Fig Peach Oolong from Modern Tea Girl

Fig-peach-oolongTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Oolong

Tea Information:

Trust us, this tea tastes SO much better than it looks 🙂 Peaches may not scream Christmas, but figs are certainly quite festive! Mission and golden figs taste amazing in this blend with a beautiful, sophisticated and fragrant dark oolong. A very uncommon blend that has a stunning flavour that subtly builds with each sip.

This tea is available from Amoda Tea.

It’s also part of Amoda Tea’s Holiday Box!

Learn more about subscribing to Amoda Tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I just received my January box from Amoda and I haven’t yet finished reviewing the teas that I got from the Holiday Box – I better get busy!

I was pretty excited about this one (really, I was excited about all the teas in the Holiday Box!  It’s a scrumptious collection of teas!  I love the flavor combination of fig and dark Oolong – these two flavors really work well together.  And because darker Oolongs tend to have a peach-like flavor and figs have a similar profile to a peach, it would seem to be the natural choice for an additional flavor for this blend.

Peach_Fig_Oolong1And what can I say?  YUM!  This is really tasty.  As Amoda says in the description above – it definitely does taste better than it looks.  It’s not the most attractive tea I’ve ever seen, but it is very tasty.

The Oolong is the star of this tea – it’s a mellow tasting, lightly smoky, earthy Oolong with a smooth, silky texture.

The flavors start out really delicate.  My first few sips, I was tasting mostly just Oolong and I found myself wondering:  “where’s the fig?  where’s the peach?”  But after about three or four sips, I started to pick up on subtle notes of fig.  The peach developed even more slowly, but after a few more sips, I could pick up on the peach.

I like that the Oolong is really front and center with this tea.  It’s a really delicious Oolong!

The fig notes arrive slowly but when they do, they’re sweet and really lovely.  I love figs and there is something so comforting to me about a fig tea – especially when served warm.  It evokes memories of a happy time in my childhood when I would pick figs from a fig orchard and eat them right after picking them.  They were still warm from the afternoon sunshine and really, there’s no better way to eat a fig!

And I’d argue that there’s no better way to eat a peach!  Freshly picked from the tree and still warm from the sun.  Mmm!  This tea manages to capture both of those flavorful memories very well.

This is a really happy tea – it makes me happy to drink it and it brings back so many warm and happy memories.  If you are looking for a really good fig tea – you should try this one.  And because it’s an Oolong, you can get a few flavorful infusions out of it!

Rougui Oolong Tea from White Two Tea

Rougui_OolongTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Oolong

Where to Buy:  White Two Tea

Tea Description:  

Rougui [cinnamon] yancha [rock tea] is an oolong tea from the Fujian province of China.

Our Rougui is fragrant and smoky with a mineral finish. It is considered a medium roast.

Learn more about this tea here.

Learn more about White Two Tea’s Tea Club Subscription here.

Taster’s Review:

I’ll admit that I have less experience with Rougui Oolong teas than I do with other Oolongs like TieGuanYin and AliShan.  But I still enjoy them!

And this Rougui Oolong from White Two Tea is lovely!

I brewed it the same way I brew other Oolongs – in my gaiwan!  I measured a bamboo scoop of leaf into the bowl of the gaiwan, and then I poured in water heated to 180°F.  I did a 15 second rinse, and then infused the leaves for 45 seconds.  With each subsequent infusion, I added 15 seconds.  My first cup is the combination of the first two infusions.

And the first cup is delightfully fragrant.  It’s pleasantly sweet with notes of fruit and flower.  It’s very flavorful.  Usually, the first cup tends to be the lightest flavored cup that I enjoy of an Oolong experience, and that may be true of this tea as well, but I like that there’s still plenty of flavor to be experienced!

Sweet!  Hints of smoke in the distance.  The wording of the description lead me to believe that this would be smokier than it is – but the smoke notes are faint – I like that!  Woodsy tones marry with notes of stone fruit.  I taste sweet notes of peach and plum with hints of sour at mid-sip.  I also taste hints of mineral and light spice notes in the background.  It’s a wonderfully complex cuppa!

And that was just the first cup!  The second cup is even more delightful!  The flavors have become smoother now.  The sip is smooth from start to finish with a mild astringency at the tail – a slightly dry note.  I also pick up on a slight citrus-y note toward the finish.

While I experienced a slight ‘sour’ note from the fruit tones in that first cup, I find that those notes seem to be tapering.  The fruit is still an abundant taste, but this cup focuses on the sweetness of the fruit and there is very little noticeable sour note.

This tea just seems to get lovelier and lovelier the more you infuse it!

The third cup was sweeter and smoother than the first two.  I can really taste peach notes now.  I am still tasting hints (wisps!) of smoke.  The spice notes seem to stand out for me in this cup, so it’s like I’m tasting peach and spice.  Nice!

A really lovely Oolong!  This is the first Oolong that I’ve tried from White Two Tea, and it’s been a wonderful experience!

Chocolate Frost Black Tea from Petali Teas

Chocolate-FrostTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Tea Information:

Of all the mint chocolate teas we’ve tasted, this one is at the top. This is a dessert tea for pure tea lovers. The mint is gentle and the chocolate is natural. Think rich dark chocolate rather than sweet milk chocolate. Simply delicious. 

This tea is available from Amoda Tea.

It’s also part of Amoda Tea’s Holiday Box!

Learn more about subscribing to Amoda Tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I’m trying the second tea from the Holiday Box that Amoda sent me.  It took a lot of willpower to save this tea for second instead of trying it immediately, but because I didn’t get the mail until after my ‘black tea’ time in the day, I decided to hold off and try this when it would be more suitable for me to drink a black tea.

I have found that when I drink black teas late at night, I end up lying in bed awake and unable to drift off.  I can drink some other teas without experiencing this so I’ve come to realize that it’s the caffeine level of the black tea that keeps me more alert at night and unable to get drowsy.  So, I find that I need to stop drinking black teas about four or five hours before I plan to head to bed.

But this is one of the teas in the Holiday Box that I was especially eager to try!  Chocolate!  Yes please!

And when it comes to chocolate teas, I find it difficult to wait until the tea cools.  I have to have just a sip of what’s to come!  So I took a small sip and even though it was too hot to keep on drinking, I could definitely taste chocolate and mint.  Mmm!

This is very crisp and minty.  A bit more minty than it is chocolate-y, in my opinion.  But there is a nice amount of chocolate to this tea.  If I were to adjust anything about the tea, it would be to lighten up on the peppermint just a tad and add more chocolate.

But what I’m enjoying most about this is that the black tea base is solid.  It’s a strong background of flavor.  It’s well-rounded and the flavor of the tea complements the flavors of mint and chocolate nicely.  The chocolate is rich and tastes of dark chocolate to me.  It’s smooth and has a deep, deliciously chocolate flavor.

The three components all work very well together and it’s a well crafted cup of tea.  It’s strong – robust enough for early morning if you need a flavorful boost.  But it’s also flavorful enough that it tastes like dessert.  So it’d be like having dessert first thing in the morning and as far as I’m concerned, that would make everything right with the world so early in the day!

Awakening Tea from The Algonquin Tea Co.

awakeningTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Herbal/Functional Tisane

Where to Buy:  Algonquin Tea Co.

Tea Description:

Blends nutritious and supportive herbs with stimulating herbs, producing a balanced, uplifting tea that energizes without the side-effects of caffeine.

Learn more about this tea here.

Learn more about subscribing to Postal Teas here.

Taster’s Review:

This is tasty … for an herbal tea.  And that last part is the problem.  I’m not big on herbal teas.  I never have been.  I’d rather drink Camellia Sinensis.  And unfortunately with the Postal Teas 9th edition box – all three selections were herbal teas.  Herbal teas from Algonquin.

Now, granted, all of these Algonquin herbal teas were unique and quite different from anything that I’ve ever tried.  And that’s both a blessing and a curse because while there may be an ingredient or two that I recognize in this blend, for the most part, I’m drinking herbs that I’m not really familiar with so it makes it difficult to recognize and reconcile what I’m tasting.

But I still tried it because that’s what I do.  I taste teas and then I write about what I’m tasting.

In this blend, the most easily identifiable ingredient and flavor is the mint.  It’s crisp and adds a nice, refreshing element to the cup.  There’s ginseng – not a favorite herb of mine.  I can taste the earthiness of the ginseng.  Nettle is in this too and I’m glad to report that while I get hints of the bitterness that goes with Nettle, it’s not a strong or dominant flavor.

Then there are some other ingredients that I’m less familiar with, like alfalfa (oh, sure, I know what it is, I just don’t recall having it in a tea any time recently), astragalus, angelica, joe-pye and calamus.  It also has labrador, which I’m pretty sure I’ve had before, but again, it’s not something I’m familiar enough with to taste it and say, ‘yep, that’s labrador’ with complete confidence.

The combination of these ingredients is supposed to be a stimulating and energizing tea without caffeine.  OK, but, I kind of like my caffeine.  The only time that I’m not up for some caffeine (tea caffeine, that is, not coffee!) is when I’m getting close to bedtime.  So, I can’t say that I really want an herbal, caffeine-free stimulant.  I like my stimulants caffeinated, thank you.

Overall, it doesn’t taste bad.  It tastes minty with an herbaceous and earthy background.  Mint is the top note.  It’s tasty.  If you’re looking for a caffeine-free stimulant, you should try it.  If I were looking for a caffeine-free stimulant, I might first consider that I’m trapped in a bad dream.  But if after determining that I’m not in a bad dream and I’m not having some kind of mental breakdown and I still – for some unfathomable reason – want a caffeine-free stimulant, this is something I’d consider.

I have to admit that I was a bit disappointed to learn that the 9th edition box from Postal Teas was all herbal selections.  While I did enjoy these herbal teas for the most part, herbal selections just don’t excite this tea drinker all that much.

That said, these teas from Algonquin were alright and I drank them and didn’t hate them.  There were definite “pros” to them.  For example of the three herbals that I tried, there were no hibiscus in any of them!  Nope, not even a little bit of hibiscus.  Big bonus points to Algonquin for crafting herbal blends without that horrible hibiscus stuff.  And I also appreciate that they’re unique.  There are ingredients that I’ve not been exposed to, and like I said, that’s both a blessing and a curse.  I would like to be able to taste something and say “oh yeah, that’s the __.”  But, I can’t really reconcile some of the flavor notes because there are ingredients that I’m not so familiar with.

But the benefit is that it’s something different.  This doesn’t taste like the average herbal blend from ABC company, you know?  So like I said, blessing and a curse.

Overall, I’d say that while my experience with this 10th edition of the Postal Teas subscription was not the most exciting and thrilling of boxes that I’ve received over the past 30 days or so, I didn’t dislike the teas that I drank from the box.  And that’s a “pro” too.

Candy Cane Tea from Naked Teas

Candy_Cane_teaTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Green Tea & Rooibos

Tea Information:

Organic! A fun tea inspired by the classic holiday candy. It’s not like drinking a candy cane though. It’s actually more on the softer side. Perfumed floral aroma, lightly minty, softly sweet with hints of raspberry. 

This tea is available from Amoda Tea.

It’s also part of Amoda Tea’s Holiday Box!

Learn more about subscribing to Amoda Tea here.

Taster’s Review:

So, I got a nice surprise from Amoda!  As their way of thanking me for not only subscribing but also for writing reviews of the teas that they send, they sent me the Holiday Box that I wished for when I received December’s subscription box!  Amoda = my Santa Claus!

And this is the first tea that I’m trying from the Holiday Box.

And YUM!  This is really good.  It’s a bit different than you might expect if you taste this without reading the above description of the tea.  The name Candy Cane is a very suggestive name and having tried several different “candy cane” teas over the years, I’ve kind of come to expect a tea called “Candy Cane” to taste a little bit like liquefied candy cane in tea.

But just as the description above states, this doesn’t taste like that.  This has a minty taste (just like most candy canes!) but the mint is balanced with a sweet-tart raspberry flavor, hints of cinnamon and whispers of sweet jasmine and rose.

Holiday_Box
The Holiday Box from Amoda Tea

The base of this tea is a green tea and red rooibos base – very festive!  I don’t taste a strong flavor from the rooibos, maybe a hint of nutty flavor but it’s slight.  I taste the sweet green tea peeking through the mint, raspberry and cinnamon.

The mint is a combination of peppermint and spearmint, but even though we’ve got two mint types in this blend, the mint doesn’t overpower the cup.  It’s minty without tasting too much like a swig of mouthwash.  The warm cinnamon contrasts with the cool minty tones and gives this cup it’s holiday flavor.

The rose and jasmine are very subtle.  There’s just a soft insinuation of flower in this – and it’s just enough to add a little bit of interest to the cup.  If you take a sip of this and find yourself searching for the floral notes, slurp the sip.  The aeration will bring those floral notes to life.

Raspberry is the one unexpected flavor of this cup, but I like that fruity sweetness and the hint of tart that melds with the cinnamon in the aftertaste.

This is definitely an unusual Candy Cane!  (But let me tell you, if I found a candy cane that tasted like this, I’d be a big fan of it, because this is yummy!)  It definitely has a ‘sweet treat’ kind of taste to it, but it isn’t the traditional Candy Cane.  This is a new-and-improved Candy Cane, Naked Teas Galore style!