version of historical England. We used to make a lunch of tea, cucumber sandwiches, and scones with cream, along with a blanket out in to the yard and "picnic" while reading in the shade.
  • @Bpaynee
    Yes please to the tea history! If anyone wants to make the strawberry jam but can't find pectin/jam sugar, you can put the peel of a Granny Smith apple in when you're cooking everything and then just take it out. It's a natural source of pectin and doesn't affect the flavor.
  • As a boy growing up in Scotland, even in the 1970s an idea days menu was: Breakfast 7am Elevenses 11am Lunch 1pm Afternoon Tea 3.00pm High Tea 5pm Supper 9pm This, or some variation of it, was a traditional Scottish form. Afternoon tea: cucumber sanwiches and small cakes with tea. High Tea.. this was a brilliant meal.and you still find it in Scotland and the North of England especially in institutions. Breakfast: Porage Bacon Sausage Eggs Toast Marmalade Etc. Elevenses Bacon rolls Aberdeen Butteries Tattie scones Cheese or fruit scones and butter Lunch: the main meal of the day So High Tea is a savory main dish: Cottage Pie, Fish and Chips, Pie and Chips, this wouldn't be a large portion Folllowed by sandwiches, scones, and jam, potato scones and cakes in large quantities. You then had supper before bed: bread, cheese, ham, cold raised pie like a Pork Pie, pickles and chutneys.. washed down with beer or a sweetish wine. Eat this for 30 years... die of gout or a hear attack
  • @Finsirith
    14:48 -- The tea gown "could be put on without the help of a maid." I have read that that was an advantage if a lady had a secret "gentleman caller", as she could get herself dressed afterwards without the servants finding out and spreading gossip!
  • @CallieCrossroad
    She really said "You can make Jam with strawberries grown in your own garden, but store bought is fine."
  • @musiclover148
    Making the cake denser surely made it easier to cut it into thin fingers and spread jam on it without creating a mound of crumbs, not to mention easier to pick it up and eat it as a sandwich without raining crumbs all over. So maybe there was method to their madness!
  • @spectre9340
    I'm so glad you talked about the whole "meat tea" thing and how it replaced the evening meal cos my British boyfriend kept talking about having tea in the evenings and I was shocked that he wouldn't be having a proper meal. He explained that he referred to dinner as "tea", not to be confused with "afternoon tea". Glad to know there was actually some history behind it and it wasn't just his town being weird with their terminologies.
  • @meganechan720
    Making your own strawberry jam is so worth it! But if you can't find good berries, frozen works fine, because they are picked when they're perfectly ripe.
  • @tando6266
    I like to think that as max takes a bite he thinks back to episodes like the hard tack or the blood ones and thinks "I have earned this"
  • The part about the Flora Hastings story that wasn't mentioned, was that Flora, as well as her alleged lover, Sir John Conroy, were members of the inner circle of Queen Victoria's mother, the Duchess of Kent. The Duchess was a rather domineering mother, and she and Conroy (he was also alleged to have been the Duchess's lover), implemented a very strict system of rules called the Kensington System, ostensibly to keep the then-Princess Victoria safe, but the result was the complete alienation of Victoria from the outside world. Victoria grew to hate the system (she was lonely, extremely restricted in what she could do and essentially bullied by her mother and her circle), and by extension her mother, John Conroy and everyone else associated with them (which included Lady Flora, who was her mother's lady-in-waiting). When she ascended to the throne, the Duchess and Conroy even tried to argue that she was too young and too "unstable" to rule on her own, and tried to make the Duchess her Regent, but Victoria was strong-willed and held firm against them. The moment she became Queen, she abolished the Kensington System, ordered that her mother's chambers be as far as possible from her own, and fired Conroy (he had been appointed Comptroller of Victoria's Household - by her mum, of course - if I remember correctly). When the Flora Hastings scandal happened, Victoria jumped on the chance to avenge herself against both Conroy and Hastings (and indirectly, her mother too). It explains why she was so harsh against Flora (it wasn't just that she was a "mean girl," she had her reasons), although it doesn't excuse her, of course.
  • @LuvzToLol21
    Fun fact: butterfly pea flowers (the things that make the Water Type tea blue) are also a natural acidity indicator. Add some lemon juice and it'll turn purple
  • I can’t help but notice that Max enunciates his consonances so clearly, especially the T’s, D’s. My speech teacher would’ve loved him
  • @MononokeLynn
    I’d love to see a video on cucumber sandwiches. “Importance of Being Ernest” mentions them so often, I’d like to know the original idea of it - I like white bread, butter and thinly sliced cucumber. However, many recipes are crazy overboard these days.
  • @thedorikorner
    Your show is literally being watched by three generations of my family now. We discovered it like last week and we can't get enough history eats. Never thought we'd all be learning and discussing ancient Roman foods and the like. We're going to make a few of these recipes for our family Samhain dinner this year. Awesome stuff.
  • Afternoon tea absolutely can be like a mad tea party if you have a bat crap crazy family like mine. I’m not entirely convinced that some of our holiday meals weren’t secretly being filmed for the world wrestling federation or Jerry Springer. I can totally see someone slapping some mustard in someone else’s face when we get visited by the ghost of Christmas HONESTY and everyone starts screaming this year 😂