Winter Wonderland Tea from Shanti Tea

Winter WonderlandTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black Tea

Where to Buy: Shanti Tea

Tea Description:

Creamy, spicy, warming with a hint of vanilla and a malty tea base

Ingredients: Black tea, orange peel, clove, cinnamon, ginger root, cornflowers, chrysanthemum petals, natural essences

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Not only is Winter Wonderland Tea from Shanti Tea one of my favorite teas this time of year but I also enjoy it year-round for the delightful quality and taste, too!

The black tea base is of medium strength and combined well with orange peel, clove, cinnamon, ginger, and a variety of flower petals.  It’s pleasing the palate and the eye!  My favorite part of this flavor combo is the orange.  The spices are just an added plus.  This is warming for the heart and soul and is perfect for sharing with friends when the holiday chill is about.  It has a bit of creaminess, spiciness, and malt to it.  I’m curious what this would taste like with the addition of a speck of mint.  Regardless…Winter Wonderland Tea from Shanti Tea is certainly for me!  Could it be for you, too?  I wouldn’t be surprised.

Pumpkin Spice Chai from The Tea Spot


pumpkin-spice-chai-teaTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  The Tea Spot

Tea Description:

Our NEW seasonal Pumpkin Spice Chai may soon become your favorite tea to look forward to each Fall! This chai blend boasts a perfectly-balanced full leaf Assam black tea base with cinnamon, clove, cardamom, allspice, and pumpkin flavor to get you warmed up for Fall. This tea makes an amazing pumpkin latte with the simple addition of steamed milk. This seasonal treat will have you jumping in piles of rainbow-colored leaves in no time!

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

This year (at least this time of the year this year) seems like it’s been the year of the pumpkin chai!  I’ve reviewed quite a few different pumpkin chai teas this year!  I’ve enjoyed most of what I’ve tried (nothing comes to mind immediately that I did not enjoy, but some I definitely enjoyed more than others), but I think I’m saving the best for last!  This one – this!  This is one of the very best pumpkin chai teas that I’ve ever tasted.

The first thing that really impressed me when I opened the pouch of this tea is the aroma!  Wow!  I can really smell the pumpkin!  It is a distinct pumpkin-y fragrance.  It smells like the kitchen on Thanksgiving morning when the pies are baking!  I smell notes of spice and black tea too, but the pumpkin notes are prominent!

The aromatic pumpkin notes are there in the brewed tea too.   The fragrance wafting out of my teacup right now are scrumptious!   To brew this, I used my Kati Tumbler and measured 1 heaping bamboo scoop of tea into the basket.  I like to use just a little more leaf when I’m brewing a chai!  This is especially important if you plan on going latte, because you want to accommodate for the heavier flavor of the dairy – or whatever product you’re using to make it a latte.

I brought 12 ounces of water to boiling and poured it into the tumbler and let this tea steep for 3 1/2 minutes.  I usually stop at 3 minutes with a black tea (and especially an Assam, which this is!) but because of the spices, I wanted to give them a little more time to develop so I crossed my fingers and hoped that the Assam would let me steep it a little longer!

Fortunately, the Assam didn’t seem to mind the slightly longer steep.

This is a really delicious pumpkin chai.  The pumpkin notes are distinct.  They are THERE.  There’s no mistaking the pumpkin here!  This isn’t a pumpkin pie spice type chai where you’re tasting the spices of a pumpkin pie but no pumpkin flavor.  This is PUMPKIN!

And even though the pumpkin flavor is strong, it is a true-to-the-squash type of flavor.  It doesn’t taste artificial.  It tastes like someone liquefied pumpkin puree and added it to my teacup.

The spices are nice.  They’re good and strong – flavorful – without pushing it to the spicy level!  It’s a distinct, spiced blend.  Not just warmly spiced, but not quite “spicy” either.  It’s somewhere between.  Consider the amount of spice that you’d find in the typical pumpkin pie.  Let’s call that mild spice.  And then there’s the super zesty, spicy level … this is somewhere in between.  This tastes like a chai that is also a pumpkin tea.

And I like that the spices are so thoughtfully balanced.  I like that this tastes like a chai!  I taste each of the spices:  cinnamon, cardamom, clove, ginger.  I am also tasting the allspice which is nice (and not always something that’s added to chai!)  It’s warm, it’s cozy, but it’s also got a certain zippy invigorating quality that I get from a well-spiced chai.

You might think that with all that pumpkin and spice, that the tea winds up on the short end of the stick.  But no!  This is an Assam tea and it’s got some gusto!  It is a rich, malty tea and the sweet, caramel-y notes together with the malt really play nicely with the flavors of pumpkin and spice.

For the purposes of this review, I didn’t go latte with this chai.  I wanted to experience the tea straight up, with just a little bit of raw sugar added to enhance the spices a little.  (This would also be amazing with honey!)  After I finished writing my thoughts about the non-latte chai, I decided to add some steamed milk and it’s awesome like that too!  So rich and creamy and yum!  Better than what you’d find in the local coffee stop!

This is a very clever, well-crafted pumpkin chai.  This is the best of the pumpkin patch!

White Vanilla Peppermint Black Tea from M&K’s Tea Company

whitevanillapeppermintTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

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

Tea Description:

Polar bears? Candy canes? It’s that time of the year again! Yay consumerism! Yay tasty things! So hop on board the capitalism train, and try out a bag of our exclusive limited-edition White Vanilla Peppermint black tea blend! It has tea from Australia if you can even believe it. It tastes like a polar bear got into a fight with a mint plant that exploded all over your face. Seriously, try it.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I’m really enjoying the teas this company I found on Etsy!  The holiday blends are really unique.  I love that they didn’t go the standard orange spice holiday blend route.  Don’t get me wrong!  I enjoy those orange spice blends, but, it’s nice to find something that ventures off the beaten path, you know?

And this blend is different from any other holiday blend I’ve yet to try.  Mint is a popular “holiday” flavor, but M&K’s decided to change the mint a bit by adding licorice to the blend.  I like the way the licorice cuts through some of those strong minty notes to give this more of a candy-like flavor than a mouthwash-y one.  The sweet candy-ish taste is enhanced further with the addition of creamy vanilla.

And let’s not forget the black tea in this – because M&K’s didn’t!  This has a strong, full-flavored black tea base that’s rich and has a hefty impact.  It’s the kind of tea that I imagine I’d want for Christmas morning when my daughter wakes me up at the crack of dawn to open presents.

I like the way everything comes together in this blend.  The peppermint is cool and refreshing.  The licorice adds a sharp, snappy flavor that I like.  The vanilla softens the sharper edges of the licorice and tones down the peppermint a little bit.

The black tea offers a lot of interest to this blend too, I’m tasting hints of smoke.  I like the way that wisp of smoke melds with these other flavors, it sort of tastes like Christmas Day:  it’s around 9 am.  All the presents have been opened and you’re relaxing before you start working on that holiday dinner.  There’s a fire roaring in your fireplace and you’re curled up next to the warmth of the fire and sipping on tea and enjoying something sweet that Santa left you in your stocking.  That’s what this tea tastes like!

It’s a nice (and different) holiday blend!

Winterwolf Tea Blend from M&K’s Tea Company

winterwolf

Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  Rooibos (Green)

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

Tea Description:

Winterwolf Tea is here! A limited holiday tea, we take juicy wolfberries and roast them in our local honey with a bit of butterscotch flavor, mix in some spiced green rooibos with cinnamon, and, well, you have some Winterwolf Tea. It tastes like an apple met a cinnamon stick and got caught in a magical honey ocean. But they lived.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

As I was brewing this, I was thinking to myself, what are wolfberries?  After the tea brewed, I looked at the infused berry and it looked a lot like a goji berry, so I googled it and it turns out that yes, goji berries are also known as wolfberries.  I didn’t know that.  You learn something new every day.

To brew this tisane, I emptied the sampler pouch into the basket of my Kati tumbler and added 12 ounces of water heated to 195°F and let it steep for 10 minutes.  The result is something that’s a lot like the description above suggests.  It does taste “like an apple met a cinnamon stick and got caught in a magical honey ocean.”  In other words:  YUM!

Because the rooibos used here is a green rooibos, the flavor doesn’t come off as nutty or woodsy, instead, it’s light and fresh and fruit-like.  Apparently when green rooibos mixed with goji berries, honey, and butterscotch flavor, the end result is an apple-y flavor.

I don’t taste a strong ‘goji berry’ flavor here.  I don’t get the tartness that I often get from goji berry.  I taste honey, I taste notes of butterscotch, but mostly, what I taste is an apple-y, cinnamon-y flavor that is quite lovely.  I’m not quite sure where the apple notes are coming from, but they’re there, and I’m loving what I’m drinking, even if I don’t quite understand it!

I’m really pleased with this holiday blend from M&K’s.  If all rooibos blends tasted this good, I’d not be so apprehensive to try them, because this tisane is delicious!

24 Days of Tea Holiday Countdown – Day 1 from Teanzo 1856

Every year since we’ve been doing this SororiTea Sisters thing, I’ve done a Holiday countdown/Advent calendar of tea.  For the previous four years, I’ve done a 12 Teas of Christmas, but this year, I’ve decided to do things a little different.  This year, I’m going to double down on the 12 Teas of Christmas and go for a full Advent Calender of 24 Days of Tea!

tea-advent-calendar

The company I’ll be featuring for the countdown this year is Teanzo 1856!  I’m so excited!  The teas arrived in a bright red gift box with a festive label on the top featuring Teanzo’s cute elephant logo.  Inside the box were 12 coppery colored, small sample packets, each with a numbered label on the front.  They are glued – rather securely, really, I think they need a glue less tacky for this job – to a strip of card-stock.  On the back of each packet is the name of the tea and the list of ingredients.  Inside is the good stuff:  a sample portion of each tea – just enough for my Kati Tumbler!  Also included is a package of DIY loose leaf tea bags so that you can brew these right in your favorite mug.

Because the packets are securely attached to the card-stock strip, it isn’t easily revealed which tea will be enjoyed the next day (so it’s a little bit of a surprise until you remove the sampler from the box), which helps keep those that are inclined to “cheat” at bay a little bit.  A persistent “cheater” would be able to find out easily what future days have in store, of course, it’s not that difficult and it’s not like some of the other countdown boxes that I’ve had in the past where I either would need to open the pouch to find out what tea is inside, or scratch off a “scratcher” (like the lotto cards) to find out what tea is inside.

While the element of surprise is a fun thing, it isn’t the most important thing about these calendars.  For me, I like the idea of having a different tea every day.  I like counting down to the holiday with tea.  Mostly because – and this may come as no big surprise to you – I like tea.

So without further ado, I will announce the first day of the countdown – there are 24 days until the big day – today’s tea is:

Winter Earl Grey

Winter-Earl-Grey

 Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  Teanzo 1856

Tea Description:

Our Winter Earl Grey Tea is sure to please with this creamy twist on a classic Earl Grey. The vanilla tones down the citrus flavors and is a perfect way to warm up this season.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:  

So my first thought is:  Teanzo knows how to kick off a countdown right!  Earl Grey baby!  This Winter Earl Grey Tea is – essentially – an Earl Grey Creme tea.  I’ve had some really good Earl Grey Creme teas and I’ve had some less than memorable ones … and I’ve had some that aren’t even worth mentioning.  This Winter Earl Grey Tea is a really good Earl Grey Creme!

My first indication that this is a good Earl Grey Creme?  When I opened the pouch I could smell a strong bergamot aroma.  STRONG!  I like that.  I like that while I could smell the creamy vanilla tones, the bergamot stood out – loud and clear!  This is an Earl Grey first, a creamy Earl Grey second.

And what can I say?  I’m a happy tea drinker at this moment.  There are few teas out there that elicit as much joy from me as a good Earl Grey tea and/or a variation of the classic Earl Grey (like an Earl Grey Creme).

To brew this:  well, as I said above, these little sampler pouches holds just the PERFECT amount for my Kati Tumbler.  This Advent Calender does include 24 unbleached loose leaf tea bags (and the amount in the sampler pouch is also just the right amount for these tea bags, should you decide to use them instead of the Kati Tumbler), but I prefer my tumbler.

I poured the contents of the sampler pouch into the basket of my tumbler and then added boiling water to the tumbler and let it steep for 3 minutes.  Earl Grey Creme (or Winter Earl Grey!) perfection!

I’m overjoyed that this tastes as good as it smells.  The bergamot has a clear and well-defined profile in this cup.  The creme does not overpower the Earl Grey.  The sharper notes of the bergamot are softened by the notes of vanilla.  The creamy vanilla adds a sweetness to contrast with the tangy bergamot.  It’s a nice contrast:  sweet, creamy (almost fluffy!) vanilla together with the sharp, vibrant notes of bergamot.

And let’s not forget about the black tea base because without it … we wouldn’t be drinking tea, now would we?  The black tea is not overwhelmed by the presence of the bergamot and vanilla.  Conversely, the black tea is not an overly assertive flavor in the cup.  Instead, it offers a smooth and rich backdrop of flavor and allows the sweet vanilla and citrus-y bergamot do their thing in the foreground.  It’s not a bitter tea nor is it what I’d call astringent.

Overall, a really LOVELY tea, this Winter Earl Grey.  It’s a fantastic way to kick off this countdown to Christmas Day!