How to Make Cream Cheese Cap
The cream cheese cap (also called "cheese cap") is a thick, creamy topping that floats on top of a drink. We offer two versions: Classic Cream Cap and Sea Salt Cream Cap. Both are made from the same base with a slight variation. When done right, the cap sits as a distinct layer on top of the drink and the customer sips the tea through it, getting both flavors at once.
Recipes
Classic Cream Cap
| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cream cheese | 4 oz (half a standard block), softened to room temperature |
| Heavy whipping cream | 1 cup |
| Granulated sugar | 2 tablespoons |
| Whole milk | 2 tablespoons |
Sea Salt Cream Cap
| Ingredient | Amount |
|---|---|
| Cream cheese | 4 oz (half a standard block), softened to room temperature |
| Heavy whipping cream | 1 cup |
| Granulated sugar | 1 tablespoon (less than classic) |
| Sea salt | 1/2 teaspoon |
| Whole milk | 2 tablespoons |
Why Two Versions?
The Classic Cream Cap is sweet and pairs well with fruit teas and lighter drinks. The Sea Salt Cream Cap has a savory-sweet contrast that is especially good with Brown Sugar Milk Tea, Classic Milk Tea, and oolong-based drinks. When a customer asks for a cream cap and is not sure which, ask what drink they are getting and recommend accordingly.
Step-by-Step: Making a Batch
Each batch makes enough for approximately 8-10 drink servings.
Step 1: Soften the Cream Cheese
The cream cheese must be at room temperature before you start. Cold cream cheese will leave lumps no matter how much you mix. Pull it out of the fridge at least 30 minutes before you plan to make the cap.
Room Temperature Matters
If you forgot to pull the cream cheese out early, you can microwave it for 10-15 seconds to soften it. Do not overdo it -- melted cream cheese will make the cap too thin and runny.
Step 2: Beat the Cream Cheese Until Smooth
Using a hand mixer or stand mixer:
- Beat the softened cream cheese on medium speed for 1 minute
- It should be completely smooth with no lumps at all
- Scrape the sides of the bowl and beat again if needed
Step 3: Add Sugar (and Salt for Sea Salt Version)
- For Classic: Add 2 tablespoons sugar
- For Sea Salt: Add 1 tablespoon sugar and 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
- Beat on medium for 30 seconds until fully incorporated
Step 4: Add the Milk
Pour in the 2 tablespoons of whole milk. Beat briefly to combine. The milk helps thin the mixture just enough so the cream can be whipped in properly.
Step 5: Add Heavy Cream and Whip
- Pour in the heavy whipping cream
- Start mixing on low speed for 10 seconds (to avoid splashing)
- Increase to medium-high speed
- Whip for 2-3 minutes until the mixture reaches soft peaks
Step 6: Check the Consistency
The finished cap should be:
- Thick enough to hold its shape when spooned
- Soft enough to pour slowly from a spoon
- Not stiff peaks -- you are not making whipped cream. If it is too stiff, it will not float properly and will not blend when the customer sips through it
The Spoon Test
Scoop some cap onto a spoon and turn it sideways. It should hold for a second, then slowly slump over. If it holds firmly like whipped cream, it is over-whipped. If it runs off immediately, it is under-whipped.
Storing the Cap
| Rule | Details |
|---|---|
| Storage container | Covered container in the fridge |
| Shelf life | 24 hours maximum |
| Before use | Stir gently with a spoon to restore consistency |
| If separated | Whisk briefly by hand -- do not re-whip with a mixer |
| If lumpy or grainy | Discard and make a fresh batch |
Applying the Cap to a Drink
Step 1: Prepare the Drink First
Make the drink completely (tea, ice, boba, everything) before adding the cap. The drink should be filled to about 3/4 of the cup to leave room for the cap.
Step 2: Spoon the Cap On
Using a large spoon, gently spoon the cap onto the surface of the drink:
- Hold the spoon close to the surface of the drink
- Let the cap slide off the spoon -- do not drop it from a height
- Add enough to create a layer about 1/2 inch thick (approximately 2 heaping tablespoons)
- The cap should float on top and stay as a distinct white layer
Step 3: Do Not Stir
Just like the tiger stripe swirl, the cap is meant to stay on top. Do not stir it in. The customer sips through the cap to get both the tea and the creamy layer.
Leave Room in the Cup
If you fill the drink too high, there will not be enough room for the cap. It will overflow or mix in immediately. Leave about an inch of space at the top.
Pairing Recommendations
When customers ask which drinks go well with a cream cap, here are the best pairings:
| Cream Cap | Best With |
|---|---|
| Classic Cream Cap | Fruit teas (Mango, Strawberry, Passion Fruit), Jasmine Green Milk Tea, Matcha Latte |
| Sea Salt Cream Cap | Brown Sugar Milk Tea, Classic Milk Tea, Osmanthus Oolong, White Peach Oolong, Thai Tea |
Troubleshooting
| Problem | Cause | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Lumpy texture | Cream cheese was too cold | Let cream cheese reach room temperature before starting |
| Too runny, sinks into drink | Under-whipped or too much milk | Whip longer; measure milk precisely |
| Too stiff, does not blend when sipping | Over-whipped | Next batch, stop whipping as soon as you hit soft peaks |
| Grainy texture | Sugar not dissolved, or batch is old | Ensure sugar is beaten in fully; discard if over 24 hours |
| Cap slides to one side | Drink surface is uneven (too much ice on one side) | Level the ice before applying the cap |
Last updated: March 2026
