Sugar Plum Shou Mei White Tea Blend from 52Teas

Sugar-Plum-52teas-Web-204x512Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  White

Where to Buy:  52Teas

Tea Description:

This year’s Christmas week blend is inspired by goodies the vision of which supposedly danced in sleeping children’s heads before they had My Little Ponies to dream about. So here’s my attempt at a sugar plum shou mei complete with some lavender flowers. I sure hope you enjoy it.

Learn more about this blend here.

Taster’s Review:

I was thrilled when I saw what tea 52Teas created for the week of this past Christmas:  a Sugar Plum Shou Mei White Tea Blend! I love sugar plums!  That it to say, I love the Jelly Belly type of sugar plum that’s a jelly sort of candy.  I haven’t tried a real sugar plum.  I don’t think I’m really entirely sure of what a real sugar plum actually is.

Which I guess opens things up for 52Teas to be very creative with this blend, right?

It took a few sips before I started to really recognize the “plum” notes in this tea.  I could taste the white tea in those first few sips:  sweet, light hay-ish notes, and a crisp, melon-ish like quality is what I could taste.

After the first few sips, I started to notice some plum-like qualities.  Sweet and juicy!  Then I noticed hints of lavender starting to emerge.  But the aroma of the lavender here is stronger than the lavender’s contribution to the flavor profile of this tea.  I can smell the lavender as I sit here, enjoying the scent of the tea wafting out of the cup but the flavor is much softer, like a whisper of lavender, a hint of lavender that caught a ride on the airy notes of the white tea.

This is pretty tasty.  It’s not quite as strongly flavored as I anticipated it being based upon my experiences with 52Teas.  But it does have the flavors I’d expect from a “sugar plum” flavored tea:  I taste the tea, and I taste notes of sweet plum.  I don’t know if this tea excites me enough to start filling my head with dancing visions, but it’s a tasty cuppa.

Traditional Plum Pudding Flavored Oolong Tea from Butiki Teas

Plum PuddingTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Oolong

Where to Buy:  Butiki Teas

Tea Description:

This tea follows a more traditional form of plum pudding. Plum pudding is cake-like treat that is soaked with liquor, spiced and contains dried fruits and citrus peels. This plum tea has notes of rum, spice, brown sugar, orange peel, and a slight hint of custard. We went very light on the spice and orange peel but added it for a touch of depth and authenticity. This delicious plum, rum, and a touch of spice tea utilizes our Nilgiri Frost Oolong for a weighty body and a hint of sweetness. While tasty on its own, this tea pops with a tiny amount of brown crystal sugar. 

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Yummy!  This Traditional Plum Pudding Flavored Oolong Tea from Butiki Teas is really a festive treat.

I can’t say that I’ve ever tasted plum pudding, but, I can taste each of the elements that is promised in the description above.  I taste the plum and the rum notes, and there is this smooth creaminess to it that is very custard-like.  It is sweet and gently spiced in such a way that it tastes very holiday-ish.  And the subtle notes of orange brighten the cup.

The base tea used here is Butiki Teas’ Nilgiri Frost Oolong, and because of the natural citrus and bourbon notes, I think that it was an ideal choice for this blend.  It melds seamlessly with the flavors, accentuating them to bring out the most from those flavors.

I’m REALLY glad that I tried this tea.  I took my first few sips of the tea without any sweetener, and it’s really good like that, but, I found that the tea really came to life after I added a little bit of turbinado sugar to the cup.  Delicious hot, but if you happen to walk away from the cup for little while and return to a cooled cup – its still yummy.  This tea gets two very enthusiastic thumbs up from me.

Mirabelle Cream Rooibos Tisane from Hale Tea Company

Mirabelle-CreamTisane Information:

Leaf Type:  Green Rooibos

Where to Buy:  Hale Tea Company

Tisane Description:

The aroma is something of a cross between a peach and an apricot. To taste, this tea really does mimic eating an actual Mirabelle plum with it’s tart skin and sweet flesh. The green rooibos brings an interesting savouriness that interacts delightfully with the Mirabelle flavour.

Learn more about this tisane here.

Learn more about subscribing to Amoda’s Monthly Tea Tasting Box here.

Taster’s Review:

This Mirabelle Cream Rooibos Tisane from Hale Tea Company is the last of the three teas that I received in September’s tea tasting box from Amoda Teas.  The fragrance is to die for!  My mouth was watering the moment I smelled it – it smells luscious … like fresh peaches and apricots … and evoked memories of my gramma’s kitchen during the month of August and beginning of September, when the last of the peaches and apricots were being harvested from her prolific trees, and she would be making peach and apricot preserves, as well as pies and cobblers.  YUM!  I think my stomach just growled from thinking about it … now I want a peach/apricot cobbler with a scoop of homemade vanilla ice cream!

But I suppose a cup of this tisane will have to suffice since those days have long since past (and I’m not nearly the baker that my gramma was!)  And this is tasty … not nearly as tasty as my gramma’s cobbler with homemade vanilla ice cream, but, this also has less fat and fewer calories.

Mirabelleplum
Image from Wikipedia.
Click on the Pic to go there.

The green rooibos base is a nice choice for these flavors, because the green rooibos has a natural fruity tone to it that accents the notes of plum.  I can’t recall that I’ve actually tasted a Mirabelle plum, but I do notice some plummy notes in this tea that remind me of a sun-ripened plum with the juicy, deep red flesh.   I notice the sweetness and the hint of sour to those plums.  This is sweeter than most plums that I’ve tasted … but I do notice that plum-like tartness to this too.

The flavor is not as peachy or apricot-y as the aroma would lead one to believe … but then, this is not supposed to be about peaches or apricots, but the Mirabelle plum, although the photo of the Mirabelle plum (above right) … those kinda look like apricots!

Overall, I’m finding this tasty tisane to be fruity with a nice contrast between sweet and tangy, with just a hint of cream.  I like the lightness of this … it’s very refreshing and it tastes great hot or iced.  As it cools, the flavors do soften somewhat, but it’s still a tasty, creamy, fruity drink.

A really nice tisane, I’m glad that Amoda included this in the September box!

PRODUCT REVIEW: French Plum Indian Black Tea Cold-Brewed Concentrate from Kickstand

kickstandlabel

Product Information:

Where to Buy:  Kickstand

Product Description:

The Organic French Plum Indian Black Tea is a scented-blended tea. This type of black tea is scented with the essence of French plums plucked at their peak.

About Kickstand Tea Concentrate:

You can serve it Hot or Cold, mixed with milk, sugar, alcohol or even adding it to a ice cream or cake mix. Prepare it to your taste, the possibilities are endless.

Taster’s Review:

Before I get started on the product review for this French Plum Indian Black Tea Cold-Brewed Concentrate from Kickstand, I have about how I had heard about this product.  I occasionally buy from Fab and as a result I get their emails all the time, and Kickstand cold-brew tea and coffee concentrates were being offered on Fab this week, and I was thinking about ordering some of this tea concentrate to give it a try.  That SAME day, I go to the post office, and in my PO Box, waiting for me, is a sample bottle of this tea concentrate, their new “for summer” scented tea to review.  Wow!  Talk about being in-sync with a tea company!kickstandtea

The bottles of this tea concentrate are very attractive – they’re packaged in dark amber bottles that are reminiscent of “medicine man” type of bottles.  They hold 32 ounces of cold-brewed tea concentrate which is to be diluted with a ratio of one part water to one part tea concentrate, and then poured over ice. So, you can make one glass of iced tea, or a whole pitcher if you want.

Since I had a pitcher handy, I decided to just go ahead and prepare the whole bottle of concentrate (that way, I don’t have everyone asking me, “hey, mom, what’s in that bottle in the fridge?”)  And the 32 ounce bottle dilutes into a half-gallon pitcher just perfectly (duh, right?).  However, this produces a rather strong glass of iced tea if you don’t pour it over ice … so I recommend doing so.  And if you prefer not to add ice (or if your iced tea is cold from being in the fridge) you might want to add a little more water to dilute it further, because it’s rather strong.

Since I had just diluted the tea, I went ahead and poured the iced tea over ice, and while my first couple of sips (before the ice started to melt) was strong, now that the ice has melted, I find this to be just right.  Strong … but not unappealingly so.  The tea is robust.  It’s very refreshing and brisk!  It has a sweetness to it and a hint of malty undertones.  Very flavorful!  The concentrate has a citric acid added to it … which I am guessing is meant to help preserve the tea, and this adds a pleasing citrus tone to the tea (like someone squeezed a lemon wedge in my iced tea).

And then there is the very appealing plum note.  It is tangy and sweet.  It isn’t quite like the flavor of plum that I’m used to (like the plums that I usually purchase in the produce section of my grocery store), instead, it’s more of a savory plum note with a certain sweet-tart taste that I find very enjoyable.

On a side note, I noticed that after pouring the whole bottle of tea concentrate into my pitcher, there were “floaters” that looked a lot like citrus pulp.  I don’t know if that’s what it is.  I strained the tea into my glass so that I would avoid getting the floaters in my tea, but I didn’t examine these floaters further.

I really like this product!  I especially like that the concentrate is NOT sweetened … so often concentrates like this are so overly sweet that you just can’t taste the tea.  I like that this product allows me to decide whether or not I want sweetener.    I also like that it’s organic!  I’m really glad I got a chance to try it.

Stone Fruit White Tea from 52Teas

Stone-Fruit-52teas

Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  White

Where to Buy:  52Teas

Tea Description:

Stone fruits are so named because they have a large pit in their centers. They include peaches, plums, apricots, nectarines and cherries–in other words, a cornucopia of yumminess, all of which is represented in this blend.

Learn more about this blend here.

Taster’s Review:

When it came time for me to try this Stone Fruit White Tea from 52Teas, I knew I had to try it iced.  It just seemed to me to be the perfect kind of tea for iced tea.  So, I brewed an extra large pot of this tea, and after straining a small cup of tea for me to try as a hot tea and with which to start this review, I strained the rest of the pot into my iced tea pitcher, and then re-infused the leaves to top off the iced tea pitcher.  Yumminess in the fridge for tomorrow!

Served still-piping-hot-from-the-teapot hot, I found the flavor was not quite everything I wanted it to be.  I took a sip or two, and then I decided to wait a few minutes for my next sip … which was considerably better.  Give this tea a few moments to cool – it doesn’t need a long time, but just a few minutes will give the flavors a chance to really pop.

This tea blend is beautifully flavored.  The white tea base is soft, sweet and earthy.  Notes of hay, and of fresh air, it tastes clean and fresh.  These flavors seemed to meld well with the sweet, lush notes of peach, nectarine, plum, apricot and cherry.

And I like that I can taste each of those flavors in the cup in front of me.  It tastes a bit more like a medley of fruit flavors rather than distinctive, individual notes … but I can taste each of them.  The peach and nectarine are the most prominent – and it really is difficult for me to tell the difference between one and the other when it comes to these two fruits, when I was young, we had a peach tree and a nectarine tree, and when it came time for “peach” cobbler, my step-mother would combine the two fruits in the cobbler, and really, it just tasted like peach cobbler. They’re both so similar.

Even though the peach and nectarine are the strongest notes, I also taste the plum, which adds a nice, tangy note to the cup.  And the cherry adds a hint of tart.  The apricot adds a smooth, sweet undertone.  It is – as I said – much more like a stone fruit medley than the individual flavors of five stone fruits.

This white tea blend from 52Teas is a stone groove (sorry, I don’t know why I felt the need to say that, I just did.)  And it’s even better iced than it is hot!  The flavors REALLY POP once it’s chilled and become more distinguished.  I taste more natural, juicy sweetness from the peach, nectarine and apricot … and more sharp tartness from the cherry and I like this contrast.  The plum flavor really shines through as well.

So delicious, naturally cooling and just … pure refreshment from start to finish!  YUM!