75

Finally getting around to trying the teas that skysamurai kindly picked up during a visit to Fairhope!

I love seeing the little twiggy stems along with the leaves; it makes me smile. I followed the directions and steeped this cup for a whopping six minutes, yet it’s still pretty mild! I’m mostly getting wet metal in the scent and taste, followed by minerally fallen leaves. It’s quite light overall! Just a teensy bit drying toward the end, but overall very smooth. A pretty easy drinker and very fun to try. Thanks, skysamurai!

Flavors: Dry Leaves, Metallic, Mineral, Wet Rocks

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 6 min, 0 sec
gmathis

Someone else mentioned this recently—but all US grown teas tend to fall on the mild side. Any of you experts have a botanical reason for that?

Skysamurai

It’s something about the terroir. The weather, soil, etc are all a bit different from Al to MI to SC but not nearly as different as the terrior you see in China which accounts for the many different taste profiles. But my guess would be something about our soil. Some would argue that it is also because of the ages of the bushes but I know of other tea farms in other countries who have younger leaves but (in my opinion) taste better than ours. There is def something about the soil though… PArt of me wants to try growing tea up here in MN and see what would happen but I have a feeling our negative temps would just destroy them T_T

Martin Bednář

As far my biology courses in highshool and all unrelated interest during my Uni times, I can confirm it is partially due to soil.

Another reason could be for example insects. Maybe because plants in the US are less infected by them, so the plants do not need to produce awful and bitter substances and thus it is milder voerall.

Last thing that I am thinking about it is that it could be different ratio of sunlight and different humidity — so again, different production of substances inside the plant.

gmathis

Our part of the world is riddled with zinc mining chat—I don’t think that would improve growing conditions any…

Kelmishka

Mmm, zinc!

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Comments

gmathis

Someone else mentioned this recently—but all US grown teas tend to fall on the mild side. Any of you experts have a botanical reason for that?

Skysamurai

It’s something about the terroir. The weather, soil, etc are all a bit different from Al to MI to SC but not nearly as different as the terrior you see in China which accounts for the many different taste profiles. But my guess would be something about our soil. Some would argue that it is also because of the ages of the bushes but I know of other tea farms in other countries who have younger leaves but (in my opinion) taste better than ours. There is def something about the soil though… PArt of me wants to try growing tea up here in MN and see what would happen but I have a feeling our negative temps would just destroy them T_T

Martin Bednář

As far my biology courses in highshool and all unrelated interest during my Uni times, I can confirm it is partially due to soil.

Another reason could be for example insects. Maybe because plants in the US are less infected by them, so the plants do not need to produce awful and bitter substances and thus it is milder voerall.

Last thing that I am thinking about it is that it could be different ratio of sunlight and different humidity — so again, different production of substances inside the plant.

gmathis

Our part of the world is riddled with zinc mining chat—I don’t think that would improve growing conditions any…

Kelmishka

Mmm, zinc!

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Bio

I was an anxious child who didn’t like change, so when my parents flew across the country for my grandfather’s wedding and left us kids with my aunt and uncle, I was a nervous wreck. Our first night at their house was tough. I couldn’t sleep, so I got up and padded into the kitchen, where my aunt was puttering around. She could tell I was distressed and offered to make me a cup of tea. It was just Celestial Seasonings’ peppermint tea, but it was exactly what I needed. The tea itself, the comfort it represented, the ritual of making it… I was enchanted. I’ve loved tea ever since.

I’m partial to strong, intense flavors and prefer loose-leaf to bagged, but I also appreciate the convenience of bags and sachets. I mostly drink my tea straight but once in a blue moon I’ll add a little plant-based milk, generally oat.

I live in Maryland, USA, with my partner, three dogs, and one cat, and I’m an editor at an animal welfare nonprofit. I use she/her pronouns. I’ve actually been a Steepster reader for years and years, but only started posting in late 2021. :)

When I’m not drinking tea (or sometimes WHILE I’m drinking tea!) I’m reading, rewatching comfort shows on Netflix, going for a run, knitting, embroidering, hiking, or puttering in the garden. You can find me on Instagram at @kelmishka. (My account is private, but feel free to send a request!)

Favorite ingredients, flavors, etc.

Maple (all-time fave flavor!), vanilla, caramel, and all things dessert-y

Jasmine, lavender, violet, and most floral flavors

Most spices, although I go through phases and sometimes get bored of generic-feeling winter spice blends

Most fruity flavors

Matcha and other vegetal flavors

Not-so-favorite ingredients, flavors, etc.

Bergamot (I tolerate it, but it just doesn’t do it for me)

Hibiscus

Overly artificial flavors (banana, coconut, mango)

Overly herbacious blends, although this varies!

Stevia, monkfruit, and other sugar-alternative sweeteners — blech

Chocolate — it’s hard to get it right in tea, though I love real chocolate!

Animal products, including honey (long-time vegan checking in!)

My ratings

90-100: The best! Will almost definitely repurchase.

75-90: Really good, and potentially worthy of a restock.

60-75: Decent, if not terribly memorable.

50-60: In the “meh” range, but possibly for personal taste reasons.

35-50: I’m not a fan, and this is not very good tea.

20-35: Varying degrees of bad.

1-20: Actively bad. Like really bad. I can’t imagine anyone disagreeing.

Location

Maryland, USA

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