“By itself, this makes a caramel-honey tea that is quite sweet. I don’t like it alone, as it is a little too sweet for me, and has a slightly odd aftertaste, but it is good in quite a few blends.” Read full tasting note
The carob is a tree in the same plant family as beans and peas. Its pods have been used for food for as long as 5,000 years. Carob pods were thought to be the “locust beans” consumed by John the Baptist, hence the name St John’s Bread. The Greeks referred to them as the “Egyptian fig” as the tree was first raised in Egypt and Western Asia. It has since adapted to cultivation in the semitropical reaches of the United States, Australia, Latin America and the Mediterranean. The Egyptians used the carob seeds as an adhesive binding during the mummification process. Made popular as a substitute for chocolate, carob powder was once deemed essential to the opera, for saving the voices of performance-weary sopranos. The seeds were also used by the Greeks and Romans as a unit of weight measurement for gold. It has been hypothesized that this is where the term carat is derived from.
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