Carrefour
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I believe it is this one, although my foil bag doesn’t exactly say it is “5 fruits rouges”.
I blame the age for not being that great… It is just generic red fruits tea, rather on the sweet side. Notice mostly straw/rasp berries. The base non present.
Easydrinking though.
Flavors: Raspberry, Strawberry
Preparation
Decided to give this a try, since I have sent it to derk without trying it before.
Oh well. I prepared it with almost boiling water as well and it was better than I have expected. Yeah, the base tea was okay, hay, maybe bit of grass – I agree with you derk! It wasn’t water or just plain wrong or bad.
And it was really full of mint. I don’t know what are differences between spearmint, peppermint, et cetera mint. I am not able to find difference. But yeah, it was refreshing cuppa even with brewed with tea bag kept in mug all the time. Nice surprise for me!
Flavors: Grass, Hay, Mint
Preparation
Innocuous teabag with a sweet, mentholated dose of mellow spearmint that blends well with whatever base green tea is used. Generic grassy/hay taste but with a good body. Aroma is all spearmint. Brewed surprisingly well with water off-boiling! Good refresher during a stressful work day but definitely not the caffeine punch I needed following a sleepless night. Merci, Martin.
Preparation
this was one from missB to be fair a number have been, but since there are some that i picked up and some that others gave me, i’m issuing a general thank you! to everyone who has shared teabags with me as i go through some today heh. I appreciate all the fun trials from people.
i enjoyed this one – very much that generic sort of red fruit tea, but it was tasty. Maybe spring/summer is a better time for me to drink those combinations. this was refreshing and if i’d had more tea bags i might have tried it as a cold brew because i think with a little sweetness this would make an excellent iced beverage!
I recently picked this up in the grab cupboard of the communal kitchen. That’s an awesome cupboard! As close to a condiment Narnia as you can come.
I thought the tea would be green, but it’s black.
I also thought it would be vile, but, strangely, it’s not. It’s a very basic, not particularly artificial peach tea. The peach flavour is subtle and devoid of any frills.
I’m definitely quite pleased with it, in all its simplicity, and I’m going to keep the rest of the bags for traveling.
[Communal kitchen loot, Rome, winter 2013.]
Preparation
Sipdown, 140. Saying bye to my supermarket tea from China, still better than a lot of jasmine greens that you find in the States!
This one has been in the same paper bag that I bought it in over a year ago, but it aged fine. Jasminey, satisfying. Piles of loose tea in the Carrefour supermarket is probably the ting I miss most about China. :)
Preparation
The day has come… my last day in Beijing! I guess that’s not totally true since I will have an afternoon here after I return from Mongolia and before I leave for the States, but tomorrow morning, very early, I am leaving for Ulaanbaatar for about a week. I kind of doubt my hostel room will have a hot water pot like my hotel here did, so I don’t know how much tea I will be drinking in the next week. So I may be very scarce around here for a little while! After my last bottle of milk tea at lunch, that is. :D
Oh, it’s morning again. It always seems to come too early no matter how early I go to bed. :P This morning I used the gaiwan and made like the people in the tea malls for tastings… that is, I did a number of short steeps but dumped all of them into one vessel. The result is definitely very tasty, and fairly similar to basically drinking each successive gaiwan steep. As such, even though I end up with a cup of tea that looks the same as “western” style steeping, the taste is definitely different. An interesting experiment, and one I am excited to try with other teas at home!
Preparation
At Red Blossom Tea one of the sales girls told me that’s how she makes her tea every morning, by dumping multiple gaiwan infusions into the same container. Still it seems kind of time consuming to me…
Today I am brewing this basically gong-fu style in a gaiwan. I’m not sure if people usually do that with jasmine teas, but that’s what I’m doing. My first use of a gaiwan, and hey I’m actually pretty good at it! I don’t even need an easy gaiwan like I thought I would.
Brewing this gongfu (high leaf:water ratio, short time) is really interesting, and it brings out other flavors that I haven’t tasted before. The jasmine is floral but… different in some ineffable way. I don’t know, but it is tasty. It’s also a little sweeter, a little fresher tasting. The first two steeps seemed pretty similar, but I also concentrating very much on the tasting, I just wanted some tea this afternoon. It is amazing how good this loose tea from the grocery store is… it makes me want to go pick up 50g of their high grade tieguanyin just to try it out!
Preparation
Today I tried to room-temp steep this by throwing some leaves into the bottle of water that I usually take with me to work. Let’s just say, it didn’t turn out well. Who knew a cold steep could be so bitter! I definitely need to go for far less leaves, I guess. I’ll try again next week.
But now I’m having this one hot again with dinner. It really is lovely, and oh so smooth. It’s just such a pleasant tea to drink, though I can’t see myself craving it and I think I would get bored of it, too, if it was the only thing I had. I guess I just crave more variety!
Preparation
Yes, craving variety makes sense! How many teas do you have at work? When I think of trying to get by on just a few teas, myself, I get kind of shaky….. ;)
Dumb question—when Steepsters refer to cold brew/cold steep, is it generally room temp as you’ve described above, or in the fridge?
At work in the states is where all of my tea is, so I have a ton! I don’t drink the same tea very often.
gmathis: most people (and usually me) call brewing in the fridge cold-brew, I just called this room temp brew cold brew since it wasn’t with hot water. I’m not sure if there is a big difference with room temp versus refrigerated water, though.
Carrefour! Gosh, I never even noticed they sold tea when I went there. I always went straight to the candy or cookie areas… not the best grocery shopper, I will admit.
Yesterday I finally bought some other tea. I had been resisting until I make it to the tea market, but I don’t know exactly when that will be and I am tired of drinking the same tea day in and day out. So I bought some loose tea at the Carrefour (mega grocery store). I don’t know what brand this is, if it’s even listed, and I don’t have the energy right now to try and figure it out. I am so stressed about things at work back home right now, but being 12 hours off means that right now it is the end of the day there even though it’s the beginning of my day… which means I get to stew about my problems for at least 12 hours before anything happens with them. Guh.
At least the tea is tasty. This is a jasmine tea that translates to something like “Dragon Strip” or something. The leaves are nice and long with a few bits of flowers here and there. I let the just-boiled water cool for 4 minutes in my kettle before I steeped it. The resulting tea is sweet and jasminey, with a kind of robust green tea backdrop. Definitely tasty, and I’m glad I have it around. Now if only it would relax me enough that I will actually be able to get work done today instead of worrying all day… :P
Preparation
Hey, you just got over being sick… stop worrying about stuff in a different country and start enjoying your AWESOME TEA VACATION that we’re all totally jealous of ;)
Haha thanks but this trip isn’t really a vacation, it’s a work trip (that I’m squeezing some tea into), so the worry stays. :)