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A meal within itself. Always a good refreshing tea, especially in late winter to early spring. I’ve had a few genmaicha now and this one is just as good as any of them. I find the difference being the balance between green tea taste and rice. This one learns toward the nutty rice taste.
Preparation
I’m sure I would find this tea perfectly palatable under most circumstances, but tasting it in conjunction with Jasmine Dragon Pearls – this tea doesn’t even come close. A much flatter and slightly astringent green, with a less amazing Jasmine taste. Its like the plain, slightly dowdy rebound girl your ex dated immediately after you broke up with him, but their relationship only lasted a few months because she was nowhere near as awesome as you. And now you get frequent weeping phonecalls begging you to take him back.
Yep.
Preparation
From the small rolled ‘pearls’, to how they sink to the bottom of your cup and slowly unfurl, to the light yet lush jasmine flavour – this is a beautiful tea from start to finish! Its also one of those teas that seem expensive up front, but as it stands up so well to multiple infusions I’d say it’d end up on par (or maybe cheaper) than a regular jasmine green. And much nicer too!
Brew this in a glass cup or teapot if you can, so you can watch the pearls do their thang!
Preparation
Huh, I recall this being completely awful the first time I tried it and reminiscent of stewed vegetables. It must’ve been brewed wrong, because its certainly not the case this time! This Kukicha is an incredibly mild buttery-nut savoury green, that would be hard-pressed to find any haters. I don’t love it, but don’t find it personally offensive either. The George Clooney of teas really.
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I am a bergamot fiend but I cannot stand floral earl greys. Somehow this ends up tasting exactly like my nemisis, Earl Grey Blue Flower, with that weird heavily perfumed bergamot flavour. If that sounds delicious to you, you will really love this tea. And green tea haters pay attention: you cannot taste the green tea in this at all, so go for it!
Preparation
I fully expected this to be the worst tasting of all the flavoured green teas I tried today. The aroma of the leaves was worryingly strong, but the resulting infusion was surprisingly nice! A lovely and incredibly delicate vanilla flavour, with no green taste whatsoever. Vanilla fans or those who enjoy white teas will love this!
Preparation
Green chai is a concept I absolutely cannot wrap my head around. The flavour is completely on the mark (though the cinnamon is too bitey for me), it tastes exactly like a chai should with just a hint of the sencha base creeping through. Like a serial killer creeping through your backyard in the dead of night. Which is creeping me out.
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I looove green chais although I still can’t bring myself to add milk to them. On the up side, your ratings are going up!=D
Aw, drinking this just made me crave a black or rooibos milky chai! Green chais are just too weird for me.
While I love black chais (especially 52teas Mayan Chocolate Chai- the best EVER IMO), I’m not a fan of unflavored or other black based flavors- I’m a green, white, raw pu erh, and green oolong woman. Maybe that’s why.
I’m really not a fan of that weird artificial lemon taste, which this tea somehow has even though the flavouring is nature identical. Hmm.
There is nothing particularily awful or gravely offensive about it, I was just surprised it tasted like your run-of-the-mill lemon tea from the supermarket. Plus I prefer to be able to taste the “tea” in flavoured teas – with this the sencha just gets lost in the lemon flavour. Whatever floats your boat, I guess…
Preparation
Haha I’m trying to taste all the teas I haven’t tried… naturally they are the ones I correctly guessed I would hate!
I have one Ricky sent me that I know I’m gonna hate. Oh well, he sent it to me as a suprise w/ some other things I was expecting. He asked if I wanted to try it and I said no because I’d figure I’d hate it and sent it anyway. So I’ll get some humor out of his reaction to my review lol=D
I want so badly to like this tea, because the ingredients sound so yummy! Citrus zest, rose petals, almond pieces, cloves, vanilla pieces, cinnamon flavouring and cardamom… delicious right? Wrong.
The only reason I braved a second tasting of this tea was because the first time I tried it, the leaves were from a fairly old packet so I thought it may have been let down by a stale green tea base. But it turns out not to have made much of a difference. The flavour is overwhelmingly dominated by the citrus zest and cinnamon, making for a harsh and lip-puckering brew that I would only wish on my most hated enemies.
I’d love to see a reblend of this, though I think it would be more suited to a black tea base: remove the cloves, cardamom and citrus, lighten the cinnamon, keep the vanilla, rose and almond?
Preparation
I do not remember this tea being so delightful the first time I tasted it! Delicate, incredibly smooth with just a hint of smokiness and barely any astringency. Another inoffensive brew, almost like the elevator muzak of green teas…
Preparation
Look how gorgeous this tea is! Even the wet leaves look lovely: long, spindly, bright green things. What a delight! The color of the tea is very light, with the taste being smooth, buttery and slightly fruity. One of the more interesting greens I’ve tried, I think you will especially enjoy it if you are a fan of the more complex tasting Darjeelings.
Preparation
You know, I wish “broken orange pekoe” wasn’t abbreviated into a word like “bop”, because it makes me think the tea will be something you can tap your feet along to. Which was not the case with this one. I’m not sure if it was an old packet or my rising distrust of ceylon teas, but this barely tasted like anything. With milk, it was definitely more “meh” than “bop”.
Preparation
Incredibly smooth, nicer than English Breakfast and lighter than Irish Breakfast. A lovely tea to drink plain as well, I think milk mutes the delicate flavour too much. The perfect afternoon tea, would pair well withsomething light like a lemon friand…
Preparation
Yikes, this tea is rough when drunk plain. But adding milk mutes the flavour a surprising amount. There’s a very small difference of strength between this and the english breakfast – to be honest, neither of them are strong enough or malty enough for my tastes.
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Ah, the classic breakfast tea. Classic though it may be, its pretty boring. Smooth, very light, with a hint of malt on the back of your tongue. I think most people choose this blend because they find such a large selection of plain teas overwhelming, which is a shame because there are so many that are nicer than this one!
If you want a slightly less boring version of this, the organic version from the same brand is far more delightful.
Preparation
The only occasion you would utter the words “needs more ginger” is when drinking this tea. I was in the mood for something heart-warming and zingy, so decided to give this a go. Unfortunately the ginger is pretty mild, even without milk, so I had to add ginger root to up the zing quota. Zing.
Preparation
Rose is good. I want to grow all the different kinds of mint. When I came back from vacation, a friend gave me some spearmint, orange mint, and lemon verbena from her garden.
Its a Sunday, I’m stuck at work for what is day 6 of 9 and I needed a pick-me-up in the form of an expensive tea so I could feel indulged. Gyokuro Kabuse is less buttery than my favourite (and doubley expensive) Hon Gyokuro, but is still really delicious. You get a hint of something greenish on the back of your tongue, like a small reminder that you are infact drinking a green tea instead of some magical delicate butter drink. I recommend a pot of this for when you’re having a day where a new pair of shoes or a packet of Hon Gyokuro would normally put a smile on your face, but you can’t afford either.
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I don’t know whats more hilarious than someone who doesn’t like white tea or rose, reviewing a White Rose tea. I found this tea pretty pointless, as both the rose and the tea were competing for the Most Delicate Flavour Ever title. If you want a white tea, go for the silver needle. If you want a rose tea, go for straight rose petals or rose buds. If you want a pair of Louboutins, you’re going to have to start saving because I can’t help you there.
Woah, this was so interesting straight after trying the white peony! In comparison its a much lighter and sweeter tea, with a greenish way about it – reminiscent of a Japanese sencha. So if you are the kind of person that gets down to green tea or 60s girl groups, you will enjoy Silver Needle for sure.
ETA: On the second steep, the flavour is stronger, sharper and leafier – I’m, not sure I like it!