We’ve had a lot of rain this week, so I’ve found myself craving this tea quite a lot – not surprising since I’ve essentially trained my body to want this tea during heavy rainfall. It’s practically a tradition, at this point.
As far as the infusion goes, this really just tasted like fruity potpourri – in the same deliciously awful way it usually tastes. However, I think it’s VERY worth noting that in measuring out the tea leaf for this cup I found a GIANT piece of vanilla bean. That’s fucking cool! I mean, I know there’s like a million ingredients in this tea and I vaguely remember vanilla being one of them – but I’ve never actually seen vanilla in the dry leaf before (and I’ve had a lot of cups of this tea) so I’ve kind of always assumed it was like a vanilla flavour!?
Vanilla pods are fucking expensive so it was cool to see such a GIANT chunk of one in my infusion. There must be a really low percentage in the overall blend though, because this was a pretty darn cheap tea to pick up from the local to Regina store I bought it at; which I know selects their teas through the catalogues of several larger vendors (the more hands a blend passes through, the greater the mark up – everyone wants to turn a profit).
For there to be any significant vanilla in this blend, it would 100% be selling for more than what I paid for it given both the cost of vanilla as an ingredient and the mark up from the retail location purchasing from a bigger vendor…
Nifty, though. I wish I would have taken a photo.
Comments
Roswell, we use a LOT of vanilla in my house baking all the time so I have been making homemade vanilla extract for years now. Last year, I was so upset that my $20 pack of beans had gone up to $55 but I bought it anyway. Last weekend, I used those beans to make four vodka fifths of vanilla with an extra fifth to top it up and also refreshed the bottle we are currently using. I had $175 invested in my ingredients and made $540 worth of vanilla extract, not counting the topping up which probably brings the value to more like $800. It is CRAZY.
Truly! It’s probably one of the most expensive ingredients that a company can blend into their tea at the moment – hence my shock in seeing such a large piece of it! Probably about two CM long? I picked it out of the steeped leaf, when it was softened, and split it open to scoop out the insides. Very cool!
Roswell, we use a LOT of vanilla in my house baking all the time so I have been making homemade vanilla extract for years now. Last year, I was so upset that my $20 pack of beans had gone up to $55 but I bought it anyway. Last weekend, I used those beans to make four vodka fifths of vanilla with an extra fifth to top it up and also refreshed the bottle we are currently using. I had $175 invested in my ingredients and made $540 worth of vanilla extract, not counting the topping up which probably brings the value to more like $800. It is CRAZY.
Truly! It’s probably one of the most expensive ingredients that a company can blend into their tea at the moment – hence my shock in seeing such a large piece of it! Probably about two CM long? I picked it out of the steeped leaf, when it was softened, and split it open to scoop out the insides. Very cool!
Neat! I wonder if you could stick it in some sugar and make vanilla sugar with it? It might be scented with your tea, though, but that could be good!