1749 Tasting Notes
Finally got to try an oz of this one! It always looks sooo pretty, and it is very pretty in reality. The smell has a lot of complexity, though the western/grandpa brew that came out was heavy on malt and sweet potatoe. The flavors didn’t have too much dimension, but it was definitely enjoyable. I’ve been spoiled by Imperial North Winds in the past, so it’s got stiff competition. However, I have darker sweeter blacks that will blend nicely. This will ground out some of the sweetness and add more “starch” or bread(th). I know, bad pun.
Flavors: Bread, Malt, Sweet Potatoes
Preordered for the temporary vanilla dreams release. I tumbler styled it, and was actually pleased with it. Heavy on the earthy woody notes with the vanilla and malt. Sometimes, there were some mushroom or rootlike qualities to it. When it cooled off, it tasted something like cream soda or rootbear to me in tea form. I don’t have too much to add right now. Rivendell and Cocoa Amore were my favorites of the Vanilla dreams, and I’m glad I can mark this one off as one I’ve tried.
The second and third rebrews were not as rich as the first, but still comforting. The tea mostly went into woody dark oolong territory that actually resembled some of the darker Dahongpao’s I used to get. The notes were thinner, but it was honey, cedar, buttery texture, wood, and of course, tea. I don’t know if I want to finish this Gong Fu or Western for the sip down. I really enjoyed my cup western.
Thank you derk for this one sooooo much. I have been staving off my roastier oolongs for cooler weather. Michigan had a whiplash of 80 degrees to 50 degrees and 40 in the same week. SEMCO fixed a gas leak, and now, my house isn’t getting heat properly, so any tea that’s on the more savory side is well welcomed.
I plopped this into my strainer mug for 3 minutes, took it out, and it smelled like cookies, butter, and autumn leaf piles and cedar. Tasting it, I thought I was drinking a black tea. It’s got a caramel chocolate thing going on for my palette, more specifically bakers chocolate or older chocolate with fresh caramel. There are times it reminds me of those endangered species chocolate bars with dried fruit plopped in for some flavor.
Anyway, I’ll come back to it. I’m loving mugstyle. I wanted to try this one for a while, and I’m very happy to have a sample. I can already tell I’ll rebrew it a few times yet I’d only use it for special or needed occasions. The tea would be too heavy on it’s own for my palette, but it’s super soothing and tasty so far.
Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Butter, Caramel, Cedar, Chocolate, Cocoa, Cookie, Cranberry, Dark Chocolate, Dried Fruit, Honey, Savory, Wood
Thank you Leafhopper! I got the box, and I’m stoked at everything. This will stave me off other tea impulse buys for a while. I tried the 2023 and not the 2022 yet. I did it western, but really liked it. Had a grassy pineapple poundcake feel to it. Later steeps had heavy magnolia and then some lychee in steep 3 as it cool down. Loved it. I will do note for it on its own, but I will do it here so I can come back to it. Cheers!
Wanderlust from September. This one is not fully a masala chai, but the nutmeg and cinnamon give it a chai character. The flavor is pretty strong, but not overly as cakey as I’d imagine. It’s more bready than anything else underneath a healthy serving of floral tannin and light astringency of sweet spices. The black tea and green tea make it medium bodied like an oolong, but has the touch of malt and green astringency to make it more on the medium side, or first flush side. Shorter brew times makes the green tea more apparent, and the longer steeps makes the black tea more apparent.
I’m not sure how the cardamom was added, but it’s one of the biggest spices leading the overall flavor with the nutmeg and rose underneath. I can’t really taste the jasmine as strongly, but it adds a little bit of dryness to it. I personally like the spice combo and love the smell. There are certain things about this tea that are honestly muddled, but the basic part of me really enjoys it. I like it on its own after about 2-3 minutes western, and it takes sugar well. It can also handle cream, but the cream can overpower other parts of the tea and make it a little bit thinner. The sugar highlights the florals and off puts the slight astringency and dryness.I liked this one because it was different from most other blends, and I honestly liked it better than some, but not all of the pumpkin spice blends. Definitely a good fall option. My girlfriend loooooves it, and some of my students that saw it at work were really into the smell. I personally would still add sugar to sweeten it to make it more palatable, which is the big thing against this tea for my preferences other than the astringency. It is also more pastry/candle bordering than potpouri like the other blends. If you really like rose and cardamom though, you might really like this.
Flavors: Astringent, Bread, Cardamom, Cinnamon, Floral, Nutmeg, Pastries, Rose, Spicy, Sweet, Tannic
Really liked this one. I dig the flavor combo. Too expensive to own other than the sample, but it kept changing on each rebrew and it lasted very long western and tumbler style. The cardamom would actually be more prominent in the later steeps with the almond and pumpkin flavors giving off nice balanced natural sweetness with the persimmon. Really dug the persimmon almond combo personally. I feel lame, but I agree it is a bit too pricy. It’s easily a winner compared to the other fall blends. I had the highest hopes for the Pumpkin Caramel Oolong, but it was too dominated by the cinnamon to be distinct. The other two were also overpowered by cinnamon. This one was balanced.
I was planning on just reviewing the sampler pack and rating them, but people actually tried these teas! I’m not the only one either wowed by the taste and irritable about some of the prices! YAY!
I’ve already commented my thoughts on this one for a few of you, but here’s the gist. I sipped this down the quickest out of all of them for easy transport and basic white girl vibes. For whatever reason, Pu-Erh Black tea blends are easy for me to like, so I got Clove, vanilla, nutmeg, and a wi bit of pumpkin are prominent in the flavor under the malt of the black tea and pu-erh. I personally would taste the pu-erh more with more leaves, but the black tea was more prominent, though less so than the power of the flavors.
I personally really liked the eggnog custard vibes and thought this tea was the pumpkin spice version of Thai Temple. I’m not always a huge fan of cake teas, so I’m happy with a more custardy version of one. It’s good with a little bit of cream and sugar, but I liked this one more straight. Felt good on my throat and felt good with the fall vibes. I’m not sure if I would pay for the full price for a large serving of it. I wouldn’t mind having it around since I thought it was better than a lot of other pumpkin spice teas I’ve had before, but I would probably only want another sampler portion.
Flavors: Artificial, Clove, Cream, Custard, Earth, Eggnog, Nutmeg, Pumpkin, Sugar, Tea, Vanilla
I dumped the rest of this unceremoniously into my teapot, let it sit for a minute, and drank it. Thankfully, it’s not as strong as it used to be, but my cup leans into the lemon apricot fruit range of grassy tea. I’ve been contemplating on getting a fall order even though I’m waiting on a swap of so many teas. What-Cha has some cool experimental varieties, but I’m also in basic white person flavor mode right now. I have so many teas, but I only have one chai out of all of them. The fall mood is hitting me HARD the past few days.
It was nice to have a black tea bordering on white and oolong. I’m still going through moods with black tea. My gong fu ones have been a little bit too brisk or tea drunk potent for me lately for western. I still plow through my oolongs, but western or tumbler. I’ve been a hair more involved in work by setting up a chess club and managing to teach all grades of social studies for high school.
I initially complained about my schedule, but I have really good groups. Luckily, I’ve taught Civics, Economics, World and US History for nearly 6 years, so I mostly know what I’m doing. Civics and Econ alternate semester to semester, so it’s not too overwhelming, but I’m trying to move away from lecture and use more collaboration/student driven discussion. Shifting to more active learning also requires waaaay more prep time and work, so I’ve been juggling what I have with what I can borrow from other teachers, what I can improve. It feels like driving manual though since I have to shift my gears from class to class.
It’s nice to finish a straight black tea and enjoy it for the flavors as I go back into a productive work mode this Saturday.
I pushed back opening this big bag, but as fall’s coming around, my cravings for something more level and spicy rolled in. It’s more than doing the job before I impulsively get chai teas. There’s a few others from Magic Hour I’ve eye balled yet again. The shipping and my need to budget have restrained me, and unfortunately, there are teas I have bulk of that I’m not enjoying nearly as much as certain samples I’ve ran out of or that I’m about to finish off. I’m half tempted to add bread to the notes for this one, making me think of an orange cranberry biscotti with just enough spice. Upping the rating for sure. 90 is a more accurate score for cost ratio and quality (nevermind the whole pieces of vanilla pods that land my pot), but I keep coming back to it, then I hold off so I don’t guzzle it in less than a month.
Now, it’s time for me to grade and watch some Wheel of TIme. I’ve weirdly enjoyed the series even though it’s not book accurate, though I had a hard time with Robert Jordan’s writing style. His alternation between a modern writing voice, contemporary religion, and fantasy tropes and cliches threw off my suspension of disbelief several times as I was reading. I know I’m a total hypocrite because I like Tolkien, Herbert, Weeks, and Gaiman, but the blended world building doesn’t sit right with my brain every time I read it. The TV show has issues too, but the blended cultural aspects are more cohesive to me. I’m thankful they just refer to the Dark One generally instead of lambusting you with the different names for Satan in Arabic, Chinese, and so on.
I wonder if anyone else on here has read Wheel of Time, and I’d be open to comments and debate about it. I know it’s considered to be on of the greatest fantasy series of all time, and a huge personal favorite for many people, so I know I may have upset a few people, but preferences be preferences.