Kenyan Tinderet

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Honey, Peanut, Malt, Tannin, Earth, Sweet, Bergamot, Brown Toast, Dark Wood, Thick, Wet wood, Astringent, Earthy, Leather, Malty, Bread, Coffee, Dark Chocolate, Walnut, Wood, Dirt, Pleasantly Sour, Nutty
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by david
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec 5 g 12 oz / 364 ml

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101 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Oh wow does this ever remind me of coffee! wheeeeew! Sadly though, for some reason… the maltiness that I love so much was missing. Maybe because it was only a 10g sample that I’ve had in my...” Read full tasting note
    84
  • “Continuation of my tea a day journey. I actually left this sitting on the counter as I walked out the door to go to work. I was tealess at work all day :(( In hind site this might not have been...” Read full tasting note
  • “After commenting on a post about how I don’t like CTC teas, I decided to give this one another try now that I have evolved a bit. The dry leaf looks like grapenuts, and it also kind of smells like...” Read full tasting note
  • “This is different. It seems as though it’s bolder than other black teas, and I can see why people say it reminds them of coffee. Yowza! I think I’ll pass the other half of this sample on to ozli as...” Read full tasting note
    76

From DAVIDsTEA

African splendour
Discover this rare tea from the Tinderet Estate in the highlands of Kenya’s Rift Valley. Most connoisseurs drink it as a little luxury after a good meal. It has a superb flavour, with light floral notes and a special maltiness. ‘Tinderet’ means ‘Place of Lightning’, and the afternoons often see flashes of lightning after a morning of sun. Fair trade and ethically produced, it’s an all-round winner.

About DAVIDsTEA View company

DavidsTea is a Canadian specialty tea and tea accessory retailer based in Montreal, Quebec. It is the largest Canadian-based specialty tea boutique in the country, with its first store having opened in 2008.

101 Tasting Notes

71
1049 tasting notes

I’ve been trying to get into more unique black teas recently. I review a lot of teas from India, China, and Sri Lanka, but I do not always pay attention to teas produced in other countries. Until recently, I did not have much interest in African teas, but after being blown away by a couple of white teas from Kenya, I have been keen on trying more teas produced outside of the so-called “Big Three.”

I prepared this tea using the one step Western infusion process I tend to favor for non-Chinese black teas and many black tea blends. I steeped 1 teaspoon of granulated tea leaves in 8 ounces of 205 F water for 5 minutes. Obviously, no additional infusions were attempted.

I got a strong aroma from the dry tea leaves. I noted a combination of earth, wood, and coffee aromas that kind of ran together. After infusion, I noted even more pronounced aromas of wood, coffee, and earth joined by scents of nuts, toast, and malt. In the mouth, I picked up on a particularly robust combination of coffee bean, earth, wood, brown toast, fresh bread, dark chocolate, leather, malt, hickory, and black walnut notes. The tea was very brisk in the mouth, with a pronounced astringency that left a dry, woody, gritty impression on the finish.

Overall, this was an interesting black tea, but I doubt I would be in any rush to come back to it. I do not normally mind brisk, astringent teas, but this one was a little much, even for me. I did, however, enjoy its woody, nutty character. I think fans of contemporary English breakfast blends would perhaps get a kick out of this one, but fans of sweeter, smoother teas would probably want to avoid it.

Flavors: Astringent, Bread, Brown Toast, Coffee, Dark Chocolate, Earth, Leather, Malt, Walnut, Wood

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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451 tasting notes

Lightly astringent and drying. A bold black tea that’s good to wake up to … or drink to stay awake at 2:30pm.

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77
31 tasting notes

Very good black tea. I throughly enjoy this one. Its fine without any milk or cream, straight – which it nice when your on the go.

I will be going back to get a full tin.

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99
29 tasting notes

Such a strong and bold tea, I bought it at first because I thought the tea itself looked very interesting. The taste is a mix between an english breakfast and dirt but in a way that it tastes actually really good. By itself I can see why people would pick up coffee but with some milk and sugar I find it’s just a stronger version of an english breakfast blend. I can see myself drinking this in the morning as a way to wake myself up.

Flavors: Bergamot, Coffee, Dirt, Earth, Malt, Pleasantly Sour

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec

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70
9 tasting notes

Whew was this tea bold. I steeped it for exactly four minutes and it was a little too strong for my taste. Not a bad tea at all, just strong.

Preparation
4 min, 0 sec
TheKesser

The tea guide that I bought this one from told me to only steep it for about 45sec. I found that to be just about right for me. I’d try that if you have more.

Eva

Thank you for the tip! Mine said between 4 and 6 minutes. I’ll have to pick some up at try it again for 45 seconds.

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85
34 tasting notes

This tea was included as a sample packet in my most recent order from DAVIDsTEA. It is a smooth black tea with a sweet scent and a light taste.

I served it hot with some milk. I would absolutely purchase this as an everyday unflavoured caffeinated tea. Delicious!

Flavors: Honey

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 24 OZ / 709 ML

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77
79 tasting notes

What deceptively cute and non-threatening little leaves! This packs a punch. I haven’t had many straight black teas, but upon reading about this I decided “go big or go home” and went for it. I’m glad I did! I steeped for about four minutes and had it with a bit of honey. It’s very earthy, malty, and a bit bitter but not in a foul way. Just hovering in the background a bit. I might try steeping three minutes next time just to see, but that’s more of a curiosity rather than trying to correct anything with this.

This could definitely work for those especially lethargic mornings. I think we’ll get along just fine, Kenyan Tinderet.

… I’m finding it increasingly difficult to assign number ratings. Like my “scale” is inconsistent. So… to heck with that for now.

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75
270 tasting notes

I was reading the, quite mixed, reviews on this one as I was letting my pot boil. I got more nervous as I realized that this seems to be a hit or a miss. I needed something on the more caffeinated side as I just arrived home from work and a delicious lunch with the boyfriend and have a large pile of work ahead of me for the rest of my day.

I thought I would end up putting milk or something in this but I am enjoying it enough straight. This is a pleasant surprise as I was under the impression I did not like many black teas, let one straight ones!

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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34
12 tasting notes

Alright. Tastes like black tea. Yay.

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80
165 tasting notes

I tried this the other day after it was recommended by the two staff members who were working. The dry blend smells very earthy, nutty and smooth. I had mine with a bit of agave and soy milk and it was delicious. This tea was earthy and nutty but there was also a touch of sweetness. I would have this again and recommend giving this a try!

Flavors: Earth, Nutty, Sweet, Tannin

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