Iced Brown Sugar Tea Latte

This post may contain affiliate links. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

A layered iced tea latte with black tea, milk, and brown sugar. It’s sweet, refreshing, and so easy to make.

Iced brown sugar tea latte

Want to save this?
Enter your email and get it sent straight to your inbox. Plus, get recipes & tips from me every week!
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.

Brown Sugar iced Tea latte

  • A layered iced tea latte that’s made sweet from the brown sugar, caffeinated from the tea, and creamy from the milk.
  • Easy to make with easy-to-find ingredients.
  • It’s layered — the secret is sugar and ice.
  • Made with English breakfast tea but any black or oolong tea can be used instead.
  • English breakfast tea is blended to be had with milk and sugar so it’s the perfect tea for this drink.

What You’ll Need

Iced brown sugar tea latte ingredients
My Royal English Breakfast Tea Pick

Photo Credit: Harney.com

Harney & Son’s variation on English Breakfast made with Ceylon and Kenyan black teas.
BUY ON HARNEY.COM

How to Make Iced Brown Sugar TEa latte

1: Make tea

Boil water on the stovetop or in an electric kettle. Use filtered water if possible since better tea is made with better water.

Combine tea sachet and hot water in a glass container. Steep for 5 minutes. Discard tea sachet and let cool.

Tea Sommelier’s Tip: Only have loose tea? Use 1.5 teaspoons of loose tea instead of 1 tea sachet.

2. Make quick brown sugar syrup

Stir brown sugar and hot water until sugar dissolves.

3. Assemble drink

Put brown sugar simple syrup into a cup and add ice then slowly pour milk directly on top of the ice.

Slowly pour cooled down tea directly on top of the ice.

Stir before drinking.

Iced Brown Sugar Tea Latte Tips

  • You can adjust the sugar but if you use too little sugar, the layering won’t work as well.
  • Slowly pour milk and tea directly onto the ice, not into the liquid to help separate the layers.
  • Because there isn’t as much of a difference in sugar content in the milk and tea, they’ll be less of a clear separation of layers. If you use a milk alternative with some sugar like oat milk, the layers will separate more.

Questions You May Have

How does sugar and ice make this drink layered?

When making layered drinks, the liquid with the highest sugar content should at the bottom since it’s the heaviest and will sink. The more of a difference there is in sugar, the more separated the layers will be. The ice helps to separate the layers even more when you pour the next layer. Make sure to slowly pour the next liquid directly onto the ice.

I don’t have English breakfast tea — what else can I use?

Any strong, dark tea would work well. Try an Assam black tea or hojicha, a roasted green tea.

Can I use cold brewed tea?

You can, but make it double the strength than what you would normally cold brew. Use 1 tablespoon of tea for every cup of water.

What else can I use instead of brown sugar?

Honey, maple syrup, or date syrup will all work well. Just make sure to make it into a simple syrup by stirring it in hot water first to make it easy to incorporate into the iced drink.

4.54 from 15 votes

Easy Iced Brown Sugar Tea Latte

By: Jee Choe
A layered iced tea latte with black tea, milk, and brown sugar.
Prep Time: 2 minutes
Total Time: 7 minutes
Yield: 1 serving

Ingredients 

Quick Brown Sugar Syrup

  • 2 tablespoons water
  • 1 tablespoon brown sugar

Instructions 

MAKE TEA

  • Boil water.
    Boil water on the stovetop or in an electric kettle (set it to 208°F). Use filtered water if possible since better tea is made with better water.
  • Combine tea sachet and hot water in a glass container.
  • Steep for 5 minutes.
    Discard tea sachet and let cool.

MAKE QUICK BROWN SIMPLE SYRUP

  • Combine brown sugar and 2 tablespoons hot water.
    Stir until sugar has dissolved.

ASSEMBLE DRINK

  • Put brown sugar simple syrup into a cup and add ice.
  • Pour milk.
    Slowly pour milk directly on top of the ice instead of the brown sugar simple syrup.
  • Pour tea.
    Slowly pour cooled down tea directly on top of the ice instead of into the milk. Stir before drinking.

Notes

  • Sugar content is what creates the separation of layers. The bottom layer has to sweeter than the layer above it.
  • Ice helps to separate the layers. Pour tea or milk directly on top of the ice.

Nutrition

Calories: 95Carbohydrates: 16gProtein: 3gFat: 3gSaturated Fat: 2gCholesterol: 8mgSodium: 58mgPotassium: 107mgSugar: 16gVitamin A: 132IUCalcium: 92mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Additional Info

Course: Drinks
Cuisine: American
Tried this recipe?Mention @ohhowcivilized or tag #ohhowcivilized!

The Latest

Leave a comment

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

RATE THE RECIPE:




11 Comments

  1. I want to use almond milk and swerve brown sugar substitute will this work and cut down some of the sugar?

  2. Just tried this drink for the first time. It was amazing! One of my new favourites and it’s so easy to make.

  3. I can’t consume caffeine and I am still kind of new to the tea world. What kind of decaffeinated tea would work best for making something like this?

    1. Hi Heather, I’m not a fan of decaf tea since it’s made through a chemical process. Give herbal teas a try instead which are all don’t contain any caffeine. Rooibos or chamomile would be a nice alternative.

  4. Hi Jee,

    I really like your blog! I have tried a few milk tea recipes from you and it turned out pretty amazing from the taste to the visual. Thank you so much for sharing lots of yummy recipes. Would you please show us how to make Hong Kong milk tea too?! 🙂