Drink Your Cake, Eat It Too
Tres leches with one twist: we replaced the evaporated milk with two cans of Olipop Strawberry Vanilla, reduced down to a glossy ruby syrup. The sponge drinks pink, the cake sits overnight, the table goes quiet.
There are desserts you make in twenty minutes, and there are desserts you make the day before.
Tres leches falls firmly in the second camp. It is the dessert built for slow gatherings. A sponge that drinks. A cream cap that thickens overnight. A spoon that lands clean. Mexico claims it. Nicaragua claims it. Cuba claims it. The truth is it was probably born on the back of a sweetened condensed milk can in the 1920s, when canned dairy first traveled and Latin American kitchens decided to do something interesting with it. A hundred years later, it is the dessert that earns its place at every long table from Mexico City to Dubai.
The classic version uses three milks: whole milk, evaporated milk, and sweetened condensed milk. They get whisked together, poured over a still-warm sponge, and the cake absorbs every last drop. Cold from the fridge, topped with whipped cream, sliced into squares. Eaten at midnight from a Tupperware with a fork.
Our version replaces one of the three milks with a glossy Olipop Strawberry Vanilla reduction. The sponge drinks ruby instead of cream. The whole cake turns the softest pink under a vanilla bean Chantilly. And underneath the cream layer sits a thin gravel of brown butter Chessmen cookie crumb that gives every bite a quiet, nutty crunch. The classic, reinterpreted. Welcome back to The Cravings Journal.
Meet the Heroes
Three ingredients that take this from familiar to unforgettable
This is a recipe with depth. The classic tres leches works because the sponge is dry, the milks are rich, and the cream cap is generous. Our version keeps those bones and rebuilds the flavor with three things you probably never thought belonged in the same dessert.
Olipop Strawberry Vanilla, Reduced
This is the chef move at the center of the whole recipe. Two cans of Olipop Strawberry Vanilla, simmered low and slow with a vanilla bean and a curl of lemon peel, until two cans become one small jar of jewel-toned ruby syrup. Treat soda as a pastry ingredient. We replace the evaporated milk in the classic three-milk soak with this reduction, which means the sponge drinks strawberry and vanilla instead of just dairy. Real fruit, no scorched corn syrup, deep ruby color. Pastry chefs have been quietly using sodas as reduction bases for years. We are just bringing the move home.
The vibe: Glossy, ruby, the secret ingredient.
Brown Butter Chessmen Crumb
Between the soaked sponge and the cream cap, we hide a thin gravel of brown butter cookie crumb. Pepperidge Farm Chessmen Brown Butter Pecan cookies, crushed into rough rubble, tossed with brown butter, milk powder, brown sugar, and flaky salt, then baked low until the whole thing turns into something that shatters under a spoon. It is the Tosi-style "crunch" technique borrowed from Milk Bar. The little surprise that makes every bite have texture instead of just custard.
The vibe: Buttery, nutty, the layer nobody saw coming.
The Sponge That Drinks
A traditional tres leches sponge has no butter and no fat. The dryness is the point. It has to soak. We are making an egg-foam sponge with whipped whites folded in for lightness, which absorbs the three-milk mixture like a thirsty cloud. It looks impossibly flooded when you pour the milks over. By the next morning, every drop is gone, and the sponge is custardy, rich, and ready to be sliced.
The vibe: Light, airy, structurally built to absorb.
"Three milks, one of them pink. A sponge that drinks. A crumb that shatters. The kind of cake that turns the day after into a celebration."
Strawberry Vanilla Tres Leches with Brown Butter Crumb
The make-ahead cake that owns every dinner party
This is the kind of tres leches recipe that does most of its work in the fridge. Bake the sponge. Pour the milks over. Cover and walk away for at least four hours, ideally overnight. The next day, top with brown butter crumb, vanilla bean Chantilly, sliced strawberries, and a drizzle of extra Olipop syrup. Slice cold. Serve cold. Watch the table go quiet.
Serves: 8 to 10 | Active time: 35 minutes | Total time: 5 hours (includes minimum 4-hour soak, overnight is better)
What You'll Need
For the Olipop reduction:
2 cans Olipop Strawberry Vanilla (about 710ml total)
1 vanilla bean, split (or 2 tsp vanilla bean paste)
1 strip lemon peel, no white pith
Pinch of fine salt
For the sponge:
5 large eggs, separated, room temperature
200g caster sugar
200g plain flour
1 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp fine salt
80ml whole milk, warm
1 tsp vanilla extract
For the three-milk soak:
1 can (354ml) evaporated milk
1 can (397g) sweetened condensed milk
The cooled Olipop reduction (from above)
100ml heavy cream
For the brown butter crumb:
1 packet Pepperidge Farm Chessmen Brown Butter Pecan Cookies (about 200g)
60g unsalted butter
2 tbsp light brown sugar
2 tbsp milk powder
Pinch of flaky salt
For the Chantilly cap:
400ml heavy whipping cream, cold
50g icing sugar
1 tsp vanilla bean paste
To serve:
250g fresh strawberries, sliced
Extra Olipop reduction for drizzling
Optional: fresh mint or basil leaves, edible flowers
How to Make It
Step 1: Make the Olipop reduction first. Pour both cans of Olipop into a heavy-bottomed saucepan. Add the split vanilla bean, lemon peel, and salt. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat, then drop to medium-low. Cook uncovered for 25 to 30 minutes until reduced to about a quarter of the original volume, glossy, and slow to drop off a spoon. Strain into a jar and cool completely. This can be done a day ahead.
Step 2: Make the sponge. Preheat oven to 175°C (350°F). Grease and line a 9x13 inch (23x33cm) baking dish with parchment. Whisk the egg yolks with 150g of the sugar in a stand mixer until pale, thick, and ribbon-y (about 5 minutes). Add the warm milk and vanilla. Whisk in the flour, baking powder, and salt until just combined. In a separate clean bowl, whip the egg whites to soft peaks. Add the remaining 50g sugar gradually and whip to stiff, glossy peaks. Fold the whites into the yolk batter in three additions, gently, preserving the air. Pour into the prepared dish and smooth the top. Bake 22 to 25 minutes until the sponge is springy in the center and a toothpick comes out clean. Cool 10 minutes in the dish.
Step 3: Make the three-milk soak. While the cake cools, whisk together the evaporated milk, sweetened condensed milk, cooled Olipop reduction, and 100ml heavy cream. The color should be a soft, dusty rose.
Step 4: Poke and soak. Once the sponge has cooled 10 minutes (still slightly warm to the touch), use the handle of a wooden spoon to poke deep holes all over the surface, about 2cm apart. Slowly pour the milk mixture over the sponge in stages, letting each pour soak in before adding more. Use every last drop. The cake will look flooded. This is correct. Cover loosely with cling film and refrigerate at least 4 hours, ideally overnight.
Step 5: Make the brown butter crumb. Brown the butter in a small saucepan over medium heat until nutty and amber (4 to 5 minutes). Crush the Chessmen Pecan cookies into rough rubble (not fine powder, you want texture). In a bowl, toss the cookie rubble with the brown sugar, milk powder, and flaky salt. Pour the warm brown butter over and stir until coated. Spread on a parchment-lined tray and bake at 150°C (300°F) for 12 minutes, stirring once halfway through. Cool completely. The crumb should be crisp and shatter-able.
Step 6: Whip the Chantilly. Just before serving (or up to 2 hours before, kept cold), whip the cold heavy cream with icing sugar and vanilla bean paste to medium-stiff peaks. Should hold a shape but stay glossy. Do not over-whip.
Step 7: Assemble. Spread half the brown butter crumb evenly over the soaked sponge as a thin, crunchy hidden layer. Spread the Chantilly over the top in soft swoops. Scatter the sliced strawberries. Drizzle a thread of extra Olipop reduction over the top. Finish with the remaining brown butter crumb sprinkled across the cream, a few mint or basil leaves, and a final pinch of flaky salt. Slice cold. Serve cold.
Three Things That Make This Work
The notes that take it from good to unforgettable
1. Reduce the Olipop properly. Two cans should come down to about a quarter of their starting volume. Anything more and the soak is too watery. Anything less and the sponge gets oversaturated by the syrup before the milks even hit. Trust the spoon test: when you drag a finger across the back of a syrup-coated spoon, the line should hold for a second before filling back in.
2. Soak the sponge slightly warm. Not hot. Not fully cold. Slightly warm is when the cake is most absorbent. Pour the milks in stages and resist the urge to rush. The cake should look completely flooded by the end. Cover. Refrigerate. Walk away. Overnight is best.
3. The crumb goes on twice. Half hidden under the cream as a textural surprise, half sprinkled on top for the photo. This double-application is what separates this version from every other tres leches. It is the difference between a soft, custardy slice and a soft, custardy slice with crunch.
Make It Your Own
Four ways to remix the same cake
The base is the bones. Once you have made it once, the variations are easy.
Go cherry vanilla. Swap in Olipop Shirley Temple for the Strawberry Vanilla. Garnish with kirsch-macerated cherries instead of strawberries. Same cake, completely different mood.
Coffee tres leches. Replace 60ml of the evaporated milk in the soak with strong espresso. The sponge takes on a tiramisu energy. Brilliant after a heavy dinner.
Coconut tres leches. Replace the evaporated milk with full-fat coconut milk. Sub the Chessmen cookies for Tate's Coconut Crisp Cookies in the crumb. Tropical, lighter, made for the heat.
Individual jars. Build the cake in tall glasses or 250ml mason jars instead of a tray. Sponge cubes, soak, crumb, cream, repeat. Photographs like a magazine cover and serves like a dream at parties.
A Little History in Your Tray
Tres leches is one of those rare desserts where nobody can agree on the origin story. Mexico, Nicaragua, Cuba, and parts of Central America all claim to have invented it. The most credible historians point to the 1930s and 1940s, when Nestlé began printing recipes on the back of evaporated and sweetened condensed milk cans across Latin America. The idea was simple. Sell more canned dairy. Get a generation of home cooks to fall in love with the new product. It worked. Tres leches went from back-of-can recipe to national dessert in less than a decade across the entire region.
The genius of the original recipe is its restraint. Three milks. A plain dry sponge. A cream cap. Nothing extra. Every part has a job. The sponge soaks. The milks sweeten and enrich. The cream lifts. Refrigerate overnight and the whole thing tightens into something custardy, cold, and impossibly luxurious for how few ingredients it asks for.
What we are doing here is the same restraint with one ingredient swap. We pulled out the evaporated milk and put in something with real fruit, real vanilla, and real color. The sponge drinks ruby. The cake turns pink. And the technique that has been winning Latin American dinner tables for nearly a century gets a new chapter on a Dubai counter.
Shop the Recipe
The whole cake lives or dies on the soda you reduce. Olipop Strawberry Vanilla is a real-fruit, low-sugar prebiotic soda. Real strawberry juice, real Madagascar vanilla, and none of the high-fructose corn syrup that scorches the moment it hits a saucepan. It is the only kind of soda built to reduce. Stock two cans per cake.
The brown butter crumb is the second hero. Pepperidge Farm Chessmen Brown Butter Pecan Cookies bring the nutty, buttery depth that the recipe is built around. Tate's Coconut Crisp Cookies work beautifully in the coconut variation.
Looking for Olipop in the UAE or hard-to-find American cookies in Dubai? That is literally what we do. Limited-edition imports, hand-picked, shipped with care, delivered across Dubai and the UAE.
Our collections rotate often and limited-edition flavours don't stick around forever.
If something catches your eye, it's best enjoyed while it's here.
Coming next on The Cravings Journal: the second Olipop chapter. Crisp meringue, mascarpone Chantilly, strawberries with a Levantine spice you have never tried. The pavlova that ruins all other pavlovas.
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