Posts Tagged ‘Deg’

Category: Black
Tea Company: Davids Tea (website)
Ingredients: Chinese black tea, South African rooibos, rum flavouring, pineapple flavouring, coconut flavouring, peppermint, dried lemon peel
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 80 deg. C water, 1.5 tsp/cup, 3-4 minute steep

Davids Tea Mojito Mint Magic

Much to my delight, I recently received a shipment of 3 teas from Davids Tea. I have been looking forward to sampling and reviewing tea from Davids ever since a store opened close to me here. They are truly a Canadian company (unlike the mistake I made with Mighty Leaf, Davids really was started, and is run, in Canada ;) ), and I have been itching to feature them in a review.

Out of the 3 samples I was sent, the Mojito Mint was the one that caught my eye first. It could have been because after my wife going to Cuba, she has been on a Mojito kick, and we finally perfected our own Mojito recipe here, or it could be because of the sweet smell to the tea, or perhaps the odd mixing of Black tea and Rooibos. Whatever the reason, the Mojito Mint gets the nod for the first review.

This blend is part of Davids Tea’s Summer 2010 collection. I have, in all my years of tasting, never seen a blend of Black Tea and Rooibos together. In the bag, I get a sweet scent, with definite coconut and pineapple, and an undertone of the mint.

The instructions called for 80 deg. Celsius water – again, odd for a Black Tea and Rooibos both – usually you use boiling water for each one of these, but I am always for first trying it the suggested route, so that is what I did. They suggested a 3-4 min steep, so I went for a 4 min, as it seemed a good compromise between my 6 min usual Rooibos, and 3 min usual Black Tea.

The colour of the liquor is a reddish, muddy brown, mid-clear. It is not the dark Black, nor the red Rooibos, again speaking to the compromise that I am seeing in this tea already. Straight out of the steep the coconut scent dominated, but as it cooled, the sweet nutty Rooibos scent, and more mint started to peek through.

The flavour of this tea is amazing. Mojito it is not, I did not get any sense of that, but the name aside, I am really enjoying this tea. There is not a hint of tannin bitterness, in fact, the Black tea really seems to be only a supporting cast member. The dominant base is Rooibos, and each of the flavours seem to come through at different points – first sip I got coconut and a bit of rum’ish flavour, then the fruity pineapple flavouring peeks up – the final appearance from the mint leaves a refreshed taste in my mouth, and encourages another sip to start the cycle all over again.

I am still not sure why the Mojito name, since a Mojito is traditionally a rum/lime flavour, but frankly I don’t care what it is called! I have enjoyed cup after cup of this tea, and keep going back for more. Thumbs up recommendation for a Canadian company making it’s debut with us with a bang!

You can purchase the Mojito Mint Magic directly from the Davids Tea website.

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Category: White
Tea Company: Leaf Spa Tea (website)
Ingredients: Organic White Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Brew Temperature: 180 deg Brew Time: 7 minutes

Leaf Spa Tea Organic Silver Needle White Tea

The smell that came wafting out of the canister when I opened it up reminded me of nothing so much as fresh-cut, sweet hay on a warm, sunny day. It’s a smell I’m used to associating with summer because many of the ranchers around here grow and cut hay crops during that time to feed their livestock over the winter.

The flavour of the tea is also reminisent of sweet hay, but without tasting too grassy or bitter. It’s not too vegetal either – a problem which I noticed with some other silver needle teas that I’ve tried. It is slightly drying to the mouth, but only a bit – nothing too unpleasent. It makes for a light, fragrant, and flavourful drink, and perhaps it’s just the hay association, but it seems like a tea that’s very much suited for sipping in the summertime.

The resteep is considerably paler in colour and lighter in flavour. It has an almost delicately flowery quality to it now. Still very drinkable and it could probably go for more steeps, but it’s late and I don’t want to be more caffeinated than I already am! ;)

 

You can purchase the Organic Silver Needle White Tea directly from the Leaf Spa Tea website.

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Category: Green
Tea Company: Canton Tea Co. (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 1-2 tsp per cup (200ml); water temperature 70 degC (158 degF): infuse 2 minutes

Canton Tea Co. Jade Sword Green Tea | Mao Jian

Ok, so as I embark on my first official tea review, I realize that I have been procrastinating because I felt so much pressure to write a meaningful review that will educate, enlighten and fully describe my experience as I tried this tea. I had to remind myself that even though I have had the pleasure of experiencing hundreds of different teas through my training to become a Certified Tea Sommelier, in the end, my review is still subjective and may be totally different than someone else’s experience with the same tea. I have decided to lessen some of the pressure and just write a straightforward and honest review that hopefully will be useful to others who may be interested in trying this particular tea.

When reviewing a tea, I feel it is important to comment on multiple aspects of the sensory experience, including an analysis of the dry and wet leaf as well as the steeped liquor. I have kept the “technical terms” to a minimum, but I have used some standard industry terminology in describing my experience.

I was very excited to try this tea because I love China green teas and this one is beautiful. The name alone makes it sound quite exciting – Jade Sword – it conjures up images of ancient China and fearless warriors. As it turns out, Jade Sword is Mao Jian, one of my favourite China green teas. One thing I noticed with this sample from Canton Tea Co. is that many of the leaves are quite a bit longer than is usual with this style of tea. The leaf is twisted and the colour is medium to dark green with some downy leaves in the mix. The dry leaf has a mildly floral and sweet aroma.

I used 2.5g of tea to approximately 4 oz of 175 deg water and steeped it for 1 minute intervals. The wet leaves were a beautiful medium green colour and were only partially open after the first steep. The leaves had a sweet and slightly vegetal aroma. The liquor was a pale yellow shade and also had a faint sweet aroma. The taste was beautifully smooth, mildly sweet and coated my pallet with an almost creamy aftertaste that lingered. After one sip of this tea, I was feeling relaxed, calm and at peace.

I was able to steep this tea three times and probably could have gone a little further if I had increased the steep time to 1.5 or 2 minutes. The astringency (dry mouth feel) came through a little more with subsequent steepings and there was even a very slight peppery taste detectible. I am usually a “first steep kind of gal”, and this tea was no exception as the first steep was heavenly. However, I always get as much mileage as I can out of any tea, and this one did not disappoint.

This is definitely a tea I would recommend and will continue to drink myself. On a scale from 1 to 10, I would rate this tea at 8.5. Mao Jian is best enjoyed clear and although it could be paired with something simple like a white cake or even certain cheeses, I prefer to take it all on its own so I can truly indulge in the tranquility that comes with that first sip. Visit the Canton Tea Co. website for more information or to order Jade Sword: http://www.cantonteaco.com/green-tea/jade-sword-green-tea-mao-jian.html.

You can purchase the Jade Sword Green Tea | Mao Jian directly from the Canton Tea Co. website.

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Category: Black
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Organic black tea, essence of bergamot, essence of jasmine
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 1 teaspoon – 205 deg F – 4 minutes

Mighty Leaf Tea Mighty Leaf Organic Earl Grey

I love Earl Grey. I used to drink it quite often, but a couple of months ago I came across a couple of EG variations that were bad. They gave Earl Grey a really horrible, perfume filled name. It used to be my favorite variety of tea, so I was excited to try this version from Mighty Leaf in hopes of renewing my faith in Earl Grey.

This is a whole leaf bagged tea which I don’t recall having experienced before. There were a lot of long, dark leaves and very few typical bagged tea sized pieces. The bag smells strongly of bergamot, but not in the perfume sort of way. I am not able to identify the scent of jasmine, but that may be a good thing. I believe my most recent horrible EG experience was with a jasmine EG. As the tea is steeping, the bergamot allows the black tea to shine through in the scent.

I steeped the bag for 4 minutes as suggested by Mighty Leaf and was a bit surprised that the leaves had expanded to fill the entire bag. That is pretty impressive compared to the normal bagged teas I usually have. The taste is of smooth black tea with a nice dose of bergamot. I am once again unable to locate the jasmine, but I’m fine with that. This is possibly one of the best Earl Greys I have had. The flavor is bold, but not overbearing or perfume-like. This tea is great and easy to drink plain, but is equally as good with the addition of milk and sweetener. The tea holds up nicely to the additions and retains a strong black tea base.

You can purchase the Mighty Leaf Organic Earl Grey directly from the Mighty Leaf Tea website.

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Category: Black
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: black tea, coconut, flavoring
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 3-5 minutes, 208 deg F

Tea Forte Orchid Vanilla

The fancy teabag/pyramid/thing had a wonderful fragrance when I took it out of its packaging. The vanilla was deliciously fragrant and smelled like actual vanilla bean rather than some random perfume or extract. I could smell the tea base underneath which had an oddly lightly spiced sort of scent. I had to concentrate for my nose to pick up the coconut, but I think I detected it up. There’s something about coconut that just seems to blend really well with vanilla.

Unfortunately it pretty much all vanished as soon as the water hit the teabag, and just smelled like steeping tea. The taste of the tea started off rather weak and somewhat flat and only slowly did the flavour creep in, first the tannic flavour of the tea (which was fairly gentle and mellow compared to many of the bases used in flavoured blends – a point in this tea’s favor) followed by a sweet, vanilla-ish flavour. It’s not really the bursting-with-vanilla-flavour taste I was expecting, and it was kind of a let down in this regard. Not really getting the coconut flavour either.

This tea might benefit from adding a bit of sweetener and possibly milk too, although I think it would have to be steeped longer, as right now I think it’s too mild to stand up to the milk. It’s not a bad tea – it doesn’t have me jumping for joy, but it’s a nice easy-drinking black tea. I gave this tea a Steepster rating of 72 out of 100.

You can purchase the Orchid Vanilla directly from the Tea Forte website.

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