Posts Tagged ‘Black tea’
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Category: Black
Tea Company: SpecialTea Brew (website)
Ingredients: Black Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed
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The common stereotype of an Assam tea is a heavy, hefty, malty breakfast beverage. With a little milk, a good Assam should stick to your ribs more effectively than a morning bowl of Raisin Bran. This particular Assam, tagged as a 2009 World Tea Champion, doesn’t fit the common denominator, but it’s still a pleasant exception.
Couldn’t get much of a scent from the little cellophane-pack sample, but the leaves are full with about a third of them golden tips. With boiling water and more than four minutes steep time, it was more coppery than dark brown; more sharp and peppery than smooth and malty. A little more astringent than expected, too. In this case, milk and sweetener would interfere with the flavor, not accentuate it.
A second steep was OK, but a little lackluster. This one is best fresh.
You can purchase the Assam Reserve directly from the SpecialTea Brew website.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: The Necessiteas (website)
Ingredients: Black tea, strawberries, natural flavors
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Use 1 tsp per 8 oz boiling water, steep 5 min
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No beating around the bush with introductory comments here–this is an excellently blended and flavored dessert tea. In a blind smell test with a slice of Cheesecake Factory Fresh Strawberry (OK, the blind smell test I wish I could take), it would be hard to detect many aroma differences–NecessiTeas has it spot on.
The double whammy of dried strawberries plus strawberry flavorings keep the tea strongly fruity and sweet after steeping. The cheesecake flavor backs off a little–dairy must be a hard thing to reproduce–but a little splash of milk in the tea as it cool coaxes it back out. If you’re a tea-sweetener, a bit of sugar or syrup will turn this into a rich treat that’s several dollars and several hundred calories less than its real-time counterpart.
You can purchase the Strawberry Cheesecake directly from the The Necessiteas website.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: TeaFrog (website)
Ingredients: Black Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Use 1 heaping tsp per 8oz water, steep 3-4 minutes in 100 deg C (212 deg F) water.
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So many not-so-great grocery-store brands of tea tout themselves as Orange Pekoe (it’s a tea grade, not a flavor) that some fine tea appreciators associate Orange Pekoe with bland or acidic brown water. Hot leaf juice. Nothing to get excited about.
Therefore, I am pleased to report that TeaFrog has rescued Orange Pekoe’s reputation and elevated it to a really fine morning cuppa. This is flowery broken orange pekoe, which adds the flowering plant to the leaf mix. In the packet, the leaves have no resemblance to the smooshed and crushed dusty stuff you see in a mass-market tea bag–you actually see leaves.
And when said leaves are steeped at the 3-4 minute mark, they result in a nice, hefty cup that feels a little thick on your tongue. It has a little fruit-and-flowery sweetness. No additives needed.
Priced quite reasonably, this is a good go-to pantry tea. Stock up!
You can purchase the Orange Pekoe directly from the TeaFrog website.
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Category: White
Tea Company: Shang Tea (website)
Ingredients: Organic White Tea Leaves, Tangerine Flowers
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 1 Tablespoon (3-4g) 203-208 F 95-98 C 1-2 minutes
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It doesn’t happen very often these days, but I would say about once every couple o’ months, something catches my eye in an “ooo shiny!” fashion. Okay, okay, I do that a lot…but not AS often with tea. I have a list saved as a Gmail draft that I call my “Tea WANT!” list. On it are several orthodox (and some plain out-there) teas that I hope to try someday. At present, I’ve notched off half of it. Some of the more difficult things were more easily obtained than I thought.
What’s this got to do with Shang Tea? Well, I ran across their operation via a tea social network called Steepster. (Think Facebook for cuppers.) Someone was waxing poetic about this black tea blend they recently tried. What caught my “shiny!” gland was the mention of tangerine blossoms. In case it isn’t readily apparent, I’m a tangerine fiend – been addicted to ‘em ever since I was a wee tot. I never knew those damn fruit trees had blossoms to them. Had I known, I would’ve built a fort out of ‘em.
Shang Tea is an operation out of Kansas City, MO. Other than being another brick-n-mortar tea shop in a mall, they have another thing to their credit. They own their own high-altitude tea garden in Fujian province, China. Their specialty happens to be Silver Needle white tea, but they also play around with the same cultivar to make red (or black) tea. This fermented option was blended with tangerine blossoms.
I bought a sampler pack that included this, along with several other white teas and blends. Needless to say, I first tore open the Tangerine Blossom black. Almost like an addict, even. It smelled beyond superb. Along with the slightly smoky/earthy black tea base was a scent similar to jasmine flowers and citrus rind – sweet yet floral. The tea leaves themselves were thin and twisty; the blossoms looked like – well – blossoms. Very…uh…blossomy.
The brewing instructions they recommended were a tad confusing, especially the measurements for the tea leaves. I skipped theirs and went with my own prep – 1 heaping teaspoon of leaves in 8oz of 205F water for three minutes. A bit light, sure, but it seemed the wisest approach.
The liquor brewed to a color that I would call “oolong amber”. The liquid aroma echoed the semi-fermented tea comparison with a fruity/lightly-astringent nose. As for taste, this completely floored me. It began with a regular Dian Hong-ish forefront that was immediately followed up with a strong citrus lean in the middle. That tapered off into a honey-floral aftertaste that simply lingered. I could find no fault with this blend. At all. It was perfect. I’m only upset that I’m all out of it now.
You can purchase the Tangerine Blossom Red Tea directly from the Shang Tea website.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Black Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 4-5 minutes in 190-200deg F (88-93deg C) water. In order to enjoy the unique flavor of Hu-Kwa we recommend allowing the tea to draw for five and one-half minutes. Stir, and let the tea settle for about one-half minute. Then decant. Hu-Kwa Tea is best appreciated when drunk clear. Milk or too much sugar compromises its delicate flavor. A little cream goes well but sugar should be used sparingly.
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Hu Kwa is purported to be the top-notch Lapsang Souchong from Taiwan. Steeping one cup at a time, I use one teaspoon of leaves per cup, and I steep the tea for five and a half minutes in just-boiled water, as per Mark T. Wendell Tea Company’s website. The dry leaves have a very strong smokiness to them, as is normal with Lapsang Souchong. However, with this one, there is a slight undertone of sweetness that can be noticed in the dry leaves. The aroma of the steeped tea is also quite smooth. Past experience with Lapsang Souchong has exposed me to some that were so rough as to suggest that perhaps one should be sitting outside on the ground around a campfire while drinking them, not sipping this noble drink in a more civilised setting.
The five and a half minutes is up, so I decant the tea to remove the leaves and allow the tea a minute or so to cool slightly (scalded taste buds do not make for accurate tea tasting). Heavily smoked is a good descriptor of the taste, but not overly smoked. That strange line of sweetness that went through the scent of the dry leaves is still present in the tea itself. The smoothness of this tea made it quite enjoyable to drink. Smooth and not thick. This tea deserves an 87/100 on my personal enjoyment scale.
You can purchase the Hu-Kwa Lapsang Souchong directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.

