Teabox
Edit CompanyPopular Teas from Teabox
See All 401 TeasRecent Tasting Notes
On opening this packet, I was really excited to be greeted by a fragrance that reminds me of my beloved Blue Mountain Twirl. Grape and malt. This is a bit less sweet and malty smelling than BMT, with an extra spice note, but it’s pretty close. That’s super exciting!
The flavour is very reflective of the smell of the dry leaf. Grapes, malt and spice. The comparison to BMT also holds true in the flavour.
All in all this is a fantastic Nilgiri, and a very passable substitute for BMT. I am pleased.
Flavors: Grapes, Malt, Spices
Preparation
Yesterday’s cup was so amazing, I was tempted to make another one, but I feel like I need to hoard this sample a bit, since I can’t justify another order right away. So I tried resteeping yesterday’s leaves, which I very rarely bother doing. Success! Only a very slight reduction in the intensity and complexity of the flavours. I drank this one with milk and sugar and it was awesome.
Sadly, I think these leaves are probably done – they’ve been steeped for nearly 20 minutes total already.
Flavors: Cinnamon, Creamy, Dark Chocolate, Herbs, Muscatel, Nutmeg, Spices, Sweet, Vanilla
Preparation
Oh my god. This tea!
Opening the bag, the smell is heavenly. This is one of the most rich, chocolately smelling things ever. Not just tea. Anything, ever. Have you ever had drinking chocolate that’s basically melted chocolate mixed with heavy cream, and it kind of coats your mouth and throat and is so rich you can only manage the tiniest sip at a time? That was my first impressions- a Mayan chocolate drinking chocolate with a hint of chillis.
Steeped this for 7 min, though only 1tsp for 8oz instead of the 2tsp for 180ml that they suggested.
The steeped tea smells incredibly rich, like the dry leaf. I’m almost bracing for disappointment in the sip, because it’s hard to imagine any tea living up to the promise of this smell.
Well, the sip isn’t as rich as the smell, but I think this is probably the richest chocolate tea I’ve ever had. What an amazing, interesting flavour. There’s thick dark chocolate notes, slightly sweet, slightly bitter, a really intense muscat Darjeeling flavour that incorporates the spiced, herbal notes typical to Darjeeling, and then some cinnamon and nutmeg supporting.
The mouthfeel is thick and smooth. There’s a strong mouth coating effect, but it’s the slightly thick, creamy, oily coating you get from letting good quality chocolate melt in your mouth. A touch of a powdery sensation that makes me think of cocoa powder. No astringency.
This tea is incredible. Totally unique and a really stand out chocolate tea. A fantastic variation on masala chai, and one I will definitely be restocking when I place another order.
I plan to try this with milk and sugar but it’s also just perfect on its own.
Flavors: Cinnamon, Cocoa, Creamy, Dark Chocolate, Muscatel, Nutmeg, Pepper, Smooth, Spices, Sweet, Thick
Preparation
Everyone needs to try this!
If you haven’t got a Teabox account yet, you can use my referral link and get $25 toward your first order. I also get a $25 coupon if you order something. http://fbuy.me/bsaIw
This cup is very interesting. The dominant note in both the dry leaf and steeped cup is fennel seed, with lemongrass and characteristic Darjeeling flavours in behind. Quite smooth and flavourful, this has a rather savoury quality to it, and is quite different from any other masala chai I’ve had.
The steeping directions recommended 2tsp per cup, but I used one and I’m not noticing any lack of flavour.
Flavors: Earth, Fennel Seed, Herbaceous, Lemongrass
Preparation
I feel like I’ve probably had chais with some Darjeeling in the blend, but this is really something else.
I’ve gotten back in the habit of drinking a lot of Assam and Yunnan black tea, so I wanted to take the day off from them and do a lighter black tea this morning. I bought 200 grams of this one, and I’m definitely happy with my purchase. I steeped it too long when I first tried it last week. Today, I limited the first steep to 2 minutes, then increased every subsequent steep by 1 minute. I had initially thought it was strong for a Darjeeling tea, but it was just because I steeped it too long. It’s nice and balanced…not weak, but kind of what you would expect from a Darjeeling. Limiting the steep time allowed me to catch the fruity flavor a little bit more, which was very enjoyable…good for sipping in the afternoon…not enough to get me going, but, I don’t want to depend on caffeine to get me going…at least not all the time. :P
My first Teabox order is heeeeeeere! I’m excited to get into the world of Darjeeling black teas because even though I’ve loved what I’ve tried previously, it’s been limited to 3 bagged Darjeeling teas. I think the complexity of this tea is a little too much for me to describe with my inexperienced palate, but I can say three things: 1) it has a bolder and stronger flavor than any Darjeeling black tea I’ve ever had, and 2) there’s not one hint of bitterness, and 3) it’s damn good. In fact, I’m on the second steep right now, and it’s outstanding…the flavor was a little too much on that first steep. They say to steep for 4-5 minutes, but I think I may limit it to 2-3 next time. Anyway, I bought a lot of this one, and quite a few samples of other Darjeelings, so I’m excited to try some new teas!! Thank you so much to Anlina (sorry, I don’t know how to tag yet, haha) for referring me to Teabox!
Glad you’re enjoying your order :) I usually find I enjoy Darjeelings steeped a little shorter and on the cooler end of their recommended temperature range.
Awesome, thanks! That explains why that second steep was so good! I’m so excited about all the new teas I have to try! I was able to get a couple from Butiki before they closed too! Did you get your $25 when I joined? I wasn’t sure how that part worked.
I did, thank you!
I was really tempted by the Butiki sale, but I managed to resist. A wonderful as everything sounded, I just need to get my cupboard down a bit before I place any more big orders. Also the dollar is terrible, which helped my resolve.
The leaf is really green and silver – if I didn’t know better I would have guessed this was a green or white tea, not a black. Smells faintly of wet earth and flowers.
Flavour is a touch of malt with spices and herbs, and a vegetal tang. Quite nice.
Flavors: Flowers, Herbs, Malt, Spices, Tangy, Vegetal, Wet Earth
Preparation
Dry leaf is small dark brown curls with some golden tips and lots of gold dust. Smells amazing – this is the kind of tea I’d buy just for the smell – chocolate, caramel, honey, booze.
Steeped leaf brown, pieces, smells more earthy, loamy.
Taste is rich, stewed fruits, malt, cocoa. A bit more bitter and astringent than I wanted. Thick, heavy body. Hint of floral on the back of the tongue.
A lovely, complex Assam. I need to try a shorter steep to see if I can get rid of some of the bitterness. Otherwise, maybe milk and sugar next time.
Flavors: Alcohol, Astringent, Bitter, Caramel, Chocolate, Cocoa, Earth, Honey, Loam, Malt, Stewed Fruits
Preparation
Dry leaf is your usual Darjeeling mix of small, twisted leaves ranging from black to pale green. There’s a light fruity smell, and that “black tea” smell.
Steeped, the leaf is medium brown pieces. Fragrance is tangy and spicy, less fruity that the dry leaf.
Soup is clear reddish brown, and fragrant. Notes of spice, tanginess, earth, a hint of muscatel but not much, and a bit of bitterness at the tail end of the sip. Finish is well spiced and fairly long.
Bit heavier body and weightier flavour than I’ve experienced with many Darjeelings. Not a bad breakfast tea.
Flavors: Bitter, Earth, Fruity, Muscatel, Spices, Tangy
Preparation
Both the smell and flavour are loaded with rich vanilla bean, the cinnamon taking a back seat and providing mostly a warming sweetness. The black tea is malty, and steeped for 4min at 96C was a bit astringent. There was less natural sweetness in this cup than I was hoping for, but with a touch of milk and sugar it was really good.
Definitely worth a try if you like vanilla, and a nice change from the chocolatey vanilla teas I’ve been enjoying lately.
Flavors: Astringent, Cinnamon, Creamy, Vanilla
Preparation
So, is this actually a chai? Or just a vanilla/cinnamon blend? I’ve been looking for a vanilla/cinnamon black tea but the price of this one is making me hesitate..
It’s just vanilla bean, cinnamon and black tea – nothing else. Teabox classifies that as a chai, but you may not. I’m not sure I would pay full price for it, though they’ll give you $25 on sign up if you’re referred (I also get $25 if you make a purchase), so that could offset the cost of it significantly. http://fbuy.me/bsaIw
I could also send you a couple of cups sample if you like. Probably would have to be in a few weeks when I’m done moving and travelling, but feel free to send me a reminder PM if you’d like me to :)
Oh my, this is awesome. It has all the spiced, muscatel, distinctive flavour of a Darjeeling, with a bit of that vegetal tang that you sometimes get with oolongs, and then there’s cardamom mingling so perfectly with this that I could almost forget that it’s been added and isn’t just a natural note in the tea, and then just a hint of cinnamon heat at the back of my throat.
Super smooth, not at all bitter. Medium body. Sipping it straight, no milk or sugar needed. I could drink this a lot.
Flavors: Cardamom, Cinnamon, Muscatel, Smooth, Spices, Tangy, Vegetal
Preparation
I’m working my way through more Teabox teas, and pulled this one out at random.
The steeping recommendations say 6 minutes. I usually steep my black teas for 3 minutes, 4 tops, so 6 just sounded excessive. But, Teabox has very specific steeping recs for each tea, and I have milk in my fridge, so I figured I’d give it a shot and follow their recs. Worst case scenario, I drown it in milk and sugar.
Well what do you know! Steeped for 6 minutes at 96C, this is smooth and only has a hint of pleasant bitterness! I am surprised. This is very nice. Fruity, with a touch of tartness, with malt. Fairly thick. A touch of cocoa on the finish.
I may need to start following the steeping recommendations on these packets more closely, and then experiment from there if I don’t like the results.
Though seriously, this is another tea where the liquor is described as “crystal lemon”. I do not think those words mean what the author thinks they mean. This cup is a deep mahogany colour. No stretch of the imagination could compare this to a lemon.
Flavors: Cocoa, Fruity, Malt, Tart
Preparation
haha…after I read your first ‘crystal lemon’ post, I’ve been looking around at liquids in my kitchen thinking, “what on earth would be considered ‘crystal lemon’?”… lol It does sound pretty, though, right?
(and now I want to insert the Inigo Montoya’ meme… ).
The tea sounds really delicious, though!
And…because I’m bored…
http://cdn.meme.am/instances/500x/58536746.jpg
Ahaha that’s fantastic! Now I want to watch the Princess Bride again, for the third time in like a month.
I drank this tea this morning, but even while I was drinking it, I was having a hard time describing it. It’s definitely a Darjeeling, spicy, fruity, tangy? But also unique. Quite light in colour and body. Between sips I kept forgetting what it tasted like, aside from “good”.
I really enjoyed this. The only downside is I was getting a touch of bitterness in the back of my mouth, sometimes noticeable and sometimes barely there. It wasn’t like tea bitterness, but reminded me of when I’ve taken mediation that messes up my tastebuds (except I haven’t recently.)
I’ll have to give this another spin and see if I can describe it better.
Preparation
Ooh, I’ve been looking for a nice loose leaf Darjeeling. Let me know how the second time around goes!
I literally have all the Darjeelings that Teabox stocks (or that they stocked in October 2014.) I’ll be doing tasting notes on them a bit at a time. If you like muscatel Darjeelings, this one was really good: http://steepster.com/teas/teabox/42861-darjeeling-premium-muscatel-blend-summer-black-tea
If you decide to order, here’s a referral link. If you register through there, I believe we both get a $25 credit in our accounts, which you can use on your first purchase. They’re also having a sale right now, 65% off some teas: http://fbuy.me/bsaIw
Sooooooo many Darjeelings to choose from, whoa! I’ll get that Premium Muscatel you mentioned. Would you recommend any other one to try? Thanks again!
I think I’ll start with the Beginners Collection and the Muscatel Collection to try out a bunch of samples, then I"ll order more of the teas I like! I’m excited! :)
Less sweet and fruity than my earlier Assam. Malt, with a hint of the toffee note mentioned on the package. Now that this cup has cooled a fair bit I’m really enjoying it. A bit of astringency, but not unpleasant. Pleasantly bitter.
Flavors: Bitter, Malt, Toffee
Preparation
Dry leaf is silvery grey, covered with downy hairs and very fluffy. Whole and broken leaf that hasn’t been twisted or rolled, lots of small leafsets of two leaves and a bud. Dry leaf has barely any smell, just a hint of fruitiness. I measured out 3g, which overflowed my 1oz tea cups.
Steeped in 85C water for 5min. Steeped leaf is yellow green and has less volume than when dry. Faint sweet fragrance.
Liquor is honey coloured, clear. Almost no fragrance, but delicate notes of honey, brown sugar and maybe summer squash – something almost fruity but without a lot of its own sweetness. Very mild, with a fairly long finish that’s slightly tangy and is reminiscent of fennel bulb.
Medium body, quite smooth. Better as it cools.
A very interesting tea. I wish for a little more flavour from it, but it’s still quite enjoyable.
Flavors: Brown Sugar, Fennel, Fruity, Honey, Sweet, Tangy, Zucchini
Preparation
An excellent Darjeeling. Notes of spice, pepper, muscatel, and then malt and hops on the finish. Distinctly Darjeeling, but none of the char notes I’ve picked up in many that I’ve tried.
Flavors: Hops, Malt, Muscatel, Peppercorn, Spices
Preparation
Woah, I cannot imagine steeping these Teabox Assams for anywhere near as long as is recommended in the directions. I steeped this for 3 minutes, and hot, it was extremely bitter. As the cup cooled a bit, the bitterness mellowed out and it became quite pleasantly malty. Only a hint of astringency.
Not an exceptional cup, but a good morning tea.
Flavors: Malt
Preparation
This is a fairly strong second flush black, with hints of cocao in the first brew. There is also a touch of sweetness in that brew. A very nice tea, but lacking somewhat in depth.
First infusion – 3 g. per 8 oz water, 90 deg., 1:30 min.
Second infusion – 3 g. per 8 oz. water, 90 deg., 7:00 min.
Third infusion – 3 g. per 8 oz. water, 90 deg., 10:00+ min.
Preparation
Another Glendale tea!
The dry leaf smells incredible. Lilac, peony, orange blossoms – it’s like walking through a garden in full bloom. There’s also a note of cool cucumber in there. The leaf is light brown, in small curls.
Steeped, the leaf unfurls into medium yellow green pieces. The floral fragrance sticks around, but is joined by a strong umami, which is an interesting combination.
The liquor is clear and the colour of honey, and smells very similar to kukicha – sweet, a bit buttery, notes of cooked vegetables and umami.
This tea has amazing flavour. Lightly spiced (pepper and something else), umami, sweet, muscatel, hints of floral, malt and green vegetables. Vegetal tangy on the finish. It reminds me of a combination of Japanese green and a Darjeeling.
There are so many different layers to this tea, but it doesn’t taste muddled – they all somehow compliment each other and work together. Very complex and unique.
Flavors: Butter, Cucumber, Floral, Malt, Muscatel, Orange Blossom, Peppercorn, Spices, Sweet, Umami, Vegetal
Preparation
I felt like having an Assam so I went and riffled through my pile of Teabox Assams. They mostly have very similar descriptions, but this one jumped out at me, because on the package it says, “produces a liquor with a crystal lemon like colour”, which sounded very intriguing and very different.
The dry leaf is small, dark and twisty, with a few tips. It smells like malt and baked bread. I steeped 1tsp in 93C water for 3 minutes, though the package recommends 5.
Well, unless “crystal lemon like colour” means something totally different to whomever wrote that description, I have no idea what they’re going on about. The liquor is a dark, reddish brown. Not quite coffee coloured, but closer to that than any lemon I’ve ever seen.
The liquor smells sweet and slightly fruity, like stewed prunes, with a hint of grain. The flavour is sweet and malty, with a touch of bitterness and very mild astringency. There’s not quite as much of a full mouth flavour as I was expecting, but I’m also hesitant to steep it longer and bring out more of the bitter and astringent notes. A bit of a fruity note at the tail of the sip, and then a finish that’s grain and makes me think of milk.
Toward the bottom half of my cup, as it cools, I’m also getting a hint of cardamom, but I’m going to chalk that up to imperfect cleaning of my steeping basket.
A pleasant but not exceptional Assam.
Flavors: Bitter, Bread, Fruity, Grain, Malt, Stewed Fruits, Sweet
Preparation
This is a pretty straightforward tea. Assam CTC with bits of cardamom pods mixed in. The CTC makes this very dense – my 10g sample package only had about 3tsp in it, and when I weighed out one teaspoon it came out to over 4g. It both smells and tastes of cardamom.
Steeped in 96C water for 4min, it was pretty strong and bitter – not really good straight, but delicious with milk and sugar, as I’d planned. The liquor was a very dark brown, almost coffee-like, and mellowed out to a creamy milk chocolate colour with milk.
An easy, straightforward cup of chai.
Flavors: Bitter, Cardamom
Preparation
OMG. I just, finally, finished logging all my Teabox teas in my cupboard. The teas I ordered during Black Friday. I’d been chipping away at the task for a while and I thought I was a good amount of the way through, and boy was I wrong. I added 76 teas to my cupboard today and yesterday. I’m actually a little embarrassed by how much tea I have. Granted, all 135 Teabox teas are 10g samples, but that’s still an absurd amount of tea!
So I’m digging into them!
The dry leaf is a small grain CTC, with a scant sprinkling of other ingredients. The smell is all cardamom and ginger.
Steeped for 5min in 98C water, then topped it up with milk to 8oz and added a scant teaspoon of sugar.
This is surprisingly mild – I was expecting something more kick in the pants – but actually, it’s perfect for right now. I love that this has no cinnamon or clove in it. Nothing wrong with those flavours, but I find that most chai blends tend to get dominated by those flavours, and this one doesn’t miss them at all. A great balance of ginger, fennel and cardamom flavours.
I might see about stewing this one for my next cup, to get more flavour out of it, but it’s really fantastic just as it is.
Flavors: Cardamom, Fennel, Ginger
Ahahaha, is it just me, or are you trying to find ALL the teas with “twirl” in the name? I swear I’ve seen a few reviews now. (Also, I saw a tea at the Toronto Tea Festival that reminded me of you because it also referenced ‘twirl’ :D)