I need to start working on some of the tea bags that i’ve picked up via swaps, travelling tea boxes, MissB and my travels. This is one from my recent trip that i grabbed from the hotel room. Gotta love random DF tea bags every day :)
This likely would have been one that i might have thought about picking up and i’m glad that i didn’t. this is less lime and more “woody” than anything. Nice that it’s a herbal but in the grand scheme of things if the tea has the word LIME in the name of it, i expect full on lime flavour…even from a fancy french tea :)
Final Count: 129 (+various tea bags)
Comments
Not sure which lime you meant. Lime is such a confusing term in English. In French this is tilleul, and lime the citrus is citron vert or some thing like that.
You probably meant precisely the non citrus lime but just mentioning it just in case. Lime blossom is crazily floral IMO when they bloom end of spring it is amazing a tree perfumes a whole block. But the tea never quite gets that. It is a proverbial calming tea.
Lime trees, linden trees, tillia cordata, not citrus something. Linden is a very traditional tisane in Europe.
Also randomly connected, in french bourbon when applied to food means vanilla, not whiskey!
Not sure which lime you meant. Lime is such a confusing term in English. In French this is tilleul, and lime the citrus is citron vert or some thing like that.
You probably meant precisely the non citrus lime but just mentioning it just in case. Lime blossom is crazily floral IMO when they bloom end of spring it is amazing a tree perfumes a whole block. But the tea never quite gets that. It is a proverbial calming tea.
that makes a LOT more sense :)
Lime trees, linden trees, tillia cordata, not citrus something. Linden is a very traditional tisane in Europe.
Also randomly connected, in french bourbon when applied to food means vanilla, not whiskey!
Bourbon i was aware of, but the lime is new to me. nice to learn things!