Lupicia

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

Tea of the morning here. I’m not usually a sencha in the morning type of gal, but I’m all out of soy milk and the flax milk I last got at Whole Foods was so disgusting I threw it out. Mostly sugar and additives. Blecch! Anyway this is a nice sencha especially if you prefer things a it more on the mellow side. I should probably make a point to finish this off soon although it’s been sitting in my refrigerator, I hope that keeps it fresh for longer.

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

This is one of my favorite senchas to date, I am enjoying the lovely sweetness of this tea this morning. It’s foggy here as usual – ick!

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 2 min, 0 sec
Bonnie

You need a sunshine vacation. Napa, Tahoe?

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

I am all out of this now. It was delicious and a very good price, time to go back to Lupicia!

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 1 min, 30 sec
ScottTeaMan

Now $9.50/50G…….that’s more like it!

TeaBrat

ayep… good enough for me.

ScottTeaMan

This is where I’ve bought some senchas & Fukamushi tea. There prices are reasonable and the tea is very good.

http://www.hibiki-an.com/product_info.php/cPath/36/products_id/399

ScottTeaMan

Free S & H over $36

TeaBrat

looks good

ScottTeaMan

It really is….I bought Sencha Superior and brewed shortsteeps==little to no bitterness.

TeaBrat

I’ll keep it in mind if I decide to look for new tea vendors. I think the fewer the better is good in terms of saving money…

ScottTeaMan

I know…that’s what I think too. My next vendor will be Tao of Tea, because I want more Mei Li tea. Do you have any other recommendations from them?

Also, an order from Tea Vivre. My third would be Rishi, b/c I really love that Chai you sent me, but that would be my third choice. So much for saving $$$. :>//

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

I am drinking this again today. I’m so glad I finally found a sencha which I really enjoy. I’ve almost finished the bag already! I upped the rating a wee bit too.

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

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93
drank Sencha "Chiran" by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

I haven’t always been a big fan of sencha but when I saw this at the Lupicia store yesterday I got curious about it, since it supposedly has a lingering sweetness like sweet potato I figured it would not come with the astringency I normally associate with sencha.

I am pretty fond of this – it is very bright, smooth and vegetal. There is a definite sweetness here which reminds me not of sweet potato, but of corn or sweet peas. This is a very flavorful green tea! I was told by my salesperson yesterday if I like this I will like the gyokuru yame, but I decided to wait on that one for a while since it’s $32.00.

This was a bit of a mess for me to make in the office in an infuser mug since the leaves are so small and very absorbent, I might try a tea sac next time. I was able to get 3 infusions out of this before I gave up on it.

This was pretty enjoyable for me and I will definitely get some more. I’m not a sencha expert so your mileage may vary… ;-)

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 15 sec
ScottTeaMan

I usually get three solid steeps from a good quality Sencha. Amy, I have had a couple Japanese greens that had corn/hay characteristics. I think it was this tea, but I got the organic one (sold out I think). :

http://uptontea.com/shopcart/item.asp?from=catalog.asp&itemID=TJ33&begin=0&parent=Teas%3EGreen%3EJapan&category=Green&sortMethod=0&categoryID=33

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64
drank Caramel & Rum by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

This is a sipdown for me but like an annoying ex-boyfriend, I won’t miss it too much. Farewell, old stinky…

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64
drank Caramel & Rum by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

hmm. I was trying to figure out what to do with this in order to make it more palatable… ended up steeping it with a cinnamon stick and a couple of cardamom pods. And now, with some soymilk it’s definitely a lot better and more like a chai. Still, kinda lame when you have to doctor up a tea so much with extra ingredients in order to make it bearable.

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 15 sec
LiberTEAS

I would recommend blending it with either “cookie” or “rum raisin” tea from Lupicia. I think that would make a really yummy blend.

TeaBrat

They’ve been out of Rum Raisin for months – I keep wanting to try it!!!

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64
drank Caramel & Rum by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

Finally I made it to the newly remodeled Lupicia store in San Francisco. They changed locations and seemed to have downsized their square footage slightly as well as the number of teas they carry – I was looking for a few they have listed on their website that they did not have in the store. Still, it is quite a good assortment of tea and tea related paraphernalia they have there in the retail shop. The salespeople were helpful but a wee bit pushy. Just a wee.

In any case I left with only a few selections and not the entire lot of hundreds – exercising some self-restraint! I am not sure what possessed me to take this, as I know I am not a big fan of red rooibos. But I do like rum, and caramel, and honeybush sometimes.

This is really sweet – over the top for me. I added some soymilk to it to make a nice dessert tea. It’s not bad but again, I get the weird roobois aftertaste which bothers me. I am getting a lot of rum but not so much caramel. I might try brewing this up also with some decaf black tea to take the sweetness down a notch. It wasn’t as bad as I thought it could be, but I did not love it either….

Preparation
Boiling 4 min, 0 sec
ScottTeaMan

I’m not a big fan of rooibos eitther-can take it or leave it.

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79
drank Momoko by Lupicia
525 tasting notes

I can’t find my chocolate strawberry puer. Cry. Where is it? :(

Im drinking this instead. I was really struck by just how pretty this tea is. Cute mini flowers and pink sugar crystals. It’s like made for little princesses. :)

I’m still in anguish over my missing tea though! Where is iiiit?

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79
drank Momoko by Lupicia
525 tasting notes

Odd! I know this is supposed to be peach but it tastes kinda almondy to me. Like in an almond flavor kind of way. I get the texture and mouthfeel of matcha here from the added matcha powder. I can taste the flowers and the smoothness of the vanilla. Yes, there is peach here, but an odd almond like peach. Of course, peaches and almonds are in the same family so I can see why they might taste similar. Actually, the peach maybe tastes more like apricot? Hmmm… I need another cup to make sure. Yeah, the peach is not as strong as I would have liked. Still pretty tasty though. I think the Super Grade Momo Oolong is infinitely better, but this is a nice affordable green tea version. :) I also like that this green tea doesn’t taste like the typical Chinese sencha so many green blends are made of.

Also, I stayed later at the office than was wise today and left in a rush. As a result, I left behind one critical piece of equipment that would allow me to work at home should that be necessary tomorrow. I suck. Hopefully I’ll be able to get back to work. And hopefully the heat and electricity will still be on.

Mercuryhime

Aaaand I just notice that I had actually had this tea before. Apparently it tasted better last time if my previous note is any indication. I’m doing a second steep with the leaves in the fridge so hopefully that one will be tasty.

CHAroma

Hopefully the snowstorm will be flurries and we can all go to work tomorrow. :) Sorry this tea wasn’t as good this time around. Maybe it’s just too old? It is amazing when it’s fresh!

Mercuryhime

I must have brewed it differently. I think last time I brewed it as a green tea with lower temp because… well, it’s a green! But this time, I followed the directions on the bag and used boiling. WIll stick my with intuition in the future. And this tea is definitely fresh as it only arrived from Lupicia last week. Or at least I hope they are not sending me old tea. :p As for the snow, there’s definitely a few inches on the ground but it’s not worse than any other winter snow storm. I’ll be back in my cube and working like usual by morning. :)

CHAroma

Oh, I didn’t realize you had just bought it. I thought it was only available in the springtime. Sticking with a lower temp will probably be better. :)

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79
drank Momoko by Lupicia
525 tasting notes

Yummy! This tea is fabulous! It’s a lovely green base that adds to the freshness of the peach flavor. The peach reminds me of japanese peach gummies. What are they called? The ones that are individually wrapped in it’s own plastic packet?
Anyway, that’s how this tea tastes. I love when the flavors work with the tea instead of trying to overwhelm it. Now that I have an idea how good Lupicia is, I’ll have to order from them next time I’m low on tea. (aka never :().

Thank you CHAroma for another great sample!

TeaBrat

My boiyfriend says tea should not taste like gummy bears but I beg to differ… hee hee

Mercuryhime

My husband hates gummy bears so he’d probably agree with your boyfriend. What do they know? :p

ScottTeaMan

As long as the tea base is noticeable, I don’t mind fruity sweet teas, once in a while.

teataku

I love Gumy brand gummies! The peach are molto squisito, but I must say, the kiwi ones are my favorite. :3

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95
drank Milk Caramel by Lupicia
4843 tasting notes

Oh…my…goodness this is good. Yummy.

This tea is a must try for those who love caramel. The toasty flavor of the houjicha is a brilliant pairing with the caramel flavor, giving it a roasty depth that I don’t think I’ve ever tasted in a caramel tea before. I love caramel tea (I think my Sweet Caramel O’Mine Tea … for those of you who have tried it… speaks for itself, no?) and this one is amazing. Maybe not as good as my Sweet Caramel O’Mine, but, I like how this tea is so light and yet offers such a deep, rich flavor.

Amazing, amazing, AMAZING! Love this!

Plunkybug

Sounds delish! I admit I have a sweet tooth in teas. I favor the dessert ones a lot. :)

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93

Thick, buttery, “steamed veggie” aroma.
Tastes potato-y, starchy—with a hint of mint in the aftertaste. It’s almost like a green tea “soup”—very full-bodied and savory.
No astringency, smooth and rich. This is very yummy!

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 5 min, 0 sec

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83

Drinking this sample tonight and the moment I opened the bag the delicious smell was the first thing I noticed. It is a full flavored cuppa that I truly enjoyed. The sweet potato is the strongest in flavor but is perfectly proportioned. A delicious well balanced cup reminiscent of all feelings and flavor of autumn.

Preparation
Boiling 7 min, 30 sec

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59

Finally, getting to some of my samples and starting with this one. I found the black tea base to be standard lacking any sort of distinguishing markers thus making it an alright choice for a flavored tea. The apple was accurate and even fresh in flavor. It was remenisant of a Red Delicious Apple. Overall, not a bad tea cuppa at all.

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec

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89
drank Gyokuro Pine Breeze by Lupicia
368 tasting notes

The sipping down continues.

Orders with Upton and Verdant have been placed and are anxiously awaited.

Yesterday afternoon we shared a good six steepings of this tea with the reverend Father Symeon during his visit to perform the annual blessing of our home. It proved the perfect brew to stimulate a prolonged discussion and good fellowship.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 15 sec
ScottTeaMan

Jim, do you ever post reviews on Upton’s website? I have, and if you want you can view mine. I’m Scott from Ohio.

Jim Marks

No, I don’t think that I have.

ashmanra

I want to order from them but I get overwhelmed when I see all the options. There are a couple I know I want, and I want that tea scale!

Jim Marks

I’ve never had a tea I didn’t like because of poor quality, just matters of taste. They sell great tea. Just go for it.

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89
drank Gyokuro Pine Breeze by Lupicia
368 tasting notes

I had to “put up” the green pu-erh cake from Central Market to age at least six months, maybe a year. This leaves (no pun intended) me with just a few teas that I am slowly working my way through so that I can justify an order to Upton, Verdant and/or Red Blossom.

So, this means many cups of this gyokuro and another lesser Japanese green that Liz brought back with her from Tokyo.

In having complained about the lackluster nature of this tea in the past, I have been thinking about what I can do to allow it to show me the best it has to offer.

I remembered observing a senchado — Japanese tea ceremony utilizing sencha instead of matcha — and that their steep times were quite short. Since I am currently obsessed with my two gaiwan method of preparation I have been engaging a very short steep time and the result has been interesting.

Early steeps are extremely delicate and are such a pale green they are almost blue. The liqueur is almost sweet. Later steeps take on the more traditional yellow-green with the stronger, more vegetal flavors.

At least it keeps me busy.

Preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 0 min, 15 sec

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89
drank Gyokuro Pine Breeze by Lupicia
368 tasting notes

Houston is having an atypically long stint of gloom.

I decided to try to brighten it with some of this bright green tea.

The cup has a very thick mouth feel today. Maybe I did a better job preparing it than I did the last time. But the problem with truly fantastic shaded green teas which are steeped correctly is that they’re mild by definition. They’re subtle. There shouldn’t be anything in the cup that leaps out and grabs you by the nose.

Which, while it makes for a very soothing cup of tea, does make it very difficult to get all that excited about any one particular cup.

We have another Japanese green in the house that Liz got while she was in Tokyo, much less high end, and yes, I can taste the difference between the two. But unless I was having a very special meal that required the pairing or I was hosting a very formal gathering, I’m hard pressed to come up with a justification for spending the money on this kind of tea when the “pay back” is so much less obvious than it is in other categories of tea (where the pay off can be enormous in some cases).

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 0 min, 15 sec
TeaBrat

The Lupicia sales guy was trying to sell me on their “Yame” which is more expensive than this one I believe. I loved the gyokuro I had from Arbor tea. definitely worth the extra $ imo

ScottTeaMan

Another New Year resolution is for me to drink more Japanese greens. I love a good sencha….Jim it sounds like you prefer a fuller green.

Amy….how much was the Yame, do you remember?

Jim Marks

Mostly what I prefer is being able to taste what I pay for, and this particular tea, at least at Tokyo prices, goes beyond that point.

I’m not suggesting that just any shaded Japanese green will taste like this one does. There are certainly low end, cheap teas out there. And yes, it is worth spending more to avoid those.

But this one in particular was so much more expensive that it goes beyond the point of simply avoiding bad tea and gets into a price range where I expect something exceptional, and, at least so far, this isn’t exceptional. It is very good. Just not exceptional.

TeaBrat

Scott – I don’t remember exactly but it’s on Lupicia’s website
Jim- I see your point. Perhaps this isn’t such a good gyokuro?

Jim Marks

I’ve had others as well, from TeaG and other places and it seems, to me at least, that there is this tipping point where the rate at which the price is going up from grade of tea to grade of tea becomes very steep while the difference in what ends up in the cup from grade to grade becomes very shallow.

Maybe in this particular case, it was a matter of expectations. I’ve had many people insist that you can only get truly good tea in Japan. That the teas which are exported from Japan to other places, even the very expensive ones, just aren’t that good compared to even the most humble cup in a noodle shop in Osaka. Well, Liz went over there and brought two or three teas back, including this one, and they simply didn’t live up to those kinds of claims. Maybe I just need to get past that set of expectations and then come back to this tea with a clear mind.

TeaBrat

where did you read that from, the Japanese tourism board? ;-)

ScottTeaMan

I think it may be both. Possibly some of the best (or even most of) are kept for the Japanese market. I think it has to do with freshness too. Even the best grades, even vacuum packed, that are exported quite possibly can’t be as fresh as teas harvested & cupped in Japan.

Jim Marks

Not read. People, face to face, have made the argument and insisted on it. Not all of them were even Japanese people, oddly enough.

TeaBrat

sorry to be a skeptic, I work in the field of marketing… :) I’ve never been to Japan so I would not know.

Jim Marks

I was always skeptical of the claim. But there’s always a part of you that wants to believe that if you go there, and spend enough, some magical doorway into “real tea” will open. It is disappointing to learn that’s probably not the case. I have to say probably because we may simply, even at this price point, have not spent enough money to open the door. Although I doubt it.

ScottTeaMan

My friend went to China & had a really good Oolong tea, & brought some home. We sampled it and it was really good, but she said it wasn’t quite as good as the tea she had while in China (the same tea). Preparation has alot to do with it too.

Jim Marks

While true, I think what is really going on has much more to do with cultural elitism coupled with the fact that we’re simply far more likely to enjoy a cup of carefully prepared tea while on a once-in-a-lifetime trip than we are with preparing the exact same leaves at home — no matter how expert we are in tea preparation. People from tea cultivating regions want to be able to insist that tea is best had right there at the source and that Americans buying tea out of shops far from that source simply can’t experience tea the way you can right there next to the bushes. Which, on one level is quite true. But on another level gets less and less true all the time. Mechanisms for tea storage, shipment and distribution are improving all the time. I have had tea that was at most mere days older than if I had been drinking a cup prepared by the master gardener himself. But on another level, this idea that the best can only be had right at the source simply isn’t true. Ultra premium products routinely fetch higher prices on the export market than they do domestically. So it is actually more likely that the best of any one given thing is sold abroad rather than at home. Look at the US fishing industry. The best tuna catches never even touch US soil. Those fish go directly from US owned boats to Japanese owned airplanes — despite a huge domestic market for ultra premium grade seafood. The mark-up is simply better selling it on export. So there’s very little reason to believe that, aside from what might be kept as genuinely priceless (for example the original big red robe bushes) and not sold retail anywhere, one cannot buy “the best” anywhere except on a local market level.

But we’re way, way off the point, here. In the world of pu-erh, you can buy very modest product and it is perfectly drinkable. You can spend a bit more, and you notice the equivalent increase in price. And the more you spend, the better the tea gets right along with that price. Yes, the closer you get to “the top” the more and more important matters of storage, shipment and eventual preparation become to truly unlock all the potential of the leaves. But the potential is there to begin with. Similarly, Darjeeling teas occupy an enormous spectrum of quality and price and in most cases the correlation and contrast is obvious.

All I’m suggesting here is that with shaded green teas, that correlation and contrast is far less obvious as one gets closer and closer to “the top”. Down near the bottom of the spectrum, the contrast is obvious. But as one moves up, the subsequent improvements become harder and harder to discern.

A very narrow, modest assertion.

ScottTeaMan

Good points all around. I think the tea experience in a foreign country heightens expectations, and in some way the brain heightens the experience. I mean I’d rather drink a quality Japanese green tea in Japan, experiencing a tea in its’ homeland, but for me it is not likely. That plays a part too. I haven’t had too many shade grown teas, but I see your point. At what point are we willing to pay that extra money, when the payoff isn’t there?!

TeaBrat

I think you just need to figure out what kind of tea you really love and are willing to spend more money on. The rest of the time an average product is certainly fine. For me personally, I like pu-erhs but I don’t feel the expensive ones are worth the price. I’ll take the gyokuro. ;-)

ScottTeaMan

I agree about the Darjeelings too. I haven’t paid $40+ 1/4 lb for any Darjeeling, but at $25-$30, there is a significant increase in quality, over a $15 per 1/4 lb of tea.

ScottTeaMan

You mean like Mei Li? :)) Amy, Sencha Fukamushi’s can be a great experience. Much lighter than many Senchas out there.

Jim Marks

I think this goes way beyond tea. Our culture has trained us to believe that things are expensive because they are better. A Calvin Klein tee shirt costs five times as much as a tee shirt from Target because it says Calvin Klein on it — but we don’t think that way, we think that designer names somehow equate to actual garment quality (which may have been true in decades and centuries past, but certainly isn’t true anymore). Way “pay for the name” as they say. Oddly, in that case, we pay extra to do free advertising on behalf of the designer.

We go to restaurants and pay $50 a plate for dishes that have 20 ingredients in them most of which are simply the latest “buzz” foods — despite the fact that science tells us all but the highly trained can only taste at most 6 things at a time. We’re paying for the experience of eating buzz foods off a fancy plate when a more modestly prepared version of the dish for less money might actually be “better food”.

The build quality on Mercedes Benz is actually worse than the build quality on a Hyundai right now but we still pay two or three times as much for that fancy German badge on the hood.

My philosophy is always “be willing to pay for what you can appreciate”. If you can tell the difference sufficiently to justify the cost, go for it.

For my palate, the distinction in pu-erhs is profound while the distinction in shaded greens is not. But, at that point, we’re discussing taste, not anything objective.

ScottTeaMan

Bottom line for me is this:

I’m willing to pay more for tea than designer clothes, coffee, an expensive wine, etc.; and I have the receipts to prove it! :))

TeaBrat

I have never bought into the expensive is better philosophy. But sadly that seems to be the way of the world and the world of tea snobs… nice chatting with you both. :)

ScottTeaMan

Sometimes you get what you pay for. For the most part though, I agree Amy. I refuse to wear shirts with names on them…….unless they’re stained with tea! :))
Catch ya both later………….

ScottTeaMan

Sometimes you get what you pay for; but, for the most part, I agree Amy. I refuse to buy clothes with names on them…….unless they’re stained with tea! :)) Catch ya later…….

ScottTeaMan

WWWHHHAAA…..I think I’m seeing double.

Shinobi_cha

How much does this gyo cost? I get the impression that gyo only gets any good (or really begins to be more remarkable) at the $50/gram price range.

Jim Marks

So… just had a conversation with the wife. As it turns out, the problem here all along has been her sense of what “expensive” tea is. She drinks mostly roiboos and flavored teas.

Via the USA distribution, you can get Pine Breeze for $20/50grams. Which is, frankly, very cheap.

I’ve had TeaG’s gyokuro which is $55 for 100grams.

There is no way I would ever pay $50 per gram for a tea. I don’t care if it has gold, sex and God mixed into it, nothing is worth that much money. At that point you’re paying $100-200 per pot of tea!

If one has to go that high to experience “truly great Japanese tea” then they’re welcome to it. I’m more than happy to spend 1/10th that price for aged pu-erh and be more than blown away by what I get.

TeaBrat

there’s no way would I ever spend that much money on a flippin’ tea – just sayin’

Jim Marks

It is nice to know that my tea snobbery has bounds.

ScottTeaMan

I wasn’t sure if Shinobi cha was serious. WOW! I couldn’t stop laughing at your comments Jim…….it just struck me as hilarious! It’s totally absurd to pay $50 /gram for any tea. Just my opinion of course. :))

ScottTeaMan

$200 for a pot of tea…HAHAHAHAHAHAHA!

Shinobi_cha

Oops! I meant $.50/gram, haha! Looks like Pine Beeze and TeaG’s gyos are about that range… and if you just didn’t love them at that asking price… well that’s fine; tea is after all, not a necessity and so drink what you enjoy.

Jim Marks

Ah. Yes. That makes a lot more sense.

And yes, that has been the point all along. There is a tipping point where what you are paying for may not actually have increased value to the individual.

ScottTeaMan

uMMM….YEAH…tea IS a necessity!:))

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89
drank Gyokuro Pine Breeze by Lupicia
368 tasting notes

Lisbet picked up this tea for me while she was in Tokyo and I’ve been saving it for a rainy day because it isn’t cheap.

Well, it is raining both literally and metaphorically today, so here we go.

Unfortunately…

There is absolutely nothing wrong with this tea, but truth be told, I’ve had better gyokuro sold stateside (so much for the myth that all the best tea is never exported) and there really isn’t anything deeply exceptional or exciting going on, here.

Certainly not enough to make up for financial woes, failing plumbing, deaths in the family, conflicting obligations, office politics or looming holiday travels and hassles.

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 0 min, 30 sec
TeaBrat

The name of that tea… pine breeze? it reminds me of a cleaning product

Jim Marks

It is a translation of a name, so it probably doesn’t have that association in the original.

gmathis

Sorry for the woes and miseries. May tomorrow bring a better cuppa, literally and figuratively.

Jim Marks

It won’t.

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59
drank Sweet Autumn by Lupicia
639 tasting notes

It’s an amazing tea that can overcome my strong dislike of red rooibos. I’m impressed with this.

It’s super sweet even sans additions, and I usually like overly sweet concoctions. The flavor is strongly chestnut and sweet potato. I’m not getting much in the way of pumpkin, or at least not the way I’m used to tasting pumpkin in drinks.

In something like a Starbuck’s Pumpkin Spice Latte, it’s a lot of spice and milk and espresso. There’s very little actual pumpkin flavor, or maybe I should say authentic pumpkin flavor. The pumpkin that’s in this tea is more like slicing open a baked pumpkin and digging in. More natural and less processed.

The taste lingers long into the aftertaste too. This is a really nicely balanced cup of tea. The flavors mesh well together.

Yum! I’m liking this tea! It does still have a little bit of that red rooibos quality I don’t like. So, I won’t be placing an order. But I am enjoying my cup, and that’s saying a lot right there.

Preparation
Boiling 2 min, 0 sec

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78
drank Sweet Autumn by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

I’ve had a bit of stomach malaise recently so I’m trying to drink only herbal type beverages this afternoon. Sometimes the caffeine in tea can be too much for me if I have too much (sensitive tummy).

I enjoy this rooibos blend myself. It has this interesting sweet potato/chestnut flavor that compliments the rooibos fairly well. I can see how it wouldn’t really be to everyone’s liking as it is a bit vegetal and sweet. I think it’s good with a bit of soymilk added, though I don’t really like drinking it plain.

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec

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78
drank Sweet Autumn by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

I was meeting a friend of mine at the Loving Hut today for lunch… I had too much time to kill and unfortunately went into the teashops including Lupicia. I think my challenge for October is to go on a tea buying moratorium, I haven’t been doing too well with that lately. Even though buying has decreased a lot over these past few months, it all adds up and I need to start making money soon.

Anyway here is a tea that I first tried a few years ago. It only comes out in October for one month so if you want it, better act soon. It is sweet and has a nice sweet potato flavor that I enjoy. I remember it was good when I had it before, so I’m glad to see it back. I added sugar this time and that makes it too sweet, I think I’ll go for unsweetened the next time I have it.

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec
boychik

I got my Lupicia order. I placed it because of this tea. I think that flavors are too delicate for me. I barely noticed anything. Do you think I “ruined” my palate with puerh, haha?

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78
drank Sweet Autumn by Lupicia
2816 tasting notes

This is a free sample I got from the nice folks at Lupicia with my monthly newsletter. It’s one of those pyramid teabags made from fabric that are so trendy these days, blah blah blah.

I almost did not try this because I usually never like anything with red rooibos in it. This is pretty well done though, with notes of japanese sweet potato and pumpkin those flavors seem to predominate instead of the rooibos. Flavor is kind of like a pumpkin pie and I wish it had some cinnamon in it (although you could add your own I suppose). Nice herbal dessert tea.

I stand amazed that I actually like this. Bravo to the folks at Lupicia and please open your SF store again soon! =)

TeaBrat

And it’s also out of stock on Lupicia’s website. Guess I’m not the only one who liked it. :)

Lisbet

Oh man, do I want to try this!

TeaBrat

maybe they’ll get it back soon. If they do I might buy some…

CHAroma

I’m usually not a fan of red rooibos either, but I agree this is a pleasant tea.

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