Pistachio Olive Oil Mini Tea Cakes
Every once in a while you’ll need a quick and easy tea cake to serve at breakfast, brunch or snack. These not-too-sweet little pistachio olive oil tea cakes are perfect for those occasions. Crunchy bits of nuts with the aroma of olive oil is a great combination.
Olive Oil Tea Cakes Recipe
Ever buy yourself a little treat, something that sounded perfect and tasty, but was left disappointed after biting into it? Maybe the bakery wasn’t as skilled as hoped, or perhaps the pastry had been waiting too long for someone to come by and savor its original deliciousness. Could have just been an off day, it happens. Sometimes even from a really good bakery. Whatever the case, you were left with the “wha waa” feeling. However these moments can lead to inspiration.
These little pistachio olive oil cakes are the result of such inspiration. After being disappointed in a pistachio cake we bought, we were determined to make them to the level of deliciousness originally hoped.
After a bunch of recipe testing, we worked out just the treat hoped for. The slightly sweet nature of the Pistachio Olive Oil Tea Cake, the flavor and crunch of the pistachios playing off of the flavor from the olive oil and the softness of the cake. Pull an espresso and call me happy.
Different nuts for olive oil tea cakes recipe
Pistachios are definitely unique in flavor and a favorite. But they aren’t always budget friendly. As with most nuts, they can be pretty costly. Use whatever nuts you like and in whatever quantity. The more nuts you use, the more crunchy and flavorful these tea cakes will be. So we suggest using at least 1/2 cup of chopped nuts and reserve some for the top of the tea cakes. Our recipe calls for 3/4 cup of nuts and this is a good balance of nuts inside the tea cakes and leave enough for some topping. Just make sure the nuts are toasted. A raw nut won’t have the same snappy texture.
Video: Pistachio Olive Oil Tea Cakes Recipe
Use Good Olive Oil
Note on the olive oil: in our recipe testing, we used a range of olive oils (an even used with a regular vegetable oil) to see if there would be a noticeable difference. End result, there was quite a flavor difference. After first shooting for Lucina Italia many years ago, we fell in love with their oils and vinegars, and in this recipe the exceptional flavor of their olive oil helped make the taste magical. Every olive oil has its own character and that character will come through in the tea cakes.
If you were to make them with nice oil vs an exceptional one, would I be able to tell? To paraphrase the original Mostly Martha movie, “It’s not that I can tell which one you did use, but I could tell which one you didn’t.” A movie which, btw, is still one of my all time favorite food movies. We’re dying to discover another great food movie, so if anyone has any suggestions, spit ’em out! 😉 . So far my top 10 (in no particular order) are: Mostly Martha (2001 version), Big Night, Dinner Rush, Eat Drink Man Woman, Tampopo, A Chef in Love, Soul Food, Chocolat, Babette’s Feast, and Bottle Shock.
Cheers to good pastries! And afternoon espressos!
Todd
Pistachio Olive Oil Mini Tea Cakes
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (90 g) toasted chopped unsalted Pistachio Nuts , divided (or nuts of choice)
- 2 lrg. Eggs
- 1 cup (220 g) packed Brown Sugar
- 1/2 teaspoon (2.5 ml) Kosher Salt
- 1/2 cup (120 ml) good Olive Oil
- 1/2 cup (125 g) Sour Cream or Greek Yogurt
- 2 teaspoons (10 ml) Vanilla Extract
- optional zest of 1 orange
or 1/2 teaspoon Orange Bitters
- 1 1/4 cups (156 g) All-Purpose Flour
- 1 1/2 teaspoons (7.5 ml) Baking Powder
Equipment
- Muffin/Cupcake Liners optional
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Lightly oil a 12-cup muffin pan or line with baking cups.
- Chop or lightly crush the pistachios with a mortar & pestle.
- Whisk together eggs, brown sugar, salt, olive oil, sour cream (or Greek yogurt), vanilla extract, and optional orange zest until well combined. Stir in about 1/3 of the pistachios. Set wet batter aside.
- In another bowl, whisk or sift together flour and baking powder until evenly combined.
- Stir flour mix into the wet batter until just combined (don't over mix or the tea cakes will end up baking more dense and drier).
- Divide batter between the 12 muffin cups (should fill each about 2/3's full). Top with the remaining pistachios.
- Bake at 375°F (190°C) for 18-25 minutes or until slightly golden and a toothpick comes out clean.
Notes
Video
Nutrition Information per Serving
More Easy Recipes:
- Just like restaurants: Homemade Thai Tea Recipe
- Roasted curry cauliflower
- Sugar free thai tea – it tastes amazing!
- Hot spicy chicken
- Homemade milk tea with or without boba
- This Pistachio Olive Oil Tea Cake was originally published in 2012 and was updated in 2020 & 2024. Here’s more of our baked recipes to enjoy.
These look awesome. Wish I could buy one to go with my espresso!
Re: movies – I’m a fan of the cute film, “The Ramen Girl,” with Brittany Murphy.
cheers to not sucking indeed…i love baking with olive oil.
Love your food photo props, especially the plates and muffin tin ๐
I love my big stone mortar and pestle. There is something therapeutic about grinding foods to powder. Most olive oils which are found in supermarkets are already rancid and most people don’t even notice this because they are so used to the rancid taste. If they ever tasted a fresh olive oil, they would never return to a mass-produced supermarket bought one.
My favourite food movie is the same as Sandy’s – Like water for Chocolate.
… based on “Eat Drink Man Woman” – “Tortilla Soup”!
I totally forgot about that one. I saw it in Netflix then forgot to add to m queue. Thanks!
T
I TOTALLY know what you’re saying! It’s so disappointing when you see something through the plexiglass that looks so good, then it’s dry and flavorless. Love these pistachio cakes, and agree that olive oils vary quite a bit in quality and flavor.
ps, just ‘got’ the ‘white on rice’. that’s hysterical and so clever ๐
i am the owner of farm to table geek. im pinning, minding my own business, then came across my pistachio recipe ala your cupcakes and i could not be more pleased! how wonderful! i love it when someone is inspired by something that i post. i love your blog, im a fan, actually. so its funny that i would see myself in you! lol.
listen, i am actually restarting farm to table geek. i have been on a very long hiatus because of life events. i plan to begin again next week. so again, serendipitous and uncanny.
in the meantime, you can also find me at tartine-bread.blogspot.com it’s my bread blog. cheers and thank you for loving this recipe enough to remake it. i made one of the cakes for my friends birthday last week, and it sparked my return to farm to table geek. check back soon!
francis-olive
So glad you loved them. Thanks for the inspiration from your great recipe and images.
Glad you are getting back in the action. It’s such a pleasure to be moved by your work.
Todd
Made them. Subtle and yummy.
We know what you mean about biting into something sweet only to be disappointed. Some sweet treats are not worth the calories! Thanks for sharing such a lovely post and the original mortar wielding Farm to Table Geek who influenced your recipe. We have subscribed to yours.
These look incredible and I can’t wait to try this recipe outdoors when camping. Thank you for introducing me to Lucina Italia and to Farm to Table Geek. Big Night is at the top of my list, I love Stanley Tucci-great NY Times article on him and family with recipes ! http://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/03/dining/stanley-tucci-actor-writer-family-cook.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
My 2nd favorite movie:Like Water for Chocolate-love love love the quail with roses scene.
I recently made a lime and olive oil cake.. and I think olive oil gives the cake a very distinct, fresh and grassy flavour.. if that makes sense!!! and i love mini cakes… and these have pistachios, orange bitters and a teeny bit of pepper.. am intrigued!!!
Very tasy looking!
Yup, I’ve definitely been disappointed in some treats, then go home and bake my own version. These little cakes look so good!
I have not seen SO many of those movies, I’m putting them on a to-watch list!
Whenever I find myself in a casino–which is almost every time I go back to Nevada–the pastries always look stunning and always seem to disappoint. It’s a special kind of heartbreak, so pretty yet so sad. I love pistachios and slightly sweet cakes!
I’ve never made cakes or cupcakes with olive oil because I always worry it’s going to taste like…pizza dough or something savory…ha! But you have me convinced to try. And the reason I bake as much as I do is b/c I am routinely disappointed in pastries I buy when out. Fine but not wow amazing, many times so necessity is the mother of invention ๐ Glad you took matters into your own hands, too!