Posts Tagged ‘Lemon Myrtle’
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Category: Green
Tea Company: SpecialTea Brew (website)
Ingredients: Organic Chinese Green Tea, organic ginger root, organic lemon grass, and organic lemon myrtle
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed
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The name of this blend is really inviting, who doesn’t love lemon, ginger and snap? Really. The only concern I have with this one is whether or not the herbs will balance with the Chinese green tea. The dry blend is really pretty with the bright lemon grass contrasting with the dark green tea. The dominant scent is definitely the lemon myrtle, having trouble isolating the scent from the tea and the other herbs.
Ready to steep this tea but I’m a bit torn about how to steep it because it appears to be mostly herbal but it’s categorized as a green tea… Going with green tea method, guessing that steeping it any longer or with hotter water will ruin the green tea in it. So it’s brewing up at 175 degrees for two minutes.
The scent of the lemon myrtle didn’t mellow but that’s okay because I love lemon myrtle. It’s an almost clear brew, just slightly golden. Tastes wonderfully tangy with the spicy hint of ginger. The green tea is crisp and fresh with no bitterness.
You can purchase the Lemon Ginger Snap directly from the SpecialTea Brew website.
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Category: Herbal
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Egyptian Chamomile, Hibiscus, Lemongrass, Orange, Rosehip, Lemon Myrtle, Natural Flavours, Nana Mint, Natural Citrus Flowers.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 2 teaspoons of leaves/12 oz water – 205 degF – 5 minutes
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Category: Rooibos
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients: Hibiscus, marigold, rose, rooibos, natural flavors, natural tropical flavors, mallow blossoms.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 2 teaspoons of leaves/12 oz water – 205 degF – 5 minutes
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Today I’m reviewing to herbal teas from Mighty Leaf and I’m excited because they are one of the few companies I know of who offer high quality in sachets. Perfect to have in a pinch if I’ve forgotten my finum because they tea pouches are large enough to let the tea infuse properly.
Opening the package and I can immediately tell that I’m going to love this tea. The citrus smell is intoxicating. It has Egyptian chamomile in it and the flowers are whole and appear to be really fresh. There’s no dust in the pouch at all, just pretty bits of herbs and fruit.
Steeping it at 205 F for the full five minutes because I want to get every golden bit of the tisane infused. The color was immediately a light yellow then finally went to a nice golden orange. Love the way rosehip warms up the color of a brew. Can smell all of the other herbs now and they are balancing out the citrus perfectly.
Yeah! It tastes as good as it looks and smells, I was right, this is a great blend. I can feel my heart rate slowing, the days stress leaving me… Would it be insane for me to let this tea pouch dry out and use it as a sachet in my lingerie drawer? hmmm… yes, it smells that good.

Now on to the African Nectar. Rooibos is a friend of mine, we go back a long way and she’s never let me down. This tea pouch fine enough to contain the rooibos, helps that it’s a higher grade so the needles are longer. Blends looks like it’s mostly rooibos, with bits of the other ingredients. Can see the marigold in it, which is good (I have a ton of marigold at home and add it to most of my teas, just to up the health benefits of my teas).
This blend has so much of a citrus scent that I can barely smell the rooibos, expecting that will change when I stop analyzing the pouch and add water to it…
Steeping this one the same as I did the Chamomile Citrus, boiling water for five minutes. The rooibos is darker wet so now I can see the other herbs as well as the stems. Excellent leaf to stem ratio though, Mighty Leaf did not disappoint. It’s infused to a nice dark, reddish brown and it smells divine. The rose and hibiscus are now dominating the scent and the citrus smell is completely gone.
It tastes like rooibos but I think the rose is killing it, bit too flowery, almost perfumey. Letting it cool. The pouches are completely biodegradible and they literally look like the sachets that girls use to scent lingerie (do guys do that too?). Tea has cooled now and it still has that rose taste, fantastic if you like flowers in your tea, not working for me though. Still a really good quality tea though, impressive.
You can purchase the Chamomile Citrus directly from the Mighty Leaf Tea website.
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Category: Herbal
Tea Company: Mighty Leaf Tea (website)
Ingredients:
Chamomile Citrus: Egyptian Chamomile, Hibiscus, Lemongrass, Orange, Rosehip, Lemon Myrtle, Natural Flavours, Nana Mint, Natural Citrus Flowers. African Nectar: Hibiscus, marigold, rose, rooibos, natural flavors, natural tropical flavors, mallow blossoms.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Boiling water, steep for 5 minutes
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Today I’m reviewing to herbal teas from Mighty Leaf and I’m excited because they are one of the few companies I know of who offer high quality in sachets. Perfect to have in a pinch if I’ve forgotten my finum because they tea pouches are large enough to let the tea infuse properly.
Opening the package and I can immediately tell that I’m going to love this tea. The citrus smell is intoxicating. It has Egyptian chamomile in it and the flowers are whole and appear to be really fresh. There’s no dust in the pouch at all, just pretty bits of herbs and fruit.
Steeping it at 205 F for the full five minutes because I want to get every golden bit of the tisane infused. The color was immediately a light yellow then finally went to a nice golden orange. Love the way rosehip warms up the color of a brew. Can smell all of the other herbs now and they are balancing out the citrus perfectly.
Yeah! It tastes as good as it looks and smells, I was right, this is a great blend. I can feel my heart rate slowing, the days stress leaving me… Would it be insane for me to let this tea pouch dry out and use it as a sachet in my lingerie drawer? hmmm… yes, it smells that good.

Now on to the African Nectar. Rooibos is a friend of mine, we go back a long way and she’s never let me down. This tea pouch fine enough to contain the rooibos, helps that it’s a higher grade so the needles are longer. Blends looks like it’s mostly rooibos, with bits of the other ingredients. Can see the marigold in it, which is good (I have a ton of marigold at home and add it to most of my teas, just to up the health benefits of my teas).
This blend has so much of a citrus scent that I can barely smell the rooibos, expecting that will change when I stop analyzing the pouch and add water to it…
Steeping this one the same as I did the Chamomile Citrus, boiling water for five minutes. The rooibos is darker wet so now I can see the other herbs as well as the stems. Excellent leaf to stem ratio though, Mighty Leaf did not disappoint. It’s infused to a nice dark, reddish brown and it smells divine. The rose and hibiscus are now dominating the scent and the citrus smell is completely gone.
It tastes like rooibos but I think the rose is killing it, bit too flowery, almost perfumey. Letting it cool. The pouches are completely biodegradible and they literally look like the sachets that girls use to scent lingerie (do guys do that too?). Tea has cooled now and it still has that rose taste, fantastic if you like flowers in your tea, not working for me though. Still a really good quality tea though, impressive.
You can purchase the Chamomile Citrus and African Nectar directly from the Mighty Leaf Tea website.
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Category of Tea: Green
Tea Company: Rishi (website)
Ingredients: Organic and Fair Trade Certified green tea, Organic lemongrass, Organic osthmanthus flowers, Organic lemon myrtle, natural essential oils of orange, lime and tangerine.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Water: 180°F / Leaves: 1 tablespoon per 8 ounces / Infusion Time: 3–4 minutes.
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Described as: “A profoundly flowery blend of select green teas, rare blossoms and aromatic lemon myrtle leaves”.
I was anxious to try this tea because I am a huge fan of lemon myrtle and it did not disappoint. It was difficult to wait the full three minutes for it to steep because the smell of the citrus and rose oils was so alluring. It brewed to a nice golden color, almost like liquid honey and tasted just as smooth. Lemon myrtle is sometimes overwhelming in a tea but this blend has just the right amount to perfectly compliment the taste of orange and the green tea. Couldn’t really pick out the lemon grass in the first steep but it came through in the second. A nice tangy aftertaste, refreshing and pleasant, with enough sweetness on it’s own. It went through three steeps perfectly and has earned a place at the front of my tea cabinet. Can’t wait to try this one iced…
You can purchase Rishi Tea Orange Blossom directly from their website.
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Category of Tea: Green
Tea Company: Rishi (website)
Ingredients: Organic and Fair Trade Certified green tea, Organic lemongrass, Organic osthmanthus flowers, Organic lemon myrtle, natural essential oils of orange, lime and tangerine.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Water: 180°F / Leaves: 1 tablespoon per 8 ounces / Infusion Time: 3–4 minutes.
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Orange Blossom is a deliciously fragrant tea blend from Rishi Tea. Rishi describes it as “a refreshing and floral blend of green teas with sweetly-scented blossoms, lemongrass and tropical citrus fruits”. The listed ingredients are organic and fair trade certified green tea, organic lemongrass, organic osthmanthus flowers, organic lemon myrtle, natural essential oils of orange, lime and tangerine.
Out of the bag the tea seems to be more lemongrass than green tea leaf – a very pretty combination of light and dark green with a scattering of golden osthmanthus flowers. Not surprisingly, the scent is strongly citrus – the orange, lime and tangerine combination almost mimics bergamot; with a nice fruity undertone provided by the osthmanthus.
After brewing, the blend maintained it’s refreshing aroma and produced a nice amber cup of tea. I really couldn’t taste the green tea in this blend, but it had a very pleasant taste; the citrus flavors were mild and not too sharp, and the floral notes added a sweetness rather than a perfumed taste. The lemongrass did a nice job of softening and tying all of the flavors together; although I think that between the lemongrass and the lemon myrtle, someone who didn’t like the taste of lemon may not like this tea. The lemony scent and flavor was not overwhelming for my tastes, but I was expecting stronger notes of orange based on the name of the tea.
Organic Orange Blossom Tea is available for purchase as part of the Xuan En Yulu Organic Fair Trade Sample Set from Rishi Tea.
You can purchase Rishi Tea Orange Blossom directly from their website.

