Posts Tagged ‘Floral Notes’
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Category of Tea: Green
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea, natural tropical flavors, natural flavors, flower petals, pineapple bits
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 170-180 degree water, 3 minutes
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I tend to like tropical tastes. Much to the chagrin of my family, when I order pizza, I usually choose pineapple and ham as toppings. This just grosses people out but I like it. So how about pineapple tastes in tea?…keep that thought in mind, okay now add to it guava. This combination makes me think that you’ll either love it or hate it. As separate food and drink items, I like it so I’m game to try the combo too. Not too sure about the flower petals in it though. We’ll see.
Opened up the package and found a mesh-stitched teabag filled with not small fannings or dust in the teabag but whole leaves that looked of good quality and only a tiny bit of blue flower petals. Steeped the teabag in boiling water for 3 minutes as per the instructions. Aroma is very fruity and floral. A very pleasant fragrance.
I agree with Mighty Leaf that the “green tea blends harmoniously with the sweet tropical fruits of pineapple and guava” and this may be part of the problem. It would have been more distinctive had the green tea had some of the characteristic grassy or vegetal notes of other green teas. Because of this, it tasted more like a tisane than a green tea blend. The taste of pineapple also seems to be lost in a stronger base note of the sweet guava. The blend does seem to come together quite naturally with the floral notes. It is an okay beverage but tastes too much like many fruity, floral teas I’ve tasted. It doesn’t stand out but it’ll do. I could take it or leave it.
You can purchase Mighty Leaf Green Tea Tropical directly from their website.
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Category: White
Tea Company: TeaFrog (website)
Ingredients: Pai Mu Dan, Cornflowers
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 1 tsp, 80 C, 2-3 minutes
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I’m always up for a blueberry flavored white tea! And it’s rare if I don’t like a nice/clean Pain Mu Dan! This was the first time I tried TeaFrog’s version and I must say it’s lovely! It’s a moderately flavored white…not overly so – with plump Blueberries and a hint of floral taste. My first cup was HOT and it was very good. My 2nd attempt was ICED and just as lovely. The only difference I would like to note with the ICED (vs the hot) is that the floral notes seem to come out more with the cold version. This is a decent blueberry flavored white and I am very excited I got to try it!
You can purchase the Blueberry White Tea directly from the TeaFrog website.
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Category: Black
Tea Company: Lochan Tea (website)
Ingredients: Black Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed
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I discovered upon opening the package that the leaves of this tea were considerably larger and more ‘whole’ than the leaves of the First Flush from Goomtee Estate that I also sampled from this same company. These leaves were an interesting and attractive-looking mix of dark green and silver, almost as though they were the buds of a silver needle white tea rather than a black tea. But then supposedly Darjeeling teas get fermented less than most blacks, so it makes sense, I guess.
The smell was sweet and hay-like with some floral notes, though brewed it took on a toastier aroma. It had a more typical Darjeeling flavour than the Goomtee first flush did – resplendent with muscatel flavours, though with considerably less of the drying astringency you’d taste in a later-picked Darjeeling. It was sweeter too, which becomes more noticeable as the tea cooled, and it had a nice, full flavour that lingered in the mouth and kept me from forgetting about it. As it cooled it also took on some fruity characteristics, with an interesting nutty undertone.
Of the two First Flush Darjeelings I’ve tasted now I think this one is my favorite of the two, although in my opinion both are excellent, complex, and interesting teas.
I gave this a Steepster rating of 87/100.
You can find Lochan Teas directly from the Lochan Tea website.
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Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 90deg C, steep for 4 minutes
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The shape of these rolled oolong leaves was reminiscent of an Alishan oolong I once had – small, compacted clumps of leaf. They carry quite a vegetal smell, almost more like a green tea than an oolong. I started out by steeping two teaspoons of leaves in two cups of water for three minutes.This resulted in somewhat of a weak brew, so I put the leaves back in for another minute or so (I like my oolongs stronger).
This completed brew is delightful. Light and creamy oolong scent with just a hint of that original vegetal strength with a bit of peppery smell too. The liquor is a very bright and clear light brown, and the taste….ooooh my. Light and soft, it caresses the tongue while still putting out moderately bold flavours including floral, vegetal, and peppery notes all wrapped into one tasty package. If this oolong went to school, it would be said that it was a very well-rounded individual, as this is a very well-rounded tea, encompassing a variety of different flavours that all serve to complement each other.
The second steep brought out the floral notes in the tea to a much fuller extent. The taste overall mellowed out a lot and brought out a bit more of the vegetal side as well. I could easily see this tea going for at least one or two more steepings. I really enjoyed this tea, and am giving it an 80/100 on my personal enjoyment scale.
You can purchase the Imperial Gold Oolong directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.
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Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 90deg C, steep for 4 minutes
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There are toys you can get – the “amazing expanding dinosaur” or “mermaid that really grows” – compressed sponges that once soaked in water grow something like 400%. This tea is just like these toys. Put in two teaspoons of tea, get an entire cup of giant whole huge tea leaves. A co-worker asked me why I had a cup of wet spinach. And the leaves are good ones too – unbroken and high quality.
And the oolong these beautiful produce is pretty high quality too. This tea tastes like a less oxidized, greener brew, and has a lot of vegetal notes to it. But it also has the buttery mouthfeel you get in some oolongs, the floral notes, and the spicy aromas. Lots of things going on in that cup! It’s a complex tea, but manages to balance the various flavors into a cohesive whole.
Or, to put it another way – Yummy! This is a really nice, solid oolong.
You can purchase the Imperial Gold Oolong directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.

