4278 Tasting Notes
H&S included a free sachet of this in my order, which is funny because I ordered a sample of the loose leaf version… So while I wish they would have chosen something else, at least I know I’ll like this. The leaves look like all senchas have to me – little dark green flat needles. The smell is similar also – quite sweet with spinach and squash. I steeped it for 1 minute in one of my new, cute noble cups.
I’m finding that I really enjoy the lighter steamed senchas versus the more heavily steamed ones. The flavor is a bit rougher or more grassy as opposed to super deep vegetal. This tea’s aroma is spinach, but I also find broccoli and carrot in there somewhere. It tastes different than others I’ve tried so far. There is that ubiquitous steamed spinach taste and the broccoli from the aroma, but I also taste autumn leaves. The aftertaste is spinachy but also slightly roasty. It’s almost like this tea has a bit of houjicha mixed in somewhere! Quite tasty.
Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Broccoli, Spinach, Vegetal
Preparation
I got a silken sachet of this as a free sample with my H&S order. It looks similar to other jasmine pearl teas I’ve tried. The pearl are small and tightly rolled with very dark green leaves and silvery threads interwoven. There are about 20 or so pearls in my sachet. There is a very powerful and sweet jasmine scent as soon as I open the pouch, along with a touch of light vegetal aroma – maybe lettuce? I brewed my sachet for 3 minutes.
The brewed tea smells similar to the leaf, but in a much subtler way. The jasmine is still the main element, but it does not seem as perfumey now, and I can catch a scent of buttery, mild green tea. Tasting this tea, the jasmine seems more mild than it has been in other jasmine pearl teas I’ve had before, and I definitely appreciate this. The green tea base is mild and sweet, and it reminds me more of fresh leaves than vegetables. There is a slight floral aftertaste.
I don’t know, after trying some straight green teas (admittedly, they’re been mostly Japanese and this is a Chinese tea, so I’m sure there’s a lot of difference) I just don’t find myself enjoying this style of tea as much. It is definitely a calming cup, though.
Flavors: Grass, Jasmine, Sweet
Preparation
So Stacy from Butiki posted on Facebook that she had a stray ounce of this lingering around and I volunteered to be its new home! Hooray! She was also nice enough to include two samples even though I only spent $5 for this tea (plus the shipping). So yay for Stacy for being so nice! This is my first Butiki tea, although I have been plotting an order since I discovered them here on Steepster a few weeks ago. Soon!
Anyway, this tea is quite beautiful visually, even though it’s just tea leaves with a few golden flower petals. The leaves are nice mix of chocolately brown and gold, and the petals accent their color perfectly. It also smells quite lovely – all nutmeg and vanilla goodness reminiscent of eggnog. I brewed one teaspoon for 3 minutes (Stacy included a note recommending 190 degrees).
The brewed tea smells even better than the dry version. The nutmeg and vanilla have toned down a bit, but they are joined by luscious notes of chocolate and raisin, giving it a richness and depth. I was surprised when I tasted this that I didn’t get a sense of vanilla or cream that many other tasters described. I did get a light but multi-flavored base tea that is well-accented by the addition of nutmeg. The nutmeg hits me most at the beginning and end of the sip, while in the middle I taste lovely hints of raisin, wood, and honey. Quite tasty, and I didn’t miss the cream at all.
I drank this one au naturel, but I can definitely see it being a decadent eggnog treat with added milk and sugar. Thanks again, Stacy! :)
Flavors: Honey, Nutmeg, Raisins, Wood
Preparation
The first of my three free samples from Nina’s Paris. Thanks to Laurent and Dorian for sending these my way! :) These samples came in the most adorably tiny zipper bags… I knew I wanted to try one of the zodiac rooibos blends and this one seemed like it was well-liked on Steepster. My sample didn’t have any dried strawberry pieces in it, which makes sense because it’s a small amount. It just looks like plain rooibos. The smell is delicious though! There’s a very tart, bright strawberry scent coupled with a sweet, candylike strawberry scent, in addition to sumptuous vanilla and cream aromas. My sample doesn’t really have enough for two cups, but I didn’t want to risk overleafing when I only get to try this once, so I didn’t use the whole thing. I used a slightly heaping teaspoon and brewed it for 5 minutes.
The brewed tea smells quite lovely. There’s a very juicy strawberry scent – like natural strawberry flavor that has been pumped up with a bit of artificial candy flavor. I also get vanilla and a bit of rooibos in the background. Tasting this, the strawberry flavoring reminds me of Kusmi’s Strawberry Green. It’s a somewhat “jammy” strawberry flavor, meaning it tastes deep and almost cooked with a natural sweetness. Although I don’t really get cream from this, the vanilla is a nice substitute and produces a similar effect. Then there’s that tart, interesting strawberry aftertaste, which is exactly the same as in the aforementioned Kusmi tea.
I very much enjoyed this tea, being a liker of red rooibos and strawberry things in general. I feel like milk would go well, but I was afraid it would overpower the flavors. I’m really interested in trying all of the Nina’s zodiac teas, and I wish they offered a sampler… As it is, I’ll probably just buy one of them, then when I drink it all replace it with another, and so on. :P
Flavors: Candy, Jam, Rooibos, Strawberry, Vanilla
Preparation
Oh, the infamous Tower of London, much beloved around these parts. I had high hopes for this one after hearing its praise sung in many a tasting note. The dry leaf pretty much looks like a “generic” black tea – very dark, short, slightly twisty leaves. However, the smell is not at all generic. It’s a powerful and tart-smelling combination of peach, vanilla, and bergamot. I actually brewed this twice.
The first time, I did a teaspoon for 4 minutes (which was the average steep time according to Steepster). It came out quite bitter and I couldn’t finish the cup, even with sugar. I’ve had the exact same problem with Paris before.
The second time, I did a 5 minute steep instead (which seemed to solve the problem in the past). It came out much better at these parameters. It has a sweet and tantalizing aroma with a lot of vanilla, accented by peach, plum, and honey fragrances. The taste is similar but a bit more complex. The vanilla hits my tongue first, followed by the bergamot, then a jumble of peaches and dark sweet cherries. Finally, the honey comes in at the end, right before a slightly unpleasant bitterness. Not sure what I’m doing wrong there. I found this tea to be quite similar to Paris, perhaps with a touch more bergamot and with a slightly brighter fruit flavor compared to Paris’s more jammy one. A tasty tea with a bit of sugar added.
Flavors: Bergamot, Cherry, Honey, Peach, Vanilla
Preparation
Since you recently tried St Petersburg do you find it similar? I do, but I didn’t do side by side, my Kusmi tin is new and I don’t want to open it now
First Chinese green tea! I’m mostly focusing on trying Japanese greens right now, but I figured I’d grab a sample of this and a dragonwell from H&S just the same. The dry leaf is quite distinctive. The leaves are formed into very dark olive green pellets. These pellets are very unevenly rolled – sort of like a smaller version of green oolong. They smell chiefly of alfalfa – similar to hay but with a greener and grassier tinge. H&S suggested 3 minutes in general for Chinese green teas, so I figured I’d give that a shot.
The brewed tea’s aroma is quite vegetal, but also dry-smelling. It reminds me of dried autumn leaves. This dry leafy scent carries over into the taste as well. I can also taste the alfalfa that I detected in the dry leaf. There’s definitely a very subtle and pleasant smokiness alongside a nice grounding earthy note. This tea leaves a strange dusty feeling in my mouth, similar to the houjicha I recently tried. I’m unsure if this suggests that I should be rinsing these teas beforehand or if it’s just an element of the taste.
I haven’t tried gunpowder before on my own, but I suspect this is the green tea that I’ve had in Chinese buffets before. It tastes very similar if my memory is correct. I could see this making a good everyday tea.
Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Earth, Grass, Smoke
Preparation
The first tea to try from my Harney & Sons order! :D They had a few different sencha teas, I had to get this one because of the name. I know, that’s not really a good selection method, but too bad! :D The leaves look similar to the other senchas I’ve tried – very thin, dark green leaves about three-quarters of an inch long at most. This tea has a powerful smell! It has the same strong sweet and grassy/vegetal scent, but for some reason it conjures up images of mango for me. I brewed it for 1 minute.
The aroma is very sencha-y – steamed spinach and grass with some butternut squash. My boyfriend claimed it reminded him of some form of meat stew (what?). This tea tastes quite similar to Den’s Sencha Shin-ryoku that I tried a few days ago. On Harney’s website, it says that this is a medium-steamed sencha. The taste is sweet, strong steamed spinach melded with squash and a slight grassiness. The flavor here is quite deep. It has a buttery spinach aftertaste that lingers for a long time, and is my favorite part of this tea. Quite tasty. And hooray, Steepster added “butternut squash” to the flavor list after I emailed them! :)
Flavors: Butter, Butternut Squash, Grass, Spinach, Sweet
Preparation
This is actually my third tea of the day. I also drank the second half of my S’mores sample from Ost and then a second steeping of Golden Orchid (I had the first steeping last night, I shared it with my boyfriend, who isn’t a tea drinker but he was excited at the notion of chocolate tea). So I brewed this up for four minutes. I usually do 3, but I knew I would add milk so I figured a bit stronger would be good. I then added some sweetened condensed milk (oh boychik…). It was still too hot to drink so I went downstairs to check the mail, hopeful that I would have some new samples to try. Well, no samples, but I did get my July issue of Bon Appetit! I love food magazines!
Needless to say, this tea is delicious with the condensed milk. It’s amazingly creamy and delicious but I can still taste a lot of blueberry. It’s like blueberries swimming in sweetened cream! Yum! If anyone reading this has a suggestion for a really good blueberry tea, I would love to hear it! I love blueberry.
Preparation
Backlog from last night! I got this tea as a swap from Ost. I wanted to purchase it when I made my order, but they were sold out of the 1 ounce packages and I didn’t want to buy a larger quantity not knowing if I would like it. The dry tea looks like mostly rooibos with some flower petals (Della Terra loves those) and some dried citrus peel. I have no idea what the leaf smells like because the resealable bag that it’s in smells strongly of S’mores (the other tea Ost sent me). I brewed 1.5 tsp for 3 minutes.
The brewed tea smelled lovely – like sweet lemon pudding and meringue. Yum yum yum! The taste followed suit. It’s light, sweet lemon at first, with the lovely addition of vanilla. There’s definitely a creaminess that I could associate with pudding and the vanilla kind of translates to meringue for me. The one thing I didn’t get from this was crust, but that’s okay with me. There was a nice lemony aftertaste. Honestly, the flavors were all nice, but this tea came out a bit weak for me. I have enough for a small cup so I’ll try it with a longer steep time for me, and see if that helps. Holding off on the rating until then!
Flavors: Cream, Lemon, Meringue, Vanilla
Preparation
I didn’t really notice a ton of a rooibos flavor, but that’s the reason I only steeped it for 3 minutes.
Weird that you thought it was weak, it was strong for me. And I usually just use 1tsp. Should have doubled the zip lock on the S’mores…didn’t even think about it. >< I actually thought this tea was stronger, smell wise. So weird.
Yum yum yum. Drinking this with my pizza and it’s so tasty. I actually tried a second infusion this time around (I did 45s compared to 1m for the first) and it’s still delicious. Tastes very similar to the first as far as I can tell, although I’m not sure I trust myself when I’m eating while drinking it. Also, this was my first time using my new Finium brew basket and it’s amazing.
Yay, happy place. Pizza with pepperoni, mushrooms, and olives, and my tasty, tasty sencha. Nothing better!
Preparation
Mine too, so far. But I’ve only tried two, so that doesn’t really count… Seems to go very well with food! :D
Usually just 2 for me :) I’ve tried a 3rd but it is never robust enough for my tastes, and it is so inexpensive I don’t feel bad tossing it after 2!
I’m trying a third steep right now (1m) and I see what you mean. The spinachy flavor is definitely lighter but I love the sort of “rough” flavor that’s developing. Is that what bancha is like? Honestly, with how inexpensive this tea is, I wouldn’t feel bad at all only doing one steep!
Bancha is way different! It is a lot more roasty in my experience. I know there are lots of different styles of bancha though…
That sounds right up my alley… I’ve loved genmaicha and houjicha so far so roasty is good! :D Thanks for answering all my questions, lol.