La Taïga Sauvage

Tea type
Herbal Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Blueberry, Earthy, Evergreen, Fir, Herbaceous, Pine, Resin, Sage, Sap, Smooth, Sweet, Syrupy, Forest Floor, Grass, Woody
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Caffeine Free
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by derk
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 5 min, 45 sec 16 oz / 482 ml

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4 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This is a complex and lovely tea. It tastes like a forest, but not just fir, all the things that could be found in a boreal forest. There’s a natural sweetness that is really amazing, a definite...” Read full tasting note
  • “ashmanra’s Sipdown Challenge – “A tea with more than 5 ingredients” When I saw this prompt, I immediately started thinking about which tea from my cupboard would possibly have the most ingredients....” Read full tasting note
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  • “Quite the list of ingredients, all harvested from Québec. A little thin but sweet, fruity and woody with a strong note of fir that evokes a feeling of near-winter, inhaling frigid, moist air...” Read full tasting note

From Camellia Sinensis

Harvested in the heart of our beautiful forests, the plants composing this herbal tea will sharpen your taste buds while also acting as a flu breaker, an anti-inflammatory medicine and a powerful release for the respiratory tract.

The delicious bluish-colored resinous liquor is energized by bitter sweet flavors alongside strong woody and vegetable aromas. Fine tasters will surely detect peppery and earthy accents in this mixture.

Infuse and re-infuse with pleasure to fully enjoy its generosity!

Ingredients: fir bud, Labrador tea, wild blueberry, yarrow shoot, spruce shoot, chaga, juniper berry, balsam fir, bearded willow. (Abies balsamea, Rhododendron groenlandicum, Vaccinium angustifolium, Achillea millefolium L., Picea, Inonotus obliquus, Juniperus, Myrica gale, Usnea barbata)

This herbal tea is offered in our new line of compostable bags. You can then put them straight in the compost bin collected by your municipality.

About Camellia Sinensis View company

Company description not available.

4 Tasting Notes

1374 tasting notes

This is a complex and lovely tea. It tastes like a forest, but not just fir, all the things that could be found in a boreal forest. There’s a natural sweetness that is really amazing, a definite taste of blueberry and the fir is very much present. The other ingredients serve to add layers and depth to the cup overall. I might pick up a bag of this one in my next CS order. Thanks for sharing Cameron!

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 6 min, 0 sec

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88
4161 tasting notes

ashmanra’s Sipdown Challenge – “A tea with more than 5 ingredients”

When I saw this prompt, I immediately started thinking about which tea from my cupboard would possibly have the most ingredients. I didn’t actually go through and check them all, because I’m too lazy for that. But I settled on this tisane, which has 9 ingredients (and which I hadn’t yet tried).

Now I love woodsy teas, so of course this evergreen concoction is right up my alley. This has two types of fir, as well as spruce AND juniper. Plus Labrador tea, which apparently also has a piney flavor. I was a bit afraid it would be like licking a pine tree, but actually it’s quite lovely.

The main flavor is definitely those resinous evergreen notes, and I do taste a variety of them – some more sappy, others leaning a bit toward sage, but also with some fresh and sweet nuances. And then that sweet blueberry comes in and really smooths the edges of the whole thing, while also adding a subtle syrupy base note.

Lovely, and a perfect companion for contemplation when winter comes around.

Flavors: Blueberry, Earthy, Evergreen, Fir, Herbaceous, Pine, Resin, Sage, Sap, Smooth, Sweet, Syrupy

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 5 min, 0 sec 4 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML
Martin Bednář

What’s wrong on licking a pine tree?

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1610 tasting notes

Quite the list of ingredients, all harvested from Québec. A little thin but sweet, fruity and woody with a strong note of fir that evokes a feeling of near-winter, inhaling frigid, moist air through my nostrils and catching the clean, cool scents of a northern Canadian landscape. Or for those unacquainted, I’d say it’s like a Christmas tree in a cup. A hint of wild blueberry and a tangy-sweet quality. Brewed for the recommended 7 minutes, there is a drying catch on the swallow but it tastes so cool and comforting I don’t care. A long-lingering resinous sweetness follows.

Directions call for 2tsp/250mL; I opted for something like 5 teaspoons for half my glass teapot, so 500ish mL. The mélange of ingredients with differing shapes and sizes doesn’t make it easy to get a varied distribution, so I did do some hand-picking of the larger ingredients instead of incorporating them into my teaspoon measurements.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 7 min, 0 sec 5 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML
gmathis

This sounds a lot like the piney-foresty blend I picked up at our favorite little TeaMaze shop. The “tree” vibe is unusual but refreshing!

Mastress Alita

I love pine/juniper flavors! I bet I’d dig this.

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