Posts Tagged ‘Orange Flavor’
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Category: Green
Tea Company: The Necessiteas (website)
Ingredients: green tea, orange and a hint of cream topped of with vanilla chips
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed online
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This review is being written in the middle of a heat wave. Industrial air conditioners around town are failing in the force of the oppressive heat. The skin on the back of your legs begins to cook the moment you step foot out of the house, causing many to turn and run back into air conditioned houses, making the heat worse on the next visit outside.
What better time for a tea that tastes of ice cream and mentions it would be great iced?
Like all the NecessiTeas blends I’ve tried, it smells amazing. Orange peel, creamy notes and tea blend into an aroma to make the angels of frozen confectionaries cry. Once brewed up it’s a lovely light yellow green. Unsweetened, the tea and the orange peel are front and center. The pleasantly bitter flavor of the orange combines well with the green tea base to make a pleasant drink. There’s a hint of a creamy after note. When I let the cup cool, the green tea took over more and the flavors hid.
But it’s an ice cream flavored tea, so that, to me means SWEET. So I sweetened my next cup. YUM. It brought out the cream flavors, and mellowed the orange flavor while not loosing the tea itself. When this cooled, it retained the dreamcicle flavor, and stayed an excellent sipping tea. I tried steeping the leaf again – and was pleasantly surprised that the added flavors remained strong.
This is a yummy, yummy tea. It’s a flavored green that manages to highlight the added flavors without losing it’s basic tea-ness. I’d strongly reccomend a sweetened iced cup of this for a warm summers evening, sitting out watching the fireflies.
You can purchase the Orange Creamsicle directly from the The Necessiteas website.
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Category: Rooibos
Tea Company: The Necessiteas (website)
Ingredients: Rooibos, orange peel, almonds, natural flavor
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 1 teaspoon per 8 oz. boiling water, steep 5 minutes
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The NecessiTeas’ selection of rooibos teas reads like a decadent bakery menu. Chiffons and cocoas and various sweet temptations are elements of every item. My first sniff of the Orange Marzipan dry mix sent my taste buds crazy, craving sugar cookies with almond flavoring–because the almond is what hits you first, strong and sweet.
The heavy almond scent dissipates a little once you steep the tea. But rooibos is complemented well by sweetish flavors and the blend is still cookie-pleasant. Orange flavor is present, but stays modestly in the background.
As tea ingredients, oranges and almonds have the potential to turn on you if you don’t steep carefully–oranges go sour, almonds go bitter. But in the case of this culinary concoction, it’s all good; well balanced.
You can purchase the Orange Marzipan directly from the The Necessiteas website.
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Category: Rooibos
Tea Company: TeaFrog (website)
Ingredients: Rooibos, Pineapple Bits, Dried Coconut, Rose Blossoms
Vendor Suggested Preparation: One heaping teaspoon per cup. Steep 5 min in boiling water.
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Pineapple bits, dried coconut and rose petals are dispersed throughout this rooibos blend. The dry smell is tropical without the woodsy smell that some rooibos teas exhibit.
5 minute infusion and the rose petals have unfurled. This particular blend is very drinkable with a sweetness that masks the rooibos. As I sip this tea, I can detect an almost orange flavor profile. Nice choice for late night tea sipping since rooibos is naturally caffeine free.
You can purchase the Tahiti Cream directly from the TeaFrog website.
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Category: Pu-erh
Tea Company: Chicago Tea Garden (website)
Ingredients: Pu-erh Tea
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I was extremely curious to try Wild Orange Pu-erh, when I saw the photo of dried tea leaves stuffed in an orange on the Chicago Tea Garden website. The vendor generously sells samples for $3 (including shipping); so I could not resist a purchase. And, I was surprised when I opened the sample package to see a tea leaf stuffed miniature orange, similar to the photo. According to the vendor, the tea-oranges were obtained in China and then aged in U.S. pu-erh caves for over 5 years. As expected, the orange peel was showing its age with a withered, dried look. If you are looking for a novelty gift for the tea-lover in your life, this is definitely one option.
As I measured out the tea, unlike some lower quality pu-erhs, no fishy flavors were noted. Following the vendor’s detailed instructions (which were printed on handy cards), I steeped the tea briefly for 30 seconds and added a piece of dried orange peel. I was surprised by the resulting brew, which was not a brown liquor typically seen for pu-erhs; instead, the tea brews to a pale orange color. The flavor has a very slight earthy flavor but certainly not as potent as a typical pu’erh. The taste can be described as smooth, light, and mellow. The subtle citrus note in the background is not tart and is surprisingly sweet, so this tea does not require sugar to balance any tartness from the citrus. Although this tea is mild, it can hold up to multiple infusions. To bring out the earthy pu’erh flavors, I experimented with longer steeping times (up to 4 minutes). The resulting brew was more typical of standard pu’erhs but then the lightness of the orange flavor was not as noticeable.
As this is a light and fragrant brew, I highly recommend this tea for pu-erh beginners. Also, why not check out Chicago Tea Garden’s website? With $3 samples, it is affordable to sample their other offerings.
You can purchase the Wild Orange Pu-erh directly from the Chicago Tea Garden website.
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Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Imperial Tea Garden (website)
Ingredients: Oolong, Jasmine Petals, Fruit Peel and natural flavors
Vendor Suggested Preparation: no suggestions
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Product Description: Orange Blossom is a blend of oolong teas from Taiwan, Sri Lanka and India. This loose leaf tea is combined with jasmine petals, fruit peel and natural flavors giving it a light, airy character with delicate orange flavor. This is an excellent beverage with morning toast and marmalade. The aroma will leave others wondering what’s in your cup, so make enough to share. Orange Blossom oolong tea also makes a refreshing and exotic iced tea.
Recently I was introduced to Imperial Tea Garden Teas. I LOVE trying teas from companies I have never tried from before. One of the teas I tried this week was their Orange Blossom Oolong. The dry leaves reminded me of a home that has recently been cleaned with Orange Glo and Lemon Pledge… I could smell the fresh, clean orange smell but also a little woodsy as well! Post infusion the aroma is more of an orange and a blossom. The scent is very ‘pretty’, pleasant, and uplifting!
As for taste this is a fairly full-bodied Oolong! It has some kick to it! There is more of a blossom than an orange taste but it seems to all even out at the end. I must say I am a fan of the Imperial Tea Garden teas I have tried so far and will be reviewing more of them very soon… so stay tuned!
You can purchase the Orange Blossom Oolong Tea directly from the Imperial Tea Garden website.

