Saturday, December 29, 2012
Tazo Passion (Hibiscus tea with tropical flavors)
Well, I just reviewed 2 Tazo teas, one bad and one good. Let's see what the third one brings us.
Outsides: This one is another herbal tea with a crapton of ingredients: hibiscus, tropical flavor (what the hell is this supposed to mean, Tazo?), citric acid and licorice (not again!), orange peel, cinnamon, rosehips, lemongrass and fruit juice extract for color. Again, this is a nice,individually-wrapped foil sachet and the teabag is standard. I brewed this in boiling water for 5 minutes. The color is very purple and it smells a bit sweeter and more floral with a hint of cinnamon.
Insides: First off, I don't see why Tazo thought the citric acid was necessary because the hibiscus already adds a bit of a sour kick to it. If anything, I feel as though it hinders the flavor because you have this nice cinnimon and orange flavor and the tropical note of hibiscus, but drinking it, it's a little too sour. I will say that i feel the licorice complements the sweet spices while not being in anyone's face.
Overall: It's ok. It needs improvement.
My Rating: Try it (but only if you can get it for cheap/free)
Tazo is everywhere. It's at Starbucks, in grocery stores, big box stores, drugstores and pretty much anywhere that sells coffee or tea. Therefore, Ima be lazy and not put a website.
Tazo Wild Sweet Orange (Herbal Tea with lemongrass, orange and a lot of other stuff)
You know, maybe I was wrong about Tazo. Maybe they aren't so bad after all. I mean, I now like 2 teas of theirs, although I still think that they are overpriced as all hell. And now I'm going to try Wild Sweet Orange, which sounds fruity but pleasant.
Outsides: This tea has a laundry list of ingredients; lemongrass, blackberry leaves, citric acid (first thing that should be noted), rose hips, spearmint leaves, color (tumeric, riboflavin), orange peel, hibiscus flowers, natural flavors, rose petals, orange essence, ginger root, licorice root and licorice extract. It's in a nice foil wrapped packet and is your standard tea bag. I brewed this at boiling for three minutes before i tasted it (the second thing you should take note of since herbals should steep for 5 minutes). The tea is a brighter orange and smells like oranges.
Insides: I don't know if I can properly put my feelings on this tea into words, but I'll try. OHMYGOD THIS IS F***ING TERRIBLE! It's sour, and I like sour but this is undrinkable sour. The licorice makes the texture of this drink seem very thick so it's pretty much a thick, sour mess. It's just terrible and I don't understand how Tazo can call this SWEET wild orange. Maybe the licorice is supposed to act as the sweetener but then it should be the third ingredient instead of friggin' CITRIC ACID! Also, why do we have all these ingredients if you're going to bombard your drink with sour and licorice. This is bad and I honestly can't imagine someone liking it without copious amounts of sugar and bad taste.
Overall: No, just no. Tazo, my lack of faith in you is restored.
My Rating: Stay AWAY! It's not even worth stealing.
Tazo is everywhere. I often get my Tazo teas from the hospital cafeteria because it's "free" there.
Labels:
Herbal Tea,
lemongrass,
licorice,
orange,
review,
Stay Away,
Tazo
Tazo Refresh Tea (herbal mint tea with Tarragon)
As you may know, I'm not the biggest fan of Tazo. I find that their tea seriously lacks in flavor or is just god-awful. There are exceptions, such as their whole leaf teas, but Tazo as a company has just not impressed me. That pessimistic thought aside, I was cleaning my backpack today, which is shocking for me, when I found this tucked in the same compartment as I put my make-up that I never wear. My first thought was "Oh, that sounds tasty" and I needed a drink, so I fired up the Keurig and decided to give it a go.
Outsides: I kinda ripped the label before I could read all of the ingredients, but it looks like there's only peppermint, spearmint and tarragon. The sachet is nice and individually foil-wrapped, and is your standard tea bag. I just stuck the bag in 8 oz of boiling water and honestly don't care about the time because it is an herbal. It's a bit darker than your standard herbal tea and smells extremely strong for something that has been in my bag for 2 months.
Insides: Well color me impressed, this is some potent mint tea. It has that hint of sweetness that most mint teas do and the tarragon is only evident in the beginning, but the mix of peppermint and spearmint really brings a lot of good minty flavor to this. Is it revolutionary? Not really since most mint teas taste like the same thing, but this one kicks it up a notch in terms of intensity.
Overall: I actually recommend this if you want mint tea. You could probably buy mint leaves cheaper, but this is a nice mix and would probably do wonders for a stomachache.
My Rating: Buy it!
Tazo is everywhere. Starbucks, grocery stores, department stores, everywhere.
Friday, December 28, 2012
Prestogeorge Herbal Red Pomegranate
I need to review more teas from Prestogeorge, but since I have about 20 teas from Zen Tea and 10 teas from Prestogeorge, Zen Tea has won priority (although, it's also because I just bought higher quality tea from Zen Tea and it's something I really need to do at Prestogeorge). I'm not the biggest fan of Rooibos since to me, it's not complex enough on it's own. Pomegranate is another story and I will gladly consume anything that reminds me of that fruit, plus the sweet and tangy taste with a hint of floral should do wonders for Rooibos.
Outsides: What's unique about this tea is that it's a blend of green and red rooibos, which I rarely see together. It also contains safflowers, rosehips and, of course, pomegranate. I brewed a teaspoon and a half of this at almost boiling for 5+ minutes. The color is lighter than most rooibos teas I've tried but still that rusty orange. It smells fantastic, juicy, sweet and tart.
Insides: The rooibos actually serves as a nice base for all of the other flavors and doesn't hinder the wonderful pomegranate smell and flavor. This smells a lot stronger than it tastes, but there is a hint of natural sweetness and a little needed tartness from the pomegranate. There's also a slight floral flavor but it's more of a complement to the fruit than a flavor on its own. I think this would go great with sugar and would make a nice iced tea.
Overall: I've decided to change my thoughts on rooibos to not liking it unless it has some stronger flavor added to it. This is a very nice blend and worth the extra dollar or so I spent on it compaired to the other rooiboses.
My Rating: Buy it!
Prestogeorge is my local tea shop in Pittsburgh. They deliver to other parts, but their shipping is expensive so I'd just look elsewhere for other tea.
Labels:
buy,
green rooibos,
Herbal Tea,
pomegranate,
prestogeorge,
red tea,
review,
rooibos.,
tea
Zen Tea Ceylon Ratnaupra
Outsides: This Ceylon Ratnaurpa is just ceylon tea and nothing else. I brewed a teaspoon of it at near boiling water for 3 minutes and I'd recommend tasting it after 3 minutes to see if you like it and let it steep a few seconds longer if you want a stronger flavor. The color is kind of a medium reddish brown and it smells very clean and a bit spicy with a note of breakfast tea.
Insides: First off, this tea is going to be a bit more bitter than other types. That's just the nature of it and I think the term used for this is a brisk taste. This has a bit of a bready malty taste to it which reminds me a bit of wheat beer. The body is less than the Darjeeling but still very full. This has a nice aftertaste as well, a bit malty and a bit floral but actually sweet compared to the overall bitterness of the tea.
Overall: It's good, but I'm glad I did this experiment because I found out that Ceylon is not my favorite black tea. I still recommend getting a sample of something like this just to find out how much you like Ceylon versus other tea.
My Rating: Try it!
Zen Tea is a Canadian Tea retailer that specializes in mid to high quality tea.
Thursday, December 27, 2012
Zen Tea Pu-erh Vanilla Mint
I kinda feel like I'm cheating a bit because I haven't really tried good Pu-erh yet (I have another Zen Tea sample sitting in my tea storage), but pu-erh is another tea that you're supposed to drink in multiple infusions and I just don't feel like doing that right now. I also feel as though this is a great tea for around the holidays since it's a sweet peppermint and all.
Outsides: First off, this one blatantly states that it's organic and fair-trade so it gives me a warm and fuzzy feeling for supporting a good tea cause. It contains pu-erh, peppermint, cinnamon (which seems almost contradictory to me), vanilla and the bane of my existence, licorice. One annoying thing that Zen Tea did was not include how much of this you're supposed to put per cup, so I'm just going to assume that it's a generous teaspoon per 8 oz of boiling water. This tea is DARK but smells fantastic, like candy canes and holiday cookies all rolled up into one.
Inside: I know that Pu-erh is different than black tea but I'm going to revoke Adagio's Candy Cane Tea's honor of being the best black tea because this is fantastic. Pu-erh doesn't seem to be as bitter as black tea and the mint and vanilla flavors come through so nicely. The licorice is barely noticeable and is actually done right by having it act as a slight sweetener. I'm going to include a picture of when I add creamer to it because the milk tea has this slight reddish tone to it which I think is very pretty. Oh, and this is amazing with creamer. It's like you're having milk and cookies with a candycane in there.
| Milk Tea Goodness |
Overall: I felt like I took a risk getting the 50 gram pouch of this but I'm glad I followed my instincts.
My Rating: Buy it!
Zen Tea is a Canadian tea retailer specializing in mid to high quality tea.
Zen Tea Tie Guan Yin, ofren called Monkey-Picked Oolong
Here I am with yet another Zen Tea purchase. Tie Guan Yin is a common type of Oolong and what makes this one interesting is that you are supposed to do multiple infusions using this. There are lots of different types of tea that can be used for multiple infusions but they work best with Oolongs and not the terrible ones.
Outside: The tea looks like little rolled leaves. I brewed the tea at a 80 degrees Celsius (which might be a bit too low for this) and varied the steeping time depending on which infusion I used (you're supposed to add some time each infusion). The first infusion is light but it gets a little darker each infusion. The first one smells the most vegital while the second smells more floral and the third is a weaker floral.
Insides: I'm going to divide this into the infusions.
First infusion: The tea is very vegetative in taste with a floral note intertwining. Overall, this is a light tea with a medium body and a slightly sweet taste. It reminds me a bit of sencha except a bit heavier and with more of a floral scent.
Second infusion: This one is a LOT more floral and my favorite infusion. Less vegetative than the first infusion but this one has a nice floral scent (my first thought was jasmine, but the bag says jasmine and orchid). It has the same body as the first infusion but the tea is a little bit sweeter. This is really a nice introduction to multiple infusions. Also physically, the leaves are opening up so if you put a tiny bit of tea in the infuser, the tea has doubled or tripled in size.
Third infusion: This is the first noticeable drop in flavor, but still drinkable and actually good. The tea is light-bodied and there's still the floral scent, but no vegetative taste and yet the same amount of sweetness. I won't brew any more infusions of this because it lost about a third of the flavor.
Overall: I really like this. It's a light floral with a medium body and you definitely get your bang for your buck. Check it out.
My Rating: Buy it!
Zen Tea is a Canadian Tea retailer that sells mid to high quality tea.
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