TeaMaze
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This one is growing on me (just as the packet is getting low, of course). Two teaspoons yesterday in a 16-oz tumbler with milk set me up with almost-hot-chocolate-but-not-quite. The spent leaves still smelled good this morning, so I added a little muscle with a spoonful of my beloved PG Tips and made myself builders’ tea with a Hershey-bar-sort-of foundation.
My general philosophy regarding chocolate tea is “when I want to drink chocolate, I want a packet of Swiss Miss with a scoop of marshmallow cream. Or a whole slab of fudge.” Hard to find a tea that replicates that.
However, this isn’t bad. The website description of “not-too-sweet-chocolate” is accurate. Chocolate hints with a little kick from the coriander. Plays nicely with milk.
I can’t agree more about the chocolate flavors! It’s hard for me to even register a tea as tasting like chocolate sometimes because I always want/expect my cocoa to include sugar or at least cream
My husband grabbed a “Hot Fudge” variety from the same vendor when we were at their store; it has some hazelnut and brittle pieces in the mix. I’ll be interested to compare.
Rarely do I say anything is too sweet for me and normally this one is a very nice almond cookie-esque dessert tea, but it’s a little much first thing in the a.m. But I woke up whimsical and went halvesies with some Mr. Shepherd’s Blend (English breakfast). It toned down the pastry aspect a little and was just right.
Gloomy outside, tree is up and adding a little cheer to Shabby House on Turkey Creek, our new neighbors have a twelve-foot inflatable snowman up and blowing in the breeze, I bruised my hand playing “Santa, Cookie, Elf, Candy, Snowman” with my Sunday kids, and all of that is making me feel prematurely marshmallowy—it’s not even December yet—so what better to accentuate the mood than my favorite cookie-ish tea?
French Macaron has been a favorite ever since we started patronizing TeaMaze, but the more I drink it, the more I think it could have just as been easily titled “Almond Sugar Cookie.” TeaMaze has nailed the cookie element and like the real thing, it’s better with a little milk. Imagine Celestial Seasonings Sugar Cookie Sleigh Ride on steroids with frosting.
As to the card game, it’s a holiday version of “Taco, Cat, Goat, Cheese, Pizza,” a silly, souped up version of slapjack. Just perfect for a bunch of 11-year-olds, or grown-ups that occasionally act that age. Recommended.
None of our local stores are carrying holiday assortments of anything—I’m trying to hunt down Twinings Winter Spice w/out having to order online; no luck.
The hand injury came from the special “Drum” card … I pa-rum-pum-pum’d the edge of the table too hard, and when your hands are, um, attached to an old lady, you’ll do a little damage to your knuckles. My husband says if I play with the kids again, I have to wear work gloves.
No World Markets near us—it’s a required stop when we go see mom-in-law near Wichita, but we don’t go often.
How was your day? I played with kiddos (we mock-conducted part of Handel’s Messiah and played ring toss with loops of tinsel) and made my mom’s apple cake recipe for a work luncheon tomorrow. Only one small peeling injury. I intend to tie a ribbon around my sore thumb and milk it for sympathy.
While the cake baked, I let Rod Stewart sing sweet Christmas carols to me and enjoyed a second steep of one of my favorite TeaMaze goodies. The first steep is almondy, pastry perfection; second needs a little help, so I helped it with a fistful of tiny marshmallows.
Come on down and meet my fifth and sixth grade Sunday grandchildren! They’re a mess, but a fun mess. Next week is Tea and Cocoa Sunday—has turned into a Sunday before Christmas tradition. Small supply of lapsang on hand to dare the boys with :)
(Tea review coming…travelogue first.)
Back in the 80’s, Precious Moments was a thing … little doe-eyed, childlike characters on posters and figurines. The artist, Sam Butcher, created a Sistine-Chapel-ish attraction in a remote rural area that in its heyday, was a tour bus mecca for collectors. It’s still open, on a much smaller scale, and a ten-minute drive from my front door.
There’s an Italian restaurant on the grounds that used to be the Precious Moments Convention Center—Chef Aleks is Albanian and puts a very non-Olive-Garden touch on his specialties. I could just order a cup of his chicken marsala sauce and drink it like soup.
Anyway, we trekked that direction for Sunday lunch and I came home full of carbonara and chilled to the bone because it’s a bit of a hike from the parking lot. (Crazy weather—snow Wednesday, 55 F yesterday a.m., tornado warnings in the evening, mid-30’s with wind like daggers today).
So, too full to eat dessert, I drank it. Now the tea. I have reviewed this a couple of times, and my experience continues to be good. Almond-y teas tend to be a little finicky for me, but so far, this one hasn’t been a bit bitter, even with inattentive steeping. It it is creamy and you know that moment when you’ve held a delicious almond sugar cookie in your mouth and it reaches the melting point? Yeah. That’s this tea.
We’ve met and chatted with him—really nice guy. One of our little local news station’s fluff shows has done cooking features with him—love to watch him work.
Precious Moments were in every curio cabinet across Ohio when I was a kid. And they were even the theme of my first bible. Sounds like a great lunch to beat that wacky Midwestern weather. Chef Aleks is doing your community a great service providing delicious Italian food!
Did Precious Moments ever really go away? The pharmacy that I frequent (too frequent… why can’t the medicines all run out at the same time?) has a big ol’ display case of them still for sale…
They’re definitely still around…just past their heyday. When the Chapel (you gotta see it just once) was in its hot dog phase, they had two restaurants, a wedding venue, one of those schmaltzy “dancing water” shows and conferences/concerts nearly every weekend. It runs about 20% of that now, which makes the grounds actually pretty lovely for us to stroll when we need some “outdoors.”
The folks at TeaMaze have absolutely nailed the “cookie” flavor in this toothsome blend (that’s an adjective I use sparingly; I believe I also applied it to H&S Vanilla Comoro). I did not buy enough when I was at the shop, so I’m stretching each spoonful as much as possible. This morning I tossed in some generic bulk-shop Ceylon, a little milk, and it was nearly as good as new.
TeaMaze is a sweet little shop in Branson, MO (Martin, that’s tourist country—think “Las Vegas Strip” except with country music shows, outlet malls, and attractions like wax museums and a scale model of the Titanic.) Setting notwithstanding, it’s a little sole proprietorship in a novelty shopping center, and I am doing my best to keep her in business ;)
I broke into the good stuff from our Branson run for a morale boost. If you dessert tea fans like almond-y, cookie-y, marzipan flavors, this is absolutely spot on. Blissfully sweet to smell and taste, even straight up, even neglected and cold on my desk. Almond first, cream and sugar next. Can’t wait to try a proper cup with milk!
(Should you wish to research further, it’s spelled macaroon on teamazeshop.com website.)
Thanks to gmathis for this sample and the lovely handmade card that came with it! Very fancy.
Been sitting on this for a couple weeks because I haven’t had the time to properly enjoy it, but it got cracked open today. The smell of the dry tea is delightful—strong and dark like European coffee with hints of bittersweet chocolate and Chinese black tea. Didn’t expect that to carry over to the actual taste, but it did! Sipping on this while I cleaned out all of my external aquarium filters made the whole process much more pleasant. Probably the best execution of a mocha tea that I’ve had so far.
Flavors: Cocoa, Coffee, Dark Bittersweet, Mocha, Smooth
Preparation
Since we can’t get our act together for a day trip to the Ozarks (although I am aching for some mountain air), last month, my thoughtful husband placed a birthday order to our favorite tea stop from that direction. This little Ceylon breakfast tea isn’t on my Teamaze “A” list, but it is still tasty. It has that smooth “just tea” profile with a nice little sugar sprinkle at the end of each sip. Better for spring afternooners than first thing in the morning in the dead of winter.
Sipdown. Though I did like this one for its natural sweetness and gentility, it was a little too gentle for morning wake-up call. I am bone tired this time of year and need kicking instead of nudging in the a.m.
Husband ordered some TeaMaze goodies this winter to surprise me, and chose this one as part of the package. It is a decently fine Ceylon tea with a little brown sugar sweetness if you steep it sufficiently long, but is not quite stout enough for my breakfast tea needs. Extra sweetness points because it was a thoughtful gift.
However, it underscores another wise principle my husband taught me: “Get what they’re known for.” Don’t get the salad at a hamburger place, don’t get meat loaf at the fish and chips establishment—they may serve it, but it isn’t their specialty. In my experience, the same applies to smaller tea emporiums (emporia?) - if they are known for their creative dessert blends, get those; if they are known for above-the-ceiling quality single-origin teas; get those. Teamaze has some of my favorite novelty blands and flavors-I’ll get those and acquire my plain leaves elsewhere.
Still can’t get over what a pretty tea this is dry—for some reason, the leaves remind me of long eyelashes. I added a little extra leaf to some spent ones in my steeping basket and let the whole thing go a little longer this morning; results: fruit and brown sugar. Really nice.
This isn’t currently appearing on the TeaMaze website, and that’s a shame because the leaves are long and lacy. You’d like the way it looks.
Though “Breakfast” is in the title, this really isn’t the brash and bold thing I require to get my eyes open. “Brunch” or “afternooner” would be a better time-of-day recommendation. The first sensation is on the back of the tongue: sweet—almost brown sugary, with a very subtle malt-and-cocoa sensation that tickles the tip of the tongue as you swallow.
With that said, this is a fine, elegant tea. Just be alert enough to appreciate it.
Ooh! Thanks for this one, gmathis. Had just enough to make a little pot of it before bed.
After a day of approximately 5 other pots of pure oolongs and blacks, this was a much-appreciated reprieve. It’s a calm, unfussy black base with a heavy helping of rich strawberry and cream flavors. Doesn’t even taste artificial, and I appreciate that they didn’t try to make it sweet. This was an excellent one to sip on while starting a new book. Think I’ll be getting an ounce or two of it for when I want a flavored black—my usual Lady Londonberry is good, but sometimes the lemon mixed in with that strawberry can be a bit much!
Flavors: Cream, Strawberry
Preparation
Double dippity day, and this one even pairs with a book currently in progress on Mount To-Be-Read: A Dublin Student Doctor by Patrick Taylor. This is my second time through the series and they’re just as enjoyable as reruns: think All Creatures Great and Small set in small town northern Ireland with people, not animals.
The tea…again, nothing new: strawberries with coconut to add a little creaminess. There’s supposed to be a little rum-mishness in there, too, but I’ve never really picked up on it. Still, another favorite!
This morning, the scent reminds me of a clear, sticky strawberry lip gloss that was in my stocking in fourth grade. Nothing chemically about the flavor, though; just strawberries and cream all the way.
Funny, this is a thematic tea, although I never intended it to be. Every review I’ve written for it refers to my Sunday kids. Today, too. This is my quiet rocking chair cup before I load up the goods for “Tea and Cocoa Day,” our Sunday-before-Christmas tradition. (And a good way to get rid of unwanted teabags ;) One of my sixth grade boys asked “Do you have any more of that bacon tea?” My husband thought it was so funny, he went out and bought an ounce of Lapsang Souchong for me to take him.
Sipdown, hopefully temporary. TeaMaze is open again and this one’s on the top of the list when we get there. It’s my current favorite no-fail strawberry and cream black tea. Needs no sugar or milk; all the goodness is thoughtfully provided for you.
The last note I wrote for this was six very long months ago—the last time I got to go on an “Impact Day” adventure with my fifth and sixth grade church kids. Appropriate that I have picked it back up to fortify me for my first Sunday back with them after a long dry spell. They’re my weekly joy break, and my tank was well past empty. Counting the minutes till I get some (properly sterilized and sanitized) air hugs.
You don’t know what you have until you miss it … normally at this time, I’d be in a room we’ve dubbed the Warehouse with 11-year-olds pecking at me like chickens, showing off their phones and dumb photos, telling me about their pets, and asking me if I’ll play a game with them. Our church staff has been fabulous—sending videos and video challenges to our kids; we’re getting ready to connect virtually in a few minutes; our kids’ pastor did several neighborhood drive-by’s, and I’m keeping a steady stream of snail mail headed their way. But, oh, how I am counting the days until they’re driving me nuts again!
However, virtual church has its benefits—like its proximity to a whole pot of this gentle strawberries-and-cream blend. The black tea base is really nothing but a base, the flavors are so pronounced. Authentic sweet strawberry pie flavor; doesn’t taste artificial at all.
It could be the sheer delight of putting my feet up in the sunshine after a high-intensity adventure with kids (more on that in a minute), but my first sip of this novel tea made me go “ah-h-h-h-h!” with eye-rolling pleasure. Sweet strawberries and cream, even without adding milk. Separately, I’m not getting the rum or coconut, but together, this is sweet, creamy, fruity magic. Flavor holds up reasonably for a second steep as well. I’m putting this on my “next trip” list in a larger quantity.
End of tea review. Adventure time:
Eleven kids, four adults, five breakfast casseroles, one coffee cake, 35 dirty dishes, three boxes of plastic gloves entirely used because “these are getting slimy,” one dead battery on the church van and an accidental triggering of the burglar alarm at the homeless shelter. My little team was on sausage-browning patrol. Your heart would grow three sizes like the grinch watching these kids doing grown-up sized acts of service. Mine’s about to bust.
Enjoying an absolutely delicious Sunday break, bathing in a sunbeam aimed directly on my rocking chair (although Tazo is glaring at me because he claims to be the rightful owner of any and all winter sunshine spots).
Close to hand is this nice, silky, buttery oolong from our new favorite shop in the Ozarks. Its fruit flavor and scent is not far from peach cobbler, and while I don’t generally choose oolongs first, I’m glad hubby talked me into bringing this home. Little pricey, so I hope it holds up well in subsequent steeps.
You would have laughed at my Sunday church kids—10 and 11 year olds. They asked me for another tea and cocoa day, and it was fun watching them paw through my chest of random bags and man the electric kettle like grown-ups. Shiloh loves Good Earth Sweet and Spicy with enough sugar to fill a hummingbird feeder; David insists he only likes “sweet tea,” and Jonathan, on a dare, tried a cup of Lapsang Souchong: “Hey, that’s not so bad!”
<3 I’m trying to figure out how to spread my love of tea to my many coworkers now that I’m on the Fun Committee (cheesy, but we have a former youth pastor running the circus). I was thinking about introducing several themed teabags each month and doing a once-monthly tea tasting with loose leaf. Aside — we’re having a chili cook-off next month; I’ve been busy this evening shelling bags full of heirloom beans I harvested from the garden today.
To anybody reading this, I’m open to suggestion for decent bagged teas that can be brewed with boiling water!
derk – some are on the way. Even that orange ones what I sent you last time. I think that one would be perfect for it :) but not chili like.
Ashmanra and gmathis: I am happy to see there are children who like teas, they will know it is not always bad. Like Lipton Ice teas. :D
I sold the Lapsang Souchong kid with “it tastes like bacon.” For office purposes—I’m finally getting some buddies on the bandwagon — good old Bigelow supermarket varieties are pretty reliable and predictable, no matter how you abuse them. (And inexpensive, so you don’t flinch seeing good tea thrown away.) Some of my non-teaist coworkers have recently fallen in love with Harney & Sons Hot Cinnamon Spice, also pretty cheaply and readily available.
Best wishes with that “fun committee” thing. Once in a while, that rears its ugly head here, but we manage to tamp it back down pretty quickly ;)
Thank you for the recommendations, gmathis. The Fun Committee seems well received here; there are no forced group activities. We basically just get fed :)
My only previous review mentioned that this tastes a little like H&S Hot Cinnamon Spice with a rooibos base…couldn’t find the whiskey part. Since I’m nearing the end of the pouch, I went nearly double on the leaf and left it more than six minutes (which I should’ve done previously, but never actually read the package). Doing so didn’t make a huge change, but it did intensify the clove part of the blend and created a pleasant little burn on the tip of the tongue—maybe that’s what was intended to emulate the whiskey. I’ve been so crabby all week, a burned tongue to help me keep my mouth shut wouldn’t be a bad idea ;)
Just when we laid in supplies for all things winter—fuzzy socks, plenty of cold-weather comfort food, Christmas-y tea…we got a string of 65F sunshiny days that will carry us well past Boxing Day. Mind you, I am not complaining! Just having to rearrange my sipping pattern a little.
Whatever the weather, we gave this one a try…husband loves TeaMaze’s Irish Whiskey flavored black tea and hoped this would be its spicy counterpart. Truthfully, I’m not getting any of the bourbon-y flavor at all, but the cinnamon-clove-orange trio goes well with a rooibos base. It resembles Harney’s Hot Cinnamon Spice, but less sweet, which is OK by me.