Posts Tagged ‘Hot Cocoa’
|
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.
|

Organic herbal blend, caffeine free.
5 Minute infusion reveals a medium brown brew.
The package is really neat, a silk pyramid filled with cacao, cinnamon, fennel, licorice root, cardamom, ginger, cloves, black pepper. After the 5 minutes, the silk pyramid is full except for just a teeny bit of space at the tippy top of the pyramid. What I really like about Tea Forte is the attention to detail, the pyramid is like a work of art with a cute little green leaf that wraps delicately over the rim of my favorite tea cup.
Smell after brew time is of cinnamon and chocolate (like a really nice expensive chocolate).
First sip revealed a hot cocoa taste with melted chocolate inside. This tea would make a great dessert tea and an even better before bed kind of drink.
Rich and yummy, a dieters dream come true… all the taste of chocolate with zero calories!
This is definitely going on my shopping list, good job Tea Forte.
You can purchase Tea Forte Coco Truffle Tea directly from their website, and in various high-end establishments around the world.
|
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.
|

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.

