Andrews & Dunham Damn Fine Tea

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Recent Tasting Notes

100

See note on the original Caravan:

https://steepster.com/Morgana/posts/44892#likes

Except the link doesn’t work (why?), so I’ll repeat it here:

So here’s what happened.

I put this into the Breville to steep, and then forgot about it and took my 4 year old to pre-K. When I came home I remembered, and the timer on the Breville indicated it had been available for drinking for approximately 54 minutes.

I figured it would be cold and probably not very good, but I tasted it anyway.

WOW.

It was lukewarm. But the first thing I noticed was the mouthfeel. Thick. Not really chewy, but thick and textured, somewhere between broth and syrup. And then, unexpectedly, the most wonderful flavor. Gently smoky, with a naturally sweet, smooth undercurrent of tea that tastes like… bread on the initial sip, and as it rounds out in the mouth, plums?

Enough. I have to go make more of this and see how it is hot.

While it’s making, I’m backtracking to the dry tea. Fairly large, brown tippy leaves. A very smoky smell, that has the salty, meaty smoke thing going on.

And yes, it’s even better hot! The thickness of the mouthfeel isn’t as apparent, but there’s a carby sweetness, sort of yam-like, to both the aroma and the flavor. The smoke is an accent, not the main event, but a noticeable one. There’s a lot of depth and character here, something that reminds me of what I like about Samovar’s black teas. That particular quality is more apparent as the tea cools. Too cold, as my first cup has now become, and the magic goes poof. Would not recommend this as an iced tea. But any range between right out of the pot and lukewarm is delicious. Like a nice wine that’s left to breathe, it changes with time. One flavor may not be better than the others, just different and equally wonderful.

I was moved to give this a 100, but I can’t bring myself to do it on a limited edition. It would just be too sad to have decided on a perfect tea, and then have it be unavailable.

I can’t really improve upon what I said there, except that this being no longer a limited edition, I have given it my first 100 rating!

It’s a rich Yunnan with some smoke around the edges, and it is sensational.

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML
Cameron B.

Regarding your link – it’s because you have underscores in your username, which are used to format text as italic. So it makes the text italic instead of printing the underscores, and breaks the link. :P

__Morgana__

How bothersome!

Cameron B.

Usually there’s some mechanism to “escape” special characters like that so that you can print them literally. It’s often a backslash (\), but unfortunately that doesn’t seem to work around here… :(

Lexie Aleah

This sounds SO good It’s a shame that it’s a limited edition though.

__Morgana__

It made a return, and as long as A&D is around I expect they will keep bringing it back periodically.

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95

More A&D to try and write first notes about today. Yowza.

In between, I’ll be binge watching season 4 of The Wire. I need to find another show for after this one is done. Suggestions?

It’s not stated what’s in this blend, but I’m going to go with assam and ceylon. The color is that reddish burnt-orange that I associate with Ceylons (and which may be the reason for the red-tailed reference). Whenever I see it, I wish for a sweater in the same color. And the dry leaf is a mix of leaf that looks similar to the Tiger Assam of yesterday mixed with some very dark bird-nesty twists of leaf. The dry leaf smells a little bready, and a little winey-pungent.

The steeped tea has a sweet potato and baked bread smell. I steeped for three minutes and I don’t get any bitterness, but do get some maltiness. There’s something that even heads toward chocolate. The tea is somewhat astringent, but it’s very satisfying.

I find this smooth and flavorful. No throat grab, not harsh on an empty stomach. I may prefer it to the Tiger Assam because of the chocolate note, which gives it more depth.

Flavors: Bread, Chocolate, Malt, Red Wine, Sweet Potatoes

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML
Tabby

That’s funny, I saw a red-tailed hawk on my lunch break today.

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85

Sipdown no. 8 of 2022 (no. 658 total).

I have been drinking too much caffeine — the other night I was up until 4 a.m. and I have to start being more careful about caffeine consumption after noon.

This was the lowest rated green tea in my collection so I decided to mark it for a sipdown. It may be the first A&D tea I have sipped down as I usually hoard and cherish them.

I tried this both hot and cold. Cold was a little too vegetal, sort of like asparagus run off — but hot was pretty much as described in the original note. A very good tea, but not the best green I’ve ever had.

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85

Another A&D first tasting. So lucky am I!

The dry leaves are gorgeous. Long, twisty, and tippy, and variegated in color on a continuum from forest green to silver. In the tin, they have notes of sweet pea, asparagus, and yellow squash. Why is there no yellow squash option in flavors?

Also, why does clicking flavors take me directly to some Windows sign in thing instead of Outlook, like it used to? Freaky and annoying. But I digress.

The steeped tea is pale yellow and clear. The aroma is mild and vegetal, with the notes mentioned above. Next time I might try the water a bit hotter as A&D suggests.

The tea is tasty and mild. It’s not as juicy as some Chinese greens, and I wish it were a bit moreso. But at this point I can’t rule out user error. Next time I’ll try hotter water and longer steep time.

Flavors: Asparagus, Peas

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 30 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML

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92

I have a number of A&D teas I haven’t tasted yet, and I get to do that as part of my “taste every tea in the cupboard and write a note about it” project. It’s always a pleasure to drink A&D so I’m really excited that I get to do this.

The leaves of this are pretty — very tippy, and they smell earthy and a little minerally. Also a little like something baked. Baked sweet potato, maybe.

The steeped tea definitely has a sweet smell like sweet potatoes. It has a stewed fruity aspect to it as well. Prunes? The color is a clear, dark chestnut.

The tea has a bit of Assam throat grab, a sort of a bite (well, they did name it after a tiger, right)? But it isn’t as harsh as a lot of other Assams I’ve had. It’s strong, but more smooth than harsh, and the tea itself has a pleasant malty mildness which is a little surprising. It’s not at all bitter, not what I’d call “stout” (which is basically my way of saying heavy on the stomach). None of that here.

The aftertaste has a sweet, mocha note.

It’s a truly lovely Assam.

Flavors: Earth, Malt, Mineral, Mocha, Stewed Fruits, Sweet Potatoes

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML
Cameron B.

Yummy. This is one of the teas on my list to order from Andrews & Dunham. ❤

__Morgana__

I am worried about them. They haven’t said anything on social media for a while.

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92

It feels like forever since I’ve had something that called itself an Earl Grey. I am surprised I missed it as much as I do. I wouldn’t count Earl Greys as among my favorite teas. I’m not sure they’re even in the top ten, though I do enjoy them a lot when I’m in the right mood.

Also, I haven’t really met an Andrews and Dunham tea that I didn’t like.

I thought that might change when I cracked open the tin because the dry tea smells heavily and only of bergamot. Strongly citrus. It even has an edge of perfume to it. When I do have Earl Grey, I like the ones that are bergamot-citrus, usually a lot more than the ones that are than bergamot-perfume.

After steeping, the perfume aspect goes away, fortunately. The aroma mellows substantially, to a light lemon-orange scent over tea with a mocha note. The tea is dark amber and clear.

This is a lovely Earl Grey. My favorite always and forever will be Samovar’s followed by ATR’s Earl Grey Shanghai which is no longer available. While I prefer the Yunnan base of the Samovar and ATR, this is a very mellow blend. The bergamot is definitely central, but not sharp or overpowering, and it integrates well with the base. I’m not sure what the base is, just that it isn’t Yunnan. It doesn’t have the color of Ceylon after steeping. Assam, perhaps?

In any case, I like it a lot. I’m bumping ATR’s rating just so I can rate this high.

I am a little worried about Andrews & Dunham, though. The last thing I see on their Facebook page is from September.

Anyone have any news?

Flavors: Bergamot, Citrus, Lemon, Mocha, Orange, Perfume

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML

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80

ahh, it always feels victorious finishing one of these tins. I’ve had this one forever and will miss it. it is everything I enjoy in black teas: malty, bready, stone-fruit-y, bright & brisk.

does anyone know what’s going on with Andrews & Dunham? both last year & this year they didn’t release their Oktoberfest blend :( I don’t even think they released their Christmas blend last year either (could be wrong).

tea-sipper

I think A&D posted something about a sale a couple months ago, so they are still around…

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85

Sipdown! (19 | 366)

I think this one was suffering from a bit of flavor loss, as I wasn’t really getting a lot of the fresher, more vegetal notes from it anymore. It’s veering more into hay and dry grass territory, still with a bit of nuttiness to it. The apricot is more like apricot leather versus the fresh fruit, and there’s more bitterness than I remember.

So about time I finished it off apparently! To be honest, I mostly bought this one for the tin originally, but it was also a tasty and well-balanced Chinese green tea when it was fresher.

Flavors: Apricot, Bitter, Dried Fruit, Dry Grass, Hay, Nuts, Soybean, Straw

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec 3 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML

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85

Pulled this one out today as it’s the 10th tea in my collection (via my spreadsheet, which is alphabetized by company and then tea name), and I’m following the #CuppaTeaAthon prompts on Instagram this week, one of which was to drink your 10th tea.

Anyway! This is quite lovely. It’s extremely well-balanced, smooth but with some minerality and a hint of smokiness to it. There’s creaminess and edamame and hay, but also a delicious apricot aftertaste and enough astringency to keep it interesting. It’s also going on three years old, but still tastes good.

I wouldn’t say it’s a standout tea, but I feel like what it does, it does exceedingly well. It’s supremely drinkable and it makes my mouth happy. Plus, what a gorgeous tin! :3

Flavors: Apricot, Astringent, Bitter, Creamy, Grain, Green Beans, Hay, Mineral, Nuts, Smoke, Smooth, Soybean, Stonefruit, Sweet, Vegetal

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML
gmathis

I haven’t checked out A&D for a long time. (Doing so now.)

Cameron B.

They don’t have much at the moment, sadly!

gmathis

Boy, that’s the truth!

Evol Ving Ness

I see them a note a couple of weeks ago and they said they are restocking soon. No details as to when exactly.

Cameron B.

Ooooooh the plot thickens! I’ll have to keep an eye out.

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85

Home – 8:00 PM

So my Andrews & Dunham order was supposed to come today, but it’s been delayed until tomorrow. To console myself, I’m having a large mug of the only A&D tea currently in my cupboard.

I really do like this one. It’s smooth, sweet, and creamy with notes of edamame, summer squash, and sugar snap peas. I’m not sure if it’s because this is a Yunnan green tea, but it has some delicious grainy/bready notes that remind me of either a silver needle or a golden Yunnan black tea. There’s a hint of smoke and mineral in the background, which gives it a bit more presence without overwhelming the other flavors. At the end of the sip, there’s a soft and slightly drying apricot note that I often find in Chinese green teas.

Aww, and now my mug is empty. Why does that always happen?!

Can’t wait to try my new A&D teas tomorrow – I ordered Black Sunshine, Tiger Assam, and Mount Gray. I had to talk myself out of ordering a second 3-pack as I likely won’t even finish those three tins before they start to lose flavor…

Flavors: Apricot, Astringent, Bread, Creamy, Grain, Mineral, Oats, Peas, Smoke, Smooth, Soybean, Sweet

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML
evol-ving

Damn fine teas—love them! But I have put myself on a leash with tea purchases because, you know, out of control and all that.

Mastress Alita

I’m on that same leash, evol-ving.

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85

Home – 9:00 PM

I confess, I bought this tea entirely because of the tin. The artwork is lovely!

Luckily for me, the tea is also very tasty! It’s a lovely light Chinese green (apparently Yunnan, not that I would know the difference) – extremely sweet, creamy, and smooth with a nice silky mouthfeel. There are fresh vegetal notes of baby spinach, edamame, and sugar snap peas, along with a very mild and sweet grass flavor. At the end, there’s a light apricot note with the tiniest bit of astringency mimicking the fuzz of its skein.

Yummy yummy, and with a beautiful tin! ❤

(Ughhhh, now I have to talk myself out of buying every tea that Andrews & Dunham offers…)

Flavors: Apricot, Cream, Freshly Cut Grass, Peas, Soybean, Spinach, Sweet, Vegetal

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec 3 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML

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89

I love this tea. I love smokey/baked goods-y black teas. I was hoping that I could score another tin with the free shipping promo going on now BUT ALAS. I was tempted to get a back-up Double Knit Blend but…I haven’t even opened the one I have yet. shrugs

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70

Gongfu!

I had a very rare, for me anyway, Gongfu session w/ this tea over Thanksgiving weekend. Short and simple, like most of my tea sessions using green tea – I never want a long green tea session, it seems. I’m gonna say I did about five/six steeps?

The tea was nice – very green and pretty vegetal; sort of like edamame/green beans as the primary notes with an edge of smoke and nuttyness. Basically, very typical tasting notes for a Chinese green tea/pan fired green tea. Still, a little green bean taste is appreciated every now and then.

The really cool part of this session was the brand new teaware I was using – I had made a trip to Camellia Sinensis and I got quite the teaware haul: about six new teacups, a gaiwan, and this wicked new shibo! It’s only 80ml but it’s so wide and shallow and I fucking _love it. That’s what I was using for this session, and while it’s a bit cumbersome to pour from given my little baby hands, it pours really smoothly and is just so sleek looking! Does anyone else have a shallow shibo or gaiwan they use regularly? What kind of teas do you usually steeping in them? I picked a green tea because that’s what was recommended but I imagine I could probably do something else as long as it does have too much expansion…

Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/B3m4oOCgvB4/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=obuHYHY2HB0

Cameron B.

Super shallow shibos are actually very common for gyokuro!

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70

Managed to cram in a mug of this before heading off for work today.

I’ll be honest, the reason I was drawn to this tea really has little to do with the tea itself at all; I just think the art on the tin is GORGEOUS. A&D basically always nails their tin art, but this might just be my favourite tin they’ve ever produced…

The tea itself is nice though; I’ve definitely had lots of Chinese green tea and compared to Japanese greens I far prefer the former. I’m not 100% sure how much of those Chinese greens have actually come from Yunnan though? I’m guessing not a whole lot. So, that does make this farily interesting as an actual tea too. My experience with it this morning was that I found it to be surprisingly full bodied with a very well defined vegetal green bean/edamame body quality and very faint nutty undertones and hints of smoke. Nor sure if I’d call it “otherworldly” but it was pleasant enough for a green tea.

Wouldn’t go out of my way to drink this (I prefer a much lighter, sweeter green profile) but there’s totally nothing wrong with it either.

Cameron B.

I just ordered this one too because WOW THE TIN. But I do really like Chinese greens, so at least there’s that. ;)

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75

TTB #4

This was a surprise! The go-to flavor for holiday blends seems to be spiced orange. This one definitely has some spice to it, but no citrus that I could detect. Instead, lots of malty black tea flavor and a bit of smokiness which blended nicely with the spice blend. A bit overpowering on its own, but quite delightful with a splash of milk!

Flavors: Clove, Malt, Nutmeg, Smoke

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML

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80

TTB #3

I enjoyed this one! The flavor is surprisingly light for an Assam: sweet and smooth and fruity with just a touch of astringency. If I didn’t already have so many good straight black teas in my cupboard at the moment, I probably would have held on to this one. Hopefully it will find a good home with someone else as the box continues on its way!

Flavors: Astringent, Fruity, Raisins, Smooth, Sweet

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML

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I’m not sure which of the two assams by this company is the one that I’m sampling from a traveling tea box, so I’m taking a guess that it is this one based on description. It’s an assam. It makes for an ok cup with some cream, but really isn’t seeming that fantastic. I’m keeping in mind that I have no idea the age of this tea… it could be quite old for all I know, but my impression is “eh”.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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This is nice. Having it with a little cream. It’s rich in flavor, light on the malt, has a hint of smoke and seems like a pretty solid tea. It doesn’t have anything that stands out to me in particular, but strikes me as a nice cup in the morning.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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70

hmm, I’m not sure what all the hype is about. I liked the smooth and malty flavours/mouthfeel here, but it isn’t the best Assam I’ve had. It was good, but lacked the
undertones of baked bread and overwhelming creaminess that I associate with a really good Assam.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 15 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 350 ML

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70

Thanks to the Travelling Tea Box I recieved this evening, I will be trying a lot of caffeinated teas today.

LPT: This makes the best latte ever using vanilla soy milk. Try it, it’s REALLY creamy.

So this is an interesting blend of Yunnan black tea and Indian black tea. I found it had a great malty flavour and tasted a lot like a Christmas blend. Rich, notes of spices (clove), something fruity, and a slight sweetness.

Flavors: Clove, Fruity, Malt, Spices

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 1 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 350 ML

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77

Geek Steep S2E22 – Cloak & Dagger

Even though I wasn’t really able to find the “perfect pairing” for this week’s fandom I did feel fairly strongly that what I wanted was a black tea. After not being totally satisfied with my first pairing attempt, this was my second choice. I liked the kind of name pun that tied in with the light/dark themes and imagery explored. On top of just having such gorgeous downy golden buds and tips through the loose leaf, it’s also a completely rich and robust malty cocoa bomb with a backbone of warming spice, wood, and dark honey notes!

In the end, like my other pairing attempt, it was a delicious tea but not a great fit for the comic…

Tea Photo: https://www.instagram.com/p/CaPvDtQOIQs/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jUqEtEET9yI&ab_channel=Superet

Daylon R Thomas

I would pair it with a weird black and silver needle blend.

Sil

oh man. I miss A&D/

Shae

Oh no, are they closed?

Sil

@shae – no idea.. i messaged them to sak if they were closing and just selling teh last of their stock or what and haven’t heard back from them. it’s been a week?

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77

Gongfu!

A midafternoon session from today! It’s a grey, rainy day here in Montreal so a session of this aptly named black tea felt appropriate!! Four thick, malty steeps with notes of red currant jam, fresh baked bread, and both ruby cacao & baker’s chocolate!! Steeped in a black tea dedicated yixing pot…

Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/B-U9zOmAz2q/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pNNf4I1dc_U

tea-sipper

AND in a kraken mug!

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77

Western style w/ milk.

Full bodied, thick and smooth cuppa – really dense/heavy notes of malt, black pepper, cocoa powder, French bread, cinnamon, and raisins. Well rounded/balanced, and just sweet enough with this hints of raisin/cocoa. Finish finishes with this little flick of almost yeast-y/dough-y breadiness, tinged with a sticky sweetness. Yumm!

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77

Another one that someone requested get added to the Discovery Tea Box that I felt like I should revisit while I had it pulled out of my cupboard and super accessible. I realize I’m making my cupboard sound like some sort of complex, hard to navigate filing system but, well, it kind of is!?

I should drink this one more often though; it’s really full bodied and flavourful which I know describes a lot of straight black teas – or at least a lot of the straight blacks that I own in larger amounts. But, in addition to that it’s also nice and sweet. Lots and lots of natural chocolate notes, but then also a really nice handful of other notes like oak wood, cinnamon, and allspice. I added a little cherry infused honey into this cup also, and that really mild hint of sweet cherry added this excellent little undertone of fruit flavour to what is normally a darker, more decadent leaning profile. Plus, with how chocolate-y this tea tastes I think cherry is a REALLY good pairing flavour.

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bf8Tda6rmi4&index=13&list=WL

Mastress Alita

My “cupboard” is also a complex, hard to navigate filing system! It is organized, but that organization spans between two kitchen cupboards, one shelving unit in the living room, a set of kitchen drawers, tins across the top of my stove, and a set of drawers located in my bedroom… and all this in a little one bedroom/one living room apartment… I have problems!

derk

The first step is to recognize the problem. The next is to drink the problems away.

tea-sipper

YES, that is exactly it, derk. :D

Todd

Nice song pairing! I like the cherry honey idea. I helped Mastress Alita set up part of that cupboard, and it’s a glorious tea selection to sample from. Like an underground tea shoppe. I also agree with derk.

Roswell Strange

Nearly all of my 600+ teas I keep in the same room – within that room I have a section for ‘cakes’ of tea, then I have two book shelves with all my tins of tea which are sorted by tea type. I have A LOT of samples of things though; so those are sorted into a series of boxes on top of two different desks. One desk has all straight/unscented teas which are then sorted into mini boxes of black tea samples, aged white samples, sheng samples, shou samples, and then green/oolong are together since I have such a small amount of both. Flavoured teas are in boxes of herbal/fruit infusions, rooibos, black tea, white/green together, and then pu’erh/oolong/mate. It’s just hard sometimes finding that ONE SPECIFIC tea – even if I know exactly what box it’s in there could still be 50+ teas in that box…

Also; there are A LOT of good Lucky covers out there Todd but this is probably my second favourite? This is my number one though: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T5Cp55MvX54 Great song!

Mastress Alita

So true, even when I know exactly where a tea will be because I have, say, all flavored black samplers in a specific drawer, that doesn’t change digging through it to find a specific one when there are so many of them, and though I have all my pure greens in a specific spot on my shelving arranged in alphabetical order, I’ll still have to remove a bunch of bags if I need a certain one that just happens to be located near the back…

Basically, no organization system fixes the “too much” problem, heh. :-P

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