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Sipdown! Counting this as a tea ordered online for ashmanra’s sipdown challenge. This is probably one of the more popular teas/herbals in our home, in that both I and my partner like it. Although I learned recently that we drink it at radically different strengths! I tend to brew it long and strong to really bring out that good burn, whereas he tends to do a more standard steep and add milk and sweetener for a ginger latte situation. We’re almost certainly going to restock this sooner rather than later, but since I just placed a DavidsTea order for Manoomin Maple I just picked up their ginger blend to tide us over for a bit rather than place two separate tea orders/pay shipping twice.
Unrelated: Roswell Strange has me dreaming of trying the mint blends from Foggy River Farm. Except they’re in Canada and I’m in the U.S.! They have free shipping for orders over $175, though, so if anyone in the U.S. is interested in going in on an order together I’d be happy to coordinate.
I’ve drunk so much of this over the past three weeks. Since I can’t take NSAIDS, herbal remedies are my only anti-inflammatory option short of steroids. Like I said in my Adagio peppermint note, I like their straight herbals better than their teas/blends. This has a good amount of gingery bite and heat, which I like in my ginger tea. Will note here also that I quite enjoyed their candied ginger.
Day 2 of DIY Adagio advent calendar. This and some basic honey are what I placed the Adagio order for in the first place – I was running low on both types of item. Since it also came with a peppermint sample, I put that in the calendar. This isn’t the greatest peppermint I’ve ever had, but it’s a very solid daily drinker sort of mint. Clear, fresh menthol. I added some vanilla agave to this mug just to zhuzh it up a bit. Perfect palate cleanser after the unfortunate green tuocha experience.
To be honest, I’m usually not a fan of Adagio’s blends or camellia sinensis teas. I just typically find them poorly balanced or on the meh side, respectively. But I’m finding that their straight herbs are pretty good! This peppermint has a clean, crisp taste that made it very easy to finish off the three-serving sample pack. Another last-minute September sipdown from yesterday!
This one is really nice! There are strong notes of the spices but not so much as to completely overwhelm the flavors. I would have preferred a slightly stronger note of maple creme, but overall I think everything works quite well here.
Edit: I love that someone previously listed “autumn leaf pile” as a flavor for this, haha! I like to think this tastes better than leaves, but I adore the comparison.
Flavors: Cardamom, Cinnamon, Clove, Cream, Maple, Spices
Well, this sure is lemongrass and ginger! I can taste both the citrusy flavor of the lemongrass and the heat of the ginger, so it certainly delivers what it advertises, although the flavors are not particularly pungent.
I’m drinking this happily enough, but I’m not sure what its niche in my cupboard would be. If I were really looking for just lemon and ginger flavors, I think I’d find it more satisfying to slice a lemon, grate some fresh ginger, and make a tea with fresh ingredients.
I do wonder how this tea would be with a tiny bit of coconut milk added … but my curiosity is not strong enough for me to order more and try it.
Preparation
I’ve had cream Earl Grey teas before. I’ve had teas with natural creamy notes, like good milk oolongs. But I’ve never had a tea that was just “cream” flavored before!
I’m of two minds about this tea. It smells lovely dry, and some sweet-ish vanilla-y notes come out in the scent while it’s steeping. That makes for a pleasant preparation, but when I actually tasted it, the cream flavor was not a match for the natural bitterness of the black tea itself. It’s not that I don’t like the flavor of black tea, but it was a little jarring that the bitterness was still so pronounced alongside the creamy, sweet scent.
On the other hand, after I added a splash of whole milk, the cup was very pleasant, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. But then, I generally prefer teas that don’t need additions to be enjoyable. Hmm! Ponder, ponder, ponder. The jury’s still out on this tea.
Preparation
Ugh I’ve had the worst luck lately with coconut going bad in teas before I have the chance to try them. Again, this is only a few months old. I taste mostly bad coconut, even though I threw away all the visible pieces before steeping. I also taste ginger and rooibos. Almond milk tastes nice in there and smooths things out a bit. It’s fine, but not special.
I was at work so late today. It wasn’t that I was under a deadline or anything, only that I was so close to being done with a big project, and I had that sense that if I could just push through to the end today, I’d be able to start next week with a clean desk, and isn’t that a better feeling for a Monday morning than starting a new week with the tail end of the last one? Well, success! I got it done, but it was a pretty long day.
I think that’s why I picked this tea sample for tonight, hoping that the chamomile would help me wind down quickly. And I have to say, it’s working! But I’m not sure if that’s from the chamomile or just from the pleasure of really enjoying a new tea. This is a good one.
The dry tea smells like York Peppermint Patties, which is weird because I could swear there’s a chocolate note in there even though there’s nothing like chocolate in the blend. It’s an enticing scent, though, for someone like me with an incorrigible sweet tooth at night.
Once the tea is brewing, that sweet note starts to smell more like the vanilla in the blend, and the floral-herbal scent of the chamomile comes out. That floral flavor is the first one that I taste, followed by the peppermint. The finish is a creamy, cool vanilla. I don’t taste the rooibos distinctly here, but I don’t miss it.
I’m into it! This is in the running for a proper order. I’d put it in the same category of tea as David’s Tea’s Valerian Nights, not because the flavors are the same, but as a sweet, desserty chamomile blend. And I loved me some Valerian Nights back in my pre-hiatus days.
Preparation
For about the last year and until I joined Steepster a couple weeks ago, I’ve been on a tea hiatus. I took my tea supply down to almost nothing — by which I mean, I had one black tea, one oolong, and a couple of herbals in my cupboard … and that’s all. My goal was always to come back to tea-drinking but to be more intentional about it and enjoy it more by starting with a clean slate.
Well, the slate is clean! Now comes the fun part! I call it “Operation Build My Cupboard”: order a couple samplers from a given supplier, sip my way through them, and pick the best few to reorder. The goal is to create a collection of teas that’s limited to the ones that I most enjoy. I’ve started with Adagio because their samplers are single-serving and affordable. Forty-three samples came in the mail today. I’ll let myself reorder a maximum of five, the best of the bunch. Wish me luck!
Okay, so here’s the first note: Berry Blast. (Terrible name! It sounds like a sports drink.) This tea smells impressive while steeping. It’s jammy and sweet, but with a slight tang in the background: it smells like when you’re making a blueberry pie and you’re cooking down the filling and you’ve just added the lemon juice. Mouth-watering!
The flavor is a little different and, unfortunately, not quite as satisfying. The tartness overpowers the berry flavors, which are more on the order of a diluted juice than a thick jam. Of the berry flavor that does come through, I taste more blackberry than blueberry, which surprises me given that there were so many blueberries in my one-teaspoon sample! I was hoping the flavors might balance out as the cup cooled, but they didn’t. The hibiscus just became more pronounced.
I enjoyed this cup, but I wasn’t in love with it. Probably not a contender for re-ordering. On to the next cup!
Preparation
Verdant Tea has a nice sampler for the cost of shipping I believe, and I think you pay only $5 and get five teas. Teavivre used to have a similar deal and they asked you to put it your blog info to get five teas for a low shipping cost. Most people just put in steepster and they username here. I am sure there are more and lots of people to help as enablers.
Also, Harney and Sons offers some of their teas in sample sizes and they are usually $4 a pouch. Shipping is always free with Harney, no matter the order size.
Thanks for the suggestions! I was aware of the Harney & Sons samples, although their selection of sample sizes seems very limited right now. But I’ll check out Verdant Tea and Teavivre!
Sipdown! (18 | 333)
To me, this one doesn’t really taste like pumpkin spice. Mostly I get strong candy cinnamon paired with clove, and the combination reminds me of the way Hobby Lobby stores smell in the fall and winter LOL.
It’s certainly not bad, but I don’t see how there’s anything pumpkin spice about it. It’s more of a hot cinnamon spice sort of tea IMO.
Flavors: Artificial, Candy, Cinnamon, Clove, Smooth, Sweet
Preparation
Have you seen Harney’s new Haunting in Venice tea? I am tempted but the ginger might be too much for me. I don’t usually go for much pumpkin spice but that one does sound a little tempting.
This sample has been hanging around for over two years, possibly longer.
Several things are happening as I work on this sipdown challenge in earnest. My tea storage areas look neater, teas in pouches are being repackaged into tins as tins get emptied, and my box of samples and small amounts is not a rip roaring mess anymore. I decided today was a good day to finally relieve that box of one more sample, even though it isn’t in cupboard and therefore doesn’t count as a sipdown.
Because it was individually wrapped I got out a mug thinking I was doing a sachet, but remembered right before tearing it open (had to get scissors actually) that a lot of these were loose leaf, and this one was, too. Pulled out a steeper and made it for my lunch cuppa.
Considering the age, this has held up extremely well. I am not a bergamot lover with the exception of a few really well-loved blends, but this was pretty decent. I could still taste plenty of bergamot but it didn’t smack me in the face, and the green base still had presence. A few bits of broken leaf made it past the steeper so the last sip got tossed but overall it wasn’t terribly bitter and had enough flavor to pair well with food. If I were just sipping for pleasure with nothing to eat, I think I would prefer something like Anastasia White to satisfy any bergamot with light tea craving.
Another single serve sample.
I don’t get this one. Why add all these other spices and fruit when you’re going to add candy cinnamon flavoring? Unsurprisingly, it mostly just tastes like fake cinnamon. Oh, and for some reason there’s also almond flavoring? So it ends up tasting like fake cinnamon and marzipan?
Honestly unsure what they were going for here. There’s a lot of mention of tropical fruit, but I don’t taste any of it. Can’t really even tell it’s a green maté base with how strong the flavoring is. I think this is a knockoff of a Teavana tea, but I’ve never had that tea so doesn’t give much context for me ha ha.
Flavors: Amaretto, Artificial, Candy, Cinnamon, Marzipan, Sweet
Preparation
Whenever I open a tea (sample, in this case) for the first time and see a mix of blonde and brunette leaves, whether they be twisted, straight, or curled (also in this case) it immediately makes me smile because those are the leaves that most often yield my favorite tea profile in the whole world—wheat bread and chocolate.
Yunnans are often noted to have a little pepper in the mix, too—if there was in Adagio’s take on Yunnan, I didn’t notice it. Didn’t mar my morning cuppa at all. Based on the age of the reviews I’m seeing, this has been one of Adagio’s consistently quality offerings for years.
Free single-serve sample from my order.
Honestly, not a ton to say about this one. It mostly tastes like chocolate flavoring, of which I am not a fan. I do get just a little bit of the strawberry, but it’s predominantly a chocolate black tea. Cream? Not really.
This was a bad example, but I would like to try the rest of Adagio’s zodiac teas and I wish they offered some kind of sampler… Maybe I’ll get lucky and get more cards for these teas.
Flavors: Alcohol, Artificial, Chocolate, Strawberry, Sweet
Preparation
Sipdown! (52 | 304)
Oddly, they recommend steeping this at 150° F? Normally I just treat toasted maté like a black tea, and I did the same here.
Not a favorite. Has a strong cinnamon candy flavor, but without the sweetness of a Hot Cinnamon Spice sort of tea. The “spice flavor” ends up reminding me of the smell of potpourri, or a Hobby Lobby in the fall. Can’t really even tell that it’s a maté under the pile of added flavoring.
Flavors: Artificial, Cinnamon, Clove, Perfume, Spices
Preparation
Sipdown! (51 | 303)
This seems like a knockoff of DT’s North African Mint? Not that it matters, I don’t think I’ve actually had that tea anyway.
It’s good, though to me there’s a bit too much mint. I can taste the mint and the cinnamon, and not really much in the way of hojicha. Oh, and ginger. I’m not sure I love spearmint and cinnamon together, it ends up being quite sweet? The earthy ginger does help to tone it down a bit.
Overall, not loving it as much as I thought I might, mostly due to the lack of toasty hojicha flavor.
Flavors: Cinnamon, Earthy, Ginger, Mint, Smooth, Spearmint, Sweet