Halmari Gold Assam Second Flush Black Tea from Golden Tips

Halmari-ClonalTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black (Darjeeling)

Where to Buy:  Golden Tips

Tea Description:

Handpicked from superior P126 clonal bushes at the Halmari Tea estate, the opulent appearance of the tea is characteristic of an almost equal combination of black and golden tipped leaves with a smooth texture. Carved out selectively from specially plucked tender young shoots, the tea brings in a unique rich maltiness which is only found in select Assams during the peak second flush tea growing season. The flavor is exhilarating with a perfect balance of strength, full-body and smoothness. This unique clonal tea brings in a sweet fruity finish in the mouth with a lingering aftertaste. The highest grade GTGFOP1 CL leaves prepare a sharp infusion which can be brewed several times. A bright golden amber liquoring cup greets your eyes when you strain out the royal dark brownish infusion.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

So very lovely!  I love it when I discover an Assam like this one:  Rich, full-flavored with a whole lot of MALT!

The dry leaf is quite beautiful.  Dark, chocolate-y brown, curly leaves with golden tips lots of golden tips.  To brew these beauties, I measured a bamboo scoop into the basket of my Kati tumbler and added 12 ounces of hot water (205°F).  I let it steep for 2 1/2 minutes.

The tea brews up dark.  It has a deliciously sweet aroma with notes of earth and leather.

The flavor is bold!  This is one of those teas that would serve you well as a morning tea if you’re looking for one.  It’s smooth with a moderately astringent tail.  It’s got that robust quality of earth and leather but it also has a pleasant malty, caramel-y sweetness that balances out the edgy flavors.

A really invigorating tea – this would take the additions of milk and honey really well if you like to add those to your cuppa, it’s also quite nice served straight up.

Giddapahar Muscatel Darjeeling Second Flush Black Tea from Golden Tips

gidda-muscTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black (Darjeeling)

Where to Buy:  Golden Tips

Tea Description:

An excellent second flush Darjeeling with an abundance of natural muscatel. A handpicked tea from the Giddhpahar tea estate in Darjeeling with gentle fruity notes, a rich aroma and a complete rounded flavor which is a defining characteristic of premium summer Darjeeling teas.  A must-have for anytime of the day.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Oh, love!  LOVE!  This has the muscatel that I adore!

This is an excellent Darjeeling, one of the best that I’ve tried.  The flavor is strong – this is a stronger tasting Darjeeling than the typical light-to-medium bodied Darjeeling.  I’d categorize this as a medium-to-full bodied Darjeeling!

It has a really nice, well rounded flavor.  It almost tastes too strong and well rounded for a Darjeeling because I typically think of them as crisper and lighter teas.  This is much more robust and satisfying.  I daresay, it would make a nice morning cuppa.  Typically, I think of Darjeeling as an afternoon tea.

And it’s remarkably smooth too!  This doesn’t have the astringency that I normally experience with a Darjeeling.

So, if the first few paragraphs of this review indicate anything to you, it should be that this is NOT your typical Darjeeling!  Not by a long shot.

The flavor starts off sweet with notes of wood and grape.  There is some of that Darjeeling ‘crispness’ right at the start, but as it moves to mid-sip, the flavor develops and becomes a richer experience for the palate.  The grape flavor intensifies!  By the finish, I’m getting a really lovely muscatel finish, but without a strong astringency.  This has all that is really GREAT about a 2nd flush Darjeeling and none of the bad!

This is best hot.  I think that this is true of most Darjeeling tea.  However, I do recommend letting it cool for a few minutes before you start sipping.  I find that the muscatel really shines through best after it’s had time to cool for about three or four minutes.

This Darjeeling is one that EVERY tea drinker should try.

Etambagahawila Estate Ceylon OP1 Black Tea from Capital Teas

EtambugahawilaEstateTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  Capital Tea Limited

Tea Description:

Well made beautiful even and neat black wiry leaves with good sheen from Sri Lanka’s Galle region. These aromatic leaves produce a medium to strong tasting tea liquor with ample body and prominent sweet flavour and aroma notes reminiscent of sugar candy.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

This is a really flavorful, strong Ceylon!  I’m not used to a Ceylon being as full-flavored as this!  But it’s a bold, flavorful Ceylon with a really lovely burnt sugar caramel sweetness.

It’s a pleasantly smooth Ceylon too.  It has some astringency to it, but it’s more like the tangy-tart qualities of a citrus fruit than a really jarring astringent tone.

There are some notes of malt to this cup too.  The way the malt notes meld with the caramel notes is quite lovely and makes for a really enjoyable tea experience.

This has many of the qualities I expect from a Ceylon – a smooth, even flavor, for example.  But I like the unexpected qualities that I’m discovering – the rich, bold flavor!  It’s an invigorating tea that would take to the additions of milk and honey well if you’re looking to make this your next breakfast tea.  This would be a good breakfast tea for those days when you’re looking for that gentle shake awake.  It’s got a robust flavor but a non-aggressive attitude.

A really nice tea.  I enjoyed about half my cup and then I was distracted from my tea for a while and when I came back to the cup, it was cold (yes, this does happen a lot, that’s the way it works when you’re a mom!) but even as a cold tea, it’s quite delicious!

Tezpur Estate Assam Black FBOP Tea from M&K’s Tea Company

tezpurAssamTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  M&K’s Tea Company on Etsy

Tea Description:

India Assam region is home to some of the world’s grandest teas. Our Tezpur estate Assam tea is a great, brisk, and malty tea. It’s great for the morning and relaxing in the evening, try it any time.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Oh … lovely.  (Imagine satisfied sigh here.)

This is the kind of Assam that I absolutely adore.  It’s bold and malty.  It’s smooth.  It’s not bitter.  (I’m sure it would be bitter if it were brewed too long, it’s always important to watch the brew time with Assam teas, it’s been my experience that they’re not a very forgiving sort of tea.)

It’s mildly sweet yet it has a certain invigorating, bracing flavor that I want as my first cup of the day!

To brew this tea, I used my Kati Tumbler.  I tend to like my teas a little on the stronger side, and the amount of tea that was in my sampler from M&K’s appeared to be enough for a weak brewing in my Breville or a strong brewing in my Kati, and I opted for the strong brewing in my Kati.

I poured the contents of the sampler into the basket (save just under 1/2 teaspoon which I added to my “breakfast tea” tin – a tin that I keep with small remnants of black tea that are too much to throw away but not enough to brew a cuppa, so I put the small amount of tea into the tin until there’s enough for a pot of tea).  Then I heat the water to 205°F (I tend to go with a slightly lower temperature with Assam – remember, they’re a little finicky) and poured 12 ounces of water into the tumbler and let it steep for 2 1/2 minutes.  Perfection!

The rich tasting tea doesn’t need additions – it tastes great served straight!  But, if you’re one who likes a little honey or sugar and milk in your breakfast tea, this tea would certainly take those additions well.  It would make a marvelously rewarding latte!

To brew a latte, I recommend steeping it a little strong – instead of taking out that aforementioned just under 1/2 teaspoon of tea to add to the breakfast tea tin, keep it in the basket so that you have a strong brewed tea.  The key for stronger tea that tastes great isn’t to steep it longer, it’s to add more leaf.  Steeping it longer will produce a stronger tea, but it will also produce a more tannic brew:  tannic = bitter.  Use a little extra leaf and steep for the 2 1/2 minutes.  Then add the dollop of honey or other sweetener of your choice and some steamed milk for a yummy morning latte!

The sip starts out strong and I taste the sweet, caramel-y notes immediately.  Then I start to taste some of the stronger, more rugged earthy notes, hints of leather and fruit notes.  The fruit notes remind me of raisin and dried stone fruit – like the sugary sweetness from a dried plum.

As I continue to sip on this tea, the astringency does build.  It started out with barely any astringency, but now I am getting a distinct dryness on my palate at the very tail of the sip and in the aftertaste, my palate feels like it’s been patted dry with a soft cloth.  Like it’s preparing me for another sip.

The description above suggests that this would make a good evening tea, but, I don’t know that this is a tea that I could drink very late into the evening.  It would keep me awake and alert for a couple of hours.  It’s got some gusto!

For a breakfast tea though – this is the stuff!  It’s awesome!

Dejoo Estate Assam STGFOP1 Black Tea from Capital Tea Limited

DejooEstateTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  Capital Tea Limited

Tea Description:

Wiry brown leaves with ample golden tips. These leaves produce a smooth and rich tasting tea liquor with a particularly sweet honey-malt flavour. A very well rounded flavour profile and balanced full body makes this an excellent tea to drink with milk for any time of day.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I received a sampling of this tea from a friend.  Her experience with the tea wasn’t as positive as my first few sips of this tea seemed to be and I thought at first that the reason may be because of steep time.  I find that Assam teas are quite finicky and temperamental.  I don’t usually use boiling water for an Assam tea, I go with just slightly under (205°F) and steep the tea for not more than 2 1/2 minutes.  If I’m steeping the tea in my Kati tumbler or a teapot, then I go with 2 1/2 minutes.  If I’m brewing the tea in my Breville One-Touch, I go with 2 minutes.

The reason for the different brew time in my Breville?  Because the tea maker will keep the liquid warmer than the act of heating the water and pouring it into a separate vessel.  Even though the temperature change may be very slight, with an Assam it does make a difference.

My first few sips of this tea were pleasant enough.  I picked up on sweeter notes of malt as well as a honey-like sweetness and these two flavors melded together in a nice way.

But as I continued to sip, I started to pick up on this bitter note toward mid-sip.  It wasn’t that “oops, I oversteeped the tea” sort of bitterness.  At first, I thought it was a savory element to contrast with the sweeter notes.  However, I noticed that some of the sweetness that I picked up on early on was beginning to wane and the tannic qualities of this tea were taking over.

I don’t think I’ve ever experienced a tea like this, where I would have a positive experience with it at first and as I continued to sip the experience grew less and less enjoyable, but that’s what I’m getting from this.  What started out with a pleasant, mild sweetness has become something more like something that’s gone bad.  It was fine for the first five sips or so but as I progressed with this cup, I found that the flavors became less sweet and pleasurable and more tannic.

And now that this cup sits in front of me, I can’t really offer any redeeming words about it.  I wish I could.

I do thank my friend, though, for sending me the sampling.  I do appreciate it.