Posts Tagged ‘Black Pepper’
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Category of Tea: Herbal
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: cacao, cinnamon, fennel, licorice root, cardamom, ginger, cloves, black pepper
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 5 minutes, 208°F For stronger flavor, steep longer.
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Sweet treat time! Opening a Coco Truffle pyramid, can tell why it was recommended to me just by the smell. Yum in a bag! Almost smells like a chai. It is a pure herbal blend, naturally caffeine-free, beautiful as a dessert tea.
Steeped it in boiling water for five minutes and the smell of all the spices are coming through, the cardamom scent is a bit strong though. Tastes good but a bit weak. Steeped it for three more minutes and the blend has balanced out. It’s brewed a beautiful dark steep. Truffle magic, here I come. Can taste and smell the cacao goodness now, like an exotic candy bar in a cup, this is really delicious. This is the very best, zero calorie indulgence I’ve had in awhile. I don’t crave sweets very often but I will be reaching for this one the next time I have a chocolate crisis!
You can purchase Tea Forte Coco Truffle Tea directly from their website, and in various high-end establishments around the world.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: Rishi Tea (website)
Ingredients: All Organic
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Stovetop: Shake well. Mix equal parts of Masala Chai and milk in a saucepan and bring to a simmer, stirring occasionally. Remove from heat and enjoy! Iced Chai: Shake well. Mix equal parts Masala Chai and milk, pour over ice and enjoy!
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With much fanfare, Rishi Tea has reintroduced its Chai concentrate – it is now available with new packaging, a high profile association with Jane Goodall’s Roots and Shoots program, and a change in the recipe. The ingredients listed are filtered water, black tea, cinnamon, cardamon, black pepper, cloves, ginger, dried cane syrup, blackstrap molasses, vanilla extract and lemon juice – all organic, and the tea is also organic as well as fair trade certified. The concentrate is described by Rishi as “a microbrewed blend of energizing spices and rich vanilla infused with a full-bodied single origin forest grown black tea. Unlike other companies that use soluble tea and flavor extracts, we use traditional Indian spices that are slow brewed for more than 20 hours and ethically sourced, wild-grown black tea leaves from an ancient tea tree forest.”
Straight out of the box the concentrate was dark and slightly murky, but redeemed itself with the rich aroma of traditional Indian masala spices which according to Rishi are slowly brewed in small batches before the addition of the tea leaves – a process which takes almost a full day.
Mixed with an equal amount of milk and heated to the point of steaming, the result was a mild, pleasantly flavored latte although I did find that the molasses smell and taste was quite noticeable and took away from the “chai-ness” of it. I appreciated that the concentrate wasn’t overly sweet and the taste of the black tea wasn’t lost in the mix.
Formerly only available in recyclable glass quart bottles, Rishi Masala Chai Tea Concentrate is now packaged in a carton and can be conveniently purchased online and shipped to you. Rishi as a company has a commendable reputation for its green initiatives and it’s nice to know that proceeds from each sale support a good environmental and humanitarian cause through the Jane Goodall Institute.
You can purchase the Masala Chai Tea Concentrate directly from the Rishi Tea website.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Black tea, cinnamon, pepper, cardamom, ginger, star anise, natural flavors, cloves
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 205 degree water, 4 minutes
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The dry leaf smells like cinnamon and star anise, though predominately of star anise. Through the bag I could distinguish long black tea leaves mixed with small bits of what appeared to be the ginger and cloves. I’ve never had a tea with star anise, but apparently it is a licorice type flavor, so here goes.
I brewed this tea using 6 oz. of almost boiling water for 4 minutes as suggested on the package. Taken plain, the tea tastes unsurprisingly like black tea flavored with licorice. If you like licorice, then you will like this but I’m not a licorice fan. I added milk and sugar to make it more chai-like which seemed to even out the licorice slightly. The cinnamon was also more noticeable but I could not distinguish any of the other chai spices that were included in this blend.
Overall, this is a decent tea for licorice fans who like black tea but is not my idea of a chai since the majority of the chai spices aren’t present in the taste.
You can purchase the Bombay Chai directly from the Mighty Leaf Tea website.
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Category of Tea: Black
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Black Tea, Cinnamon, Pepper, Cardamom, Ginger, Star Anise, Natural Flavors, Cloves
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 205 degree water, 4 minutes
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On the Mighty Leaf website this description is given: Bombay Chai with a melange of spicy notes conjures the steamy, aromatic delights of an Indian street market. Black tea leaves with subtle hints of Pepper, Orange, Cinnamon, Cardamom, and Clove make up our chai, the Indian word for tea. Bombay Chai is delicious when brewed fresh and blended with heated milk and sugar to taste.
Having recently given up coffee I drink Chai every day, as I find it is the only tea that has enough of a flavorful kick to get me awake and out the door in the morning.
When I tried Mighty Leaf’s Bombay Chai I found that it was pleasantly smooth and warm. However, generally Chai is distinguished by the bite of its spices, which didn’t seem particularly present here.
When I added milk I found that this overpowered the spices to the point that they were barely even noticeable. To me this tea seems to be suitable as a spiced black tea, but without knowing what it was I wouldn’t identify it as chai.
You can purchase Mighty Leaf Bombay Chai directly from their website.
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Category of Tea: Herbal
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: cacao, cinnamon, fennel, licorice root, cardamom, ginger, cloves, black pepper
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 5 minutes, 208°F For stronger flavor, steep longer.
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This is a herbal blend from Tea forte who describe it as “a rich, chocolate reward, nearly as gratifying as a velvety truffle”. Well, I don’t know if it’s all that but it is very good.
Being a chocoholic I prefer the real thing – dark and melting on your fingers. I’ve been disappointed many times by teas that promise a real chocolate taste and deliver only a hint. I was pleasantly surprised by Coco Truffle; not only by the sweet aroma which with eyes shut could make me believe that it was a mug of hot cocoa rather than tea, but the rich almost milky taste had tons of real chocolate flavor.
The ingredients are listed as cacao, cinnamon, fennel, licorice root, cardamom, ginger, cloves, black pepper. The flavor from the cacao beans was the most pronounced. I suspect that the cardamom gave the tea it’s creamy characteristic but the other spices, fennel and licorice root only came through as an aftertaste. I think that either fennel or licorice root and not both would have been sufficient but overall the combination was a success.
I followed Tea forte’s guidelines and brewed it for 5 minutes in water that was just short of boiling. A second cup made with the same tea bag had very little of the coco flavor left but the other ingredients came through and it was almost like a weak chai. Tea forte’s signature pyramidal tea bags are very elegant looking and the design seems to give the tea plenty of room to steep but they are very expensive at $1 per bag so it’s unlikely I would be buying these regularly but perhaps as a special treat or as a gift.
You can purchase Tea Forte Coco Truffle Tea directly from their website, and in various high-end establishments around the world.
