Showing posts with label Tea Reveiw. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tea Reveiw. Show all posts

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Tuo Cha Pu-erh

The Tuo Cha pu-erh is not really the highest grade pu-erh, but is not a low grade pu-erh either.  It is earthy, like all pu-erhs I have tasted, but sometimes I detect an almost fruity note. I got the pu-erh from The London Tea Room, they have several good pu-erhs there. The Tuo Cha is a richer tea, if tea can be called rich!  The Tuo Cha comes in a small tea cake or brick (whichever you want to call it) that is just the right for about sixteen ounces of water. This Pu-erh is a good tea for rainy days in my opinion because of it's richness and heartyness although is is also a delicate tea in a sense. One nice thing about this Pu-erh is that you can get a lot of infusions out of one cake.  Once I got about ten infusions out of one cake, although towards the end, the pu-erh was not very flavorful. I highly recommend this tea!

Friday, July 3, 2015

Guest post by Amanda Wilson

Thank you for doing this guest post Amanda! Hop on over to her blog: My Thought Are Like Butterflies


Today I am taking a look at Irie a coconut themed Chai spiced tea from Tea Leaf Co (or TeaLC if you are feeling fancy) it takes a classic Masala Chai and tweaks it a bit with coconut and a bit of orange peel. The aroma is very sweet and spicy, blending nice strong ginger and clove with a touch of cinnamon, pepper, and cardamon. Of course there is coconut, just the right amount to accent the spices without overwhelming them with sweetness. Tie in a bit of malt from the black tea base and that is how this tea smells.
irie1.JPG
Brewing the leaves and spices (and other fun things) brings out a very rich blend of spices and coconut. The coconut is creamy and sweet, an excellent accompaniment to the spices, reminiscent of Thai curry. The liquid is a nice blend of spices, with ginger and cinnamon being the dominant ones, the others are mellow in comparison, the coconut is pleasantly sweet and creamy, though not as intense as the leaves.
irie2.JPG
Tasting the tea, with the usual added cream and sugar for a Chai (pretty much the only time I take cream and sugar in my tea anymore) the first thing I notice is the powerhouse of spices blending with the rich malty tea base. The coconut is mellow, it does not detract or overwhelm the spices, and adds a creamy taste and mouthfeel. It is almost like instead of using cream I used coconut milk, just to add a hint, which was great. Sometimes coconut teas are too coconut heavy and you miss out on the other notes, not this time! The aftertaste is spice, specifically warming ginger and pepper.
irie3.JPG

Tuesday, March 31, 2015

Silver Needle

This is just a quick post because I have been trying to post at least twice a month and I only posted once this month! I at least still have several hours left to this month.


Silver Needle is a very pretty tea, I like the silvery look the dry leaves have. My little sister calls it green banana tea! It does not taste like green bananas though, only looks like them.
The taste is similar to the smell of dry autumn leaves,  though a little more subtle. It is also fruityish (I think I may have made that word up!) It has a nutty-toasty flavor as well, somewhat like toasted barley or oat. It is a very good tea is you are not wanting something too strong, yet something that still has plenty of flavor to it. Ever since I first tasted it, I thought it tasted similar to a lightly oxidized oolong. I know that that probably sounds funny, since white teas are oxidized very little, and oolongs are usually oxidized more than green teas are. I think the best word to describe the smell is the word autumn, though autumn may smell different to every person. So that is just about "it" for this post!

Thursday, March 19, 2015

Tung Ting Oolong


I finally got this poem done! I had been starting and re-starting it for quite awhile, but never really got beyond the first line. I decided to try starting it a totally different way. I started it as brewing the tea, not starting it as what the tea tastes like. Here it is (finally, and it is still not perfect) I hope you enjoy it!

I set the leaves to steep,
hot water I then pour over
drowning in the water deep,
they unfurl so beautifully.

Then I smell my finished tea,
lakes and streams and grass
the aroma drifts so wonderfully
though 'tis still to hot for me to sip.

But it then cools off, it seems!
So a careful little sip I take,
but then I quickly cough,
twas still too hot for me.

When the second sip I take,
I take it very cautiously
though the flavors dance 
across and around my tongue.

As I take the next sip over,
the first thing that I taste,
is barley grass and clover
call it vegetal otherwise.

In the next sip that I take
a new flavor is distinct
it is not grass, and is not lake,
it's the bitter almond that I taste!

The next tasty thing,
is honey; dark, dark, honey
though the sweet does not take wing,
I only taste the so-dark flavor.

Have I said enough yet,
of this so-good tea?
If I haven't, do not fret
try it without me!

Or with me, if you want to! What do you think of this poem? Do you think that starting at the brewing and burning your tongue before you really get to taste it a good way to start the poem? The burning your tongue part of the poem happens way too often to me!



Saturday, February 28, 2015

Dark Pearl Oolong


This is such a good tea! It has a rather dark flavor, but is still fruity. It also is more astringent than a lot of oolongs, making almost a mix in flavor between a black and an oolong. I got this one time when I went to The London Tea Room, and asked them what their most interesting tea was. They told me that this one was probably their most interesting tea. I agree that it is very interesting. I have found that some of my favorite teas are the interesting, unique, and different ones. If you can imagine a black tea (I thought a Keemun without the smokyness) mixed with... say Iron Goddess of Mercy oolong and Tung Ting oolong, what you would get is something like Dark Pearl oolong. Dark Pearl is also almost lemony, it is not sour, it is just a little lemony. It also had that toasted barley/oat flavor that a lot of oolongs have! I would say this tea has a very juicy mouthfeel, but, if you let it get cold or cool (accidentally) before you get to drinking it, the mouthfeel is rather creamy. If you can call a tea rich, I would call this tea rich. It is also slightly savory, and sometimes when I drink it, I taste baked potatoes and leeks. At other times though, I taste bananas and peaches (I don't care for the taste of bananas though, sadly.) Yes, I think interesting is a good word to describe this tea!

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Lapsang Souchong and Butterflies


 

I think this is one of my...I can't really say favorite because I don't really have favorite teas.  I guess it could just be called one of the many teas I really like. I think that perhaps one of the reasons is because of it's smoky flavor, and it reminds me of the campfires we have in the summer to burn the bits of wood that somehow end up laying around our yard. It also reminds me of when I was two and a half or three years old, and lived in Guatemala. Some of the people there cooked over wood fires. 

I can just say that whatever the reason, I really like this tea. 

Tasting notes: smoky, very slightly astringent, slightly fruity, and a little nutty. 

I don't know why, but this tea for some reason is reminding me of butterflies on flowers. So, here are some non-tea photographs, I hope that is not too much of a problem! 









A just flower picture I decided to throw in



Friday, January 30, 2015

Dragon Well

I turned the tasting notes I took of this tea at a tea class tonight into a poem once I got back home. I hope you enjoy it!

Dragon Well


At first I only taste 
the goodness of this tea
but then the flavors separate
and become distinct to me

The first one that I taste
is like kale that has been steamed
a little less descriptive,
it would vegetal be deemed 

The next distinct to me
is the delicious nutty-ness
this flavor 'tis a pleasure,
in all it's creamy-ness

And all the time I sip
it tastes 'most buttery
and with stevia-like sweetness
I do enjoy this tea!


I forgot to take any pictures of the tea, so I just put two good tea photographs of mine on instead.

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Highland tea blend and a Lego London Tea Room

This Highland tea blend is one The London Tea Room did exclusively for January. It actually is almost like a tea blend I blended almost a year ago, the only difference is that I used Keemun in my blend and they used a Kenyan tea in theirs.
I am really liking the challenge of writing a poem that accurately describes what I taste in a certain tea. This one is probably my favorite poem so far.



Highland Tea

A background of smoky
and mellow astringency 
neither overpowering
yet not very subtle

What is subtle, though,
is the slight hint of sweetness
and the taste that seems 
almost quite fruity

This tea is quite juicy
and almost is creamy
the right blend of flavors,
it seems the end of my cup
appears way too soon

I decided to write it as a three-verse poem this time.


I built a Lego London Tea Room a couple weeks ago and photographed it just today, I thought I would put the two best photographs on my post. 


How do you like it? I have not gotten out my Legos in about two years, but when I did get them out, this is what I built. This London Tea Room is (hopefully!) not going to be crashed. 

Wednesday, December 31, 2014

Anji White tea review and poem

Anji White loose leaves
 As I softly sip
my Anji White
this is what I taste:
a flavor that is
subtly grassy
yet very vegetal
it is slightly toasty
yet 'er so slightly nutty
a hint of fish
with a hint of spinach
come in the aftertaste
there's another flavor too
one I simply cannot place
yet still I like this tea
that actually is a green!
Anji White brewed tea
Also, how do you like my new blog header?

Monday, December 29, 2014

Iron Goddess of Mercy tea tasting notes in a poem

Iron Goddess of Mercy tea

The taste of this tea
Iron Goddess of Mercy
is slightly nutty
yet very toasty
hints of oats and barley
and the hints of honey
are subtle yet strong
'tis classic but unique
for oolong tea

Written by Clara Stone

Iron Goddess of Mercy dry loose leaf

Sunday, December 28, 2014

Jinggu "Golden Strand" Pure Bud Yunnan Black Tea


The tea is a very beautiful golden-brown color.
You can see our kitchen-ceiling fan reflected in the tea!


I got given a tea sample, I guess about two years ago, by a friend that worked for Kaldi's coffee and the tea sample had been sent to Kaldi's.  The package says: Jinggu "Golden Strand" Pure Bud Yunnan Black tea* Autumn 2012 and is from Yunnan Sourcing.  I really liked it when I first tried it, but then put it in a tin can and put it on a shelf and forgot about it.  Then about a year ago, I was looking in all my tin cans (I do that occasionally), and found it.  I re-tried it and this time did NOT forget about it, it is a very rememberable tea.
These are my tasting notes; First sip: fresh strawberries, juicy, creamy mouthfeel. Second sip: vanilla, sweet, still a hint of strawberries, the juiciness can be tasted with every sip-all through the entire pot, cream aftertaste. Third sip: vanilla, cream, and sweet notes are more intense, hardly any fruitiness left, a slightly toasty note.  The tea is very slightly astringent, and is surprisingly mellow for a black tea.
I think it is very interesting that you taste different things with every sip when you are drinking tea.  I think that one of the things that makes this tea so good is the fact that it is made from only leaf buds.
The leaf buds of the camellia sinensis make the best teas, depending on what you are looking for in a tea, I suppose.




The loose leaves.  

Saturday, December 13, 2014

Six Teas (Poem)



The calm and floral
notes of Jasmine Green
first they dance, and then linger
and remind me of
the flowering spring

The earthy-smoky 
hints in Keemun
remind me of the 
sightly smoky woods
into which I walk

The nutty-grassy 
taste in Kukicha tea
is one in which I do delight 
it tastes like autumn, it tastes of lake
and of the fresh-cut grass

The buttery-nutty taste 
can be found in Milk Oolong
it tastes of fresh churned butter
and holds me many memories
I smile when I taste this tea

I like the taste of White Peony
that reminds me of
the summer rain
of fresh fallen autumn leaves 
and of melting winter snow

The taste of Pu-erh of many kinds
always has and always will
remind me of the spring
whether walking in the rainy wood
or in my garden planting seed

Thursday, November 20, 2014

My adventures with Gardenia Fragrance (Huang Zhi Xiang)

I went to a tea rarties class last friday, and one of the teas we sampled was, Gardenia Fragrance (Huang Zhi Xiang) oolong. However they did not really have much information on gardenia fragrance (except for the fact that was grown on WuDong mountain). So I came home with the intention of finding out as much as I could about it. I googled it and found quite a bit of information, which I then sent to the person who was doing the tea class. 
I decided to copy and paste my email and the links to this blog, it seemed like it would make a good first post.


This is my compiling of some of the information I found (and read) about Gardenia Fragrance Tea: It is a whole-leaf tea, and is oxidized 40-60 percent. It is also a Dancong oolong . I think that Huang Zhi Xiang refers to a type of tea bush and it is from the Guangdong province. The trees Gardenia Fragrance comes from are over one hundred years old! I also just copied and pasted this information: It is barely roasted, and as one of the lightest, least oxidised Phoenix Oolongs falls somewhere between a ‘Qing’ and ‘Nong Xiang’. The tea’s thicker, smoother character and more pronounced and persistent finish are indications of its age and lineage. 

Here is the link to the website that I copied and pasted  this from:

Here is an interesting review about several Dancong oolongs:

This page includes a lot of information about Dancong oolongs, and also some information about Gardenia Fragrance:

 This page also includes another name for Gardenia Fragrance - Yellow Blossom Fragrance: