Posts Tagged ‘Tea Forte’

Category: Black
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: black tea, ginger, cinnamon, cardamom, cloves, star anise, black pepper, flavoring
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 3-5 minutes, 208 degF

Tea Forte Bombay Chai

These teabags are adorable; little bendy strings with the leaf, the pyramid shape leaving room for the leaves to dance, the packaging.  They’re highly engineered and very cute.

However, it’s what’s inside that counts, and as a chai, it didn’t really stand out.  Chai should be bold and brave and spicy.  This is a delicate chai.  A demure chai.  Not quite a wall-flower chai, but definitely not the belle of the ball.  Nice to drink, but not something I’d actively seek out.

What I found that I really liked using this tea for was making cocktails with it.  I originally got this idea from a class I took at a local tea shop.  They had gotten the Tea Forte tea cocktails set in, and this is a modification of one of those recipes.  This is a LOVELY decadent drink, to replace dessert when you feel like laying about and being pampered.

1 Bombay Chai Tea Pyramid
Double shot of Whipped Cream flavored vodka (can be done with regular vodka, but this adds an extra dimension of yum)
ice
simple syrup
whole milk (or half and half if you feel REALLY decadent)

Take the bombay chai tea pyramid and put in a small cup.  Pour the vodka in, let sit approx. 5-8 minutes. Remove tea pyramid. Take a large juice or highball glass, fill with ice.  Pour in steeped vodka.  Then add at least 2 tbsp of simple syrup, more if you like things sweet (you can adjust after finishing the drink).  Fill the glass with milk.  Taste, adjust the sweetness with more simple syrup as needed.  Then enjoy.

The tea pyramid can be resteeped two to three times for more drinks.  (For you, or your friends - if you want to share.)  It’s amazingly yummy.  Completely decadent.  Lovely.

You can purchase the Bombay Chai directly from the Tea Forte website.

Category of Tea: White
Tea Company: Tea forte (website)
Ingredients: ginger, blackberry leaves, lemon balm leaves, white tea, mallow flowers, flavoring.
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 2-4 minutes, 195F.

Tea forte - white ginger pear

Although I normally cut open teabags and steep them loose, I decided to steep this tea in its own bag and why not, Tea Forte has one of the most attractive teabags in the industry. I kept the teabag in for the full duration of my drinking the tea. Steeped leaves show broken green leaves, stem, ginger bits, and white flower petals. Infusion is a yellowish colour. Although the leaves are not small enough, I did notice a little bit of dust components, pekoe?, that made it through the teabag and sat on the surface of the tea. Aroma is heavenly, sweet from the pear.

Unlike with many teas with ginger as an ingredient that I have tasted recently, the ginger here is surprisingly soft. Sweetness came predominantly from the white tea and pear and the ginger played the supportive role. The resulting taste of the balance of these three flavours is one similar to bubble gum. Funny, I don’t think I’ve ever seen a pear bubble gum flavour before, but the combination of these three ingredients was spot on like bubble gum. Don’t get me wrong, I like bubble gum but like with bubble gum I can’t chew more than one piece at a time. I don’t think I can drink more than one cup of this tea at a sitting. I can’t see myself drinking a lot of it.

You can purchase Tea forte white ginger pear directly from their website.

Category: Herbal
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: peppermint, lemon peel
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 5 minutes, 208 degF For stronger flavor, steep longer.

Tea Forte Citrus Mint

Not being much of a mint fan, in whatever form, be it candy, ice cream, or chocolates, Tea Forte has a tough job at hand to try to convince me that mint – yes, in the form of a tea is good. Well, I like citrus fruits so at least they have that going for them. Anyway, on with the review…

Dry leaf looks like the grade of a fannings, green and some brown, packaged in that familiar pyramid shaped teabag known to be Tea Forte. I cut open the 2 teabags I received (total about 3 grams) and steeped it in about 400 ml of hot water. I was pre-occupied at the time and by the time I returned to the water, it had cooled to 80C. Herbal teas should be steeped at 100C for 2-3 minutes. I knew I was going to get a sub-par tasting tea. There was a faint minty aroma, no hint of citrus. The taste was minty, not overly piercing mintyness but a softer mint. I did not detect any citrus taste. After the initial mintyness, there was a taste as if you were licking the back of an envelope – that sort of gluey-paper taste. Mind you, I think this was because of the low temperature at which I steeped the tea.

I tried a second infusion at boiling point and the tea tasted much better. There was no more of the gluey-paper taste and the mintyness was more light and tangy rather than stale if that makes any sense. I noticed that as the tea cools, the minty taste dissipates and you can taste hints of citrus. I prefer it cold rather than hot. As a hot beverage, I found that the citrus and mint did not complement each other very well. I don’t know, maybe because when I drink citrus I expect something sweet like citrus juices, because when I tasted this the sort of “lack of sweetness” coupled with the mintyness made the taste buds yearn for something that wasn’t there. It was missing an ingredient, maybe honey or cocoa shells or maybe even lavender. But then again, that could just complicate things…let’s leave that to the tea blenders shall we.

You can purchase the Citrus Mint directly from the Tea Forte website.

Category: Black
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: Darjeeling Black Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 3-5 minutes, 208 deg. F

Tea Forte Estate Darjeeling

The Darjeeling District of West Bengal, India has produced some of the most nuanced teas for well over 150 years.  Eighty-plus gardens in the district produce only 7% of India’s total tea. (Competing regions include Nilgiri and Assam.) The median flavor profile of Darjeeling teas has often been described as muscatel and light. Such a note earned these orange pekoes the designation, “The Champagne of Teas”.  Not sure I agree with the title, but it is apt enough in signifying their importance.

Tea Forté is a vendor with an unusual design for their teas. Instead of a normal net sachet for the illustrious leaves, they implement a…well…there’s no other way to describe it, really. It’s a fort, an actual “tea fort”. The netting is a tall pyramid, which is individually packaged. The” tea fort” string is green with a cute li’l leaf on the end.

I’ve only ever had one other tea from Tea Forté, and the delivery mechanism got a giggle out of me. What can I say? It was satisfyingly silly. For their Estate Darjeeling, they didn’t quite specify which estate it hailed from. (Note to future tea vendors: Always list the estate.) However, it smelled lovely – albeit missing the requisite spice in the fragrant finish.

Brewing instructions sort of echoed my thoughts on Darjeeling prep. They recommended a three-to-five-minute steep in water heated to 208F (basically boiling). Personally, I found that Darjeelings worked best with “under-a-boil” water and no more than a three-minute steep. That was the approach I used when test-driving this.

Since the leaf allocation of the “tea fort” looked to be about a tablespoon worth, I filled a transparent pint glass with about 12oz of hot water. To my surprise, the leaves expanded to take up the ENTIRE sachet. I started to think I underestimated the water needed.

Thankfully, the liquor brewed to the usual amber of Darjeelings past, if a little darker. This made me think that I was dealing with an autumn flush OP. The aroma could only be described as “cocoa-grape” – muscatel with a chocolaty underpinning.  The taste was boldly floral, slightly spicy, and very strong on the grapy give. I’d say it was even the most boldly muscatel of the Darjeelings I’ve tried in awhile, but part of that might also be due to the unexpected flowery profile.  Quite enjoyable.

You can purchase the Estate Darjeeling directly from the Tea Forte website.

Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Tea Forte (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steep for 2-4 minutes, 195 deg F

Tea Forte Formosa Oolong

Once again utilising my Tea Forte Cafe Cup, Tea Forte Tea Tray, and Tea Forte Tea Timer iPhone application , I start out steeping this tea for a recommended average of 3 minutes. It may sound like a shameless plug, but their app is great, and the Cafe Cup (with its specially designed lid) is perfect for steeping Tea Forte pyramid infuser bags. The leaves inside the pyramid infuser look very broken up. This worries me a bit, but not being one to judge a tea from its appearance (at least not completely), I wait patiently for the steeping to finish.

The liquor has steeped to a milk-chocolate brown. Nutty smells waft up from the cup. This tea smells quite nutty. In the aroma, there even appears to be some subdued cocoa notes. Taking my first sip, it appears that three minutes was long enough to steep this tea. Perhaps even a bit too long.

The taste is much smoother than the smell would lead one to believe. Unlike many Formosa oolongs I have tried, this one slips nicely over the tongue, ending in an expressive aftertaste. Robust is a good descriptor for this tea. Oolongs are known to be warming to the body, and this one seems to be the epitome of that factoid.

My tea time was enjoyable, thanks to this tea. It was a good representation of a decent Formosa oolong. On my personal enjoyment scale, I rate it an 80/100.

You can purchase the Formosa Oolong directly from the Tea Forte website.

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