Strawberries & Cream

Tea type
Fruit Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
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Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Mac
Average preparation
Boiling 4 min, 15 sec 12 oz / 354 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I was dubious at first because when I smelt the dry mix there was a strong smell of off milk laid over the fruity scent, but that vanishes completely when steeped. This is nice. Extremely fruity...” Read full tasting note
    89
  • “Too much hibiscus. I accidentally spelled it ‘hibisuc’ just now and tbh I think that’s a more accurate name for it. Sour, metallic, and no redeeming qualities besides a pretty coloured cup of tea....” Read full tasting note
    60

From Ringtons

Quick Overview

Anyone for tennis? Classic British summer flavours.

Product Description

A unique house fruit infusion that is a twist on that British summer classic. Ideal for serving hot or prepared over ice.

Dried strawberries with hibiscus, rosehip, dried yoghurt pieces and natural strawberry & vanilla flavouring.

Naturally sweet, fruity and tangy. Add sugar to taste (some would say making it even better!)

About Ringtons View company

Company description not available.

3 Tasting Notes

89
50 tasting notes

I was dubious at first because when I smelt the dry mix there was a strong smell of off milk laid over the fruity scent, but that vanishes completely when steeped.

This is nice. Extremely fruity and quite tart, but there’s a vanillary taste that stops the tart from becoming sour. Very drinkable. I haven’t tried sugar in it yet, I’ll try that next, and I think this will taste really good iced (I’ll update when I try that.)

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec
SoccerMom

“Vanillary”? :)

SoccerMom

When you actually say vanillary out loud is sounds like a cross between Vanilla and Celery.

Mac

::must not dip celery in vanilla extract to see what it’s like, must not dip celery in vanilla extract to see what it’s like::

SoccerMom

Don’t worry I wasn’t going to try celery and vanilla. I am sure vanillary sounds better with a heavy English accent but doesn’t sound so dignigified with my little southern (Texas) drawl. :P

Mac

::giggles:: Well my English accent is North York Moors, so it’s kinda slow and a little undignified.

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60
681 tasting notes

Too much hibiscus. I accidentally spelled it ‘hibisuc’ just now and tbh I think that’s a more accurate name for it. Sour, metallic, and no redeeming qualities besides a pretty coloured cup of tea. I tried to latte a tea I didn’t realise had hibisuc in recently and it made some sort of stringy cheese curd at the bottom of my mug. Wtf is that all about?! It took me a while, but I’m officially aboard the hating hibiscus bandwagon.

Anyway. I added maple syrup to the last of this to cancel out the hibisuc (I might be spelling it like that for a while) and it’s fine, but for some reason it tastes like stewed rhubarb rather than strawberries and cream. This is a sipdown I’m totally okay with.

211/399

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML
ashmanra

LOLOL I feel the same about hibisuc!

Nattie

Lol, it’s a totally appropriate name, right? (:

Mastress Alita

I’m fairly certain I’m the only person on Steepster that actually likes hibiscus.

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