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After months of being curious I decided to try out Sakura Co – which is a monthly subscription snack box service with different Japanese sweets. This month was all cherry blossom themed, and it’s been super cool tasting through the box.

This tea was included, and I was excited to try it out. Much to my surprise when I opened the packaging, it wasn’t dry but was instead soaked in some type of liquid. I wrongly assumed sugar syrup of some kind when, in fact, I think it was a saline solution to preserve the flowers. They were, after all, just pure cherry blossoms – and just so beautiful when steeped. One of the most stunning flower teas I’ve ever seen. Subtle pale pink, ethereal, and just breath taking.

The tea tasted like trash, though. Not literally – but it just wasn’t good. Very, very salty and perfume-y to near gag worthy level. Even when a tea is bad I usually try to finish it to not be wasteful and for education’s sake – but I couldn’t make it through this one.

Kelmishka

Yikes! What a shame. All flash, no substance.

Mastress Alita

I love sakura, but hate the salt/saline notes that many sakura teas have from being salt-preserved. I have to find ones that don’t use the salt preserve or use sugar instead. I have made very good sakura-flavored white rice using the “salty” sakura blossoms, though.

Cameron B.

How weird, since it’s called “sweet sakura tea” I would assume they were coated in sugar.

Sakura Sushi

FYI, the company that makes this tea also has a Sweet Sakura Black Tea which is so much better – very enjoyable. I found it at Mitsuwa market, so maybe if there is a Japanese grocery near you, you may be able to find it. Just the Sakura flower “tea” is usually too subtle/floral/weird tasting for me as well.

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Comments

Kelmishka

Yikes! What a shame. All flash, no substance.

Mastress Alita

I love sakura, but hate the salt/saline notes that many sakura teas have from being salt-preserved. I have to find ones that don’t use the salt preserve or use sugar instead. I have made very good sakura-flavored white rice using the “salty” sakura blossoms, though.

Cameron B.

How weird, since it’s called “sweet sakura tea” I would assume they were coated in sugar.

Sakura Sushi

FYI, the company that makes this tea also has a Sweet Sakura Black Tea which is so much better – very enjoyable. I found it at Mitsuwa market, so maybe if there is a Japanese grocery near you, you may be able to find it. Just the Sakura flower “tea” is usually too subtle/floral/weird tasting for me as well.

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Bio

Hello! My name is Kelly, though many people in the tea community call me Ros or Roswell.

I am a mid-twenties tea addict, blogger, and all around nerd. I grew up in the Prairies, but a few years ago I relocated to Quebec to pursue a career with DAVIDsTEA in the tea industry! I’m still working on getting my French language skills down…

My first introduction to tea, in any form outside of instant and bottled iced tea, was about seven years ago when I happened to stumble upon DAVIDsTEA while looking for a birthday present for a friend! I tried their Birthday Cake rooibos blend, and I’ve been hooked on tea ever since! In those seven years; I was introduced to the online tea community, expanded my interest in flavoured teas to include a deep love and appreciation for straight teas and traditional brewing methods, got a tea themed tattoo, started reviewing teas, amassed a sizable tea and teaware collection, became a TAC certified Tea Sommelier, & even came full circle by beginning a career in the tea industry with DAVIDsTEA!

I consider myself a Jack of all Teas, and strive to have a knowledge and appreciation of all tea types, formats, and styles of drinking. I don’t like to feel boxed in to just being a “flavoured tea” or “straight tea” drinker – my expectations may vary depending on the type of tea or how it’s been processed/prepared but if it’s good tea, it’s good tea no matter how it’s been made!

You name it, I probably drink it- and I’ll absolutely try anything at least once.

My default method of preparation is hot, Western style, and straight – but I’m not opposed to additions if I’m in the right mood. If I ever add something to a tea or use a different method of preparation I will ALWAYS call it out in the tasting note though.

I like to listen to music when drinking tea, especially when I’m brewing a large pot at a time or steeping Gongfu. Often I curate very intentional tea and music pairings, and sometimes I share them here in my tasting reviews. Music is something that I find can deeply affect the experience of having tea.

I’m also one half of the “tea and fandom” podcast GeekSteep where, weekly, we discuss newly explored fandoms over tea as well as try to figure out the perfect tea to pair with each fandom. You can find us on Spotify and Apple & Google podcasts.

Favourite flavour notes/ingredients: Pear, lychee, cranberry, cream, melon, pineapple, malt, roasty, petrichor, sweet potato, heady florals like rose, hazelnut or walnut, sesame, honey (in moderation), and very woody shou.

Least favourite flavour notes/ingredients:
Lemongrass, ginger, strongly spiced profiles (and most Chai in general), mushrooms, seaweed, chamomile, stevia, saltiness or anything that reminds me too much of meat that isn’t supposed to taste like meat…

Currently exploring/obsessed with: Sheng from Yiwu, Yancha (Qilan in particular), anything with a strong sweet potato note. Also, I need to try ALL the root beer teas! Searching for a really good caramel flavoured blend, ideally with a black tea base.

Please contact me at the instagram account listed below if you would like me to review your teas.

Currently I’m employed in the tea department of the DAVIDsTEA head office. While I’m still sharing my own personal thoughts on new & existing DAVIDsTEA blends, I am no longer numerically rating them due to the obvious conflict of interest. Any comments expressed are a reflection of my own thoughts and opinions, and do not reflect the thoughts and opinions of the company. Any DAVIDsTEA blends you currently see with a numeric score were reviewed prior to my being hired there and have not been adjusted since becoming a DAVIDsTEA employee.

Location

Montreal, QC, CA

Website

https://www.instagram.com/ros...

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