BlueChai's Blue Tea

Tea type
Flowering Food Herbal Blend
Ingredients
Natural Flavours
Flavors
Earth, Flowers, Peas
Sold in
Sachet
Caffeine
Caffeine Free
Certification
Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by Bluechai
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 4 min, 30 sec 4 g 39 oz / 1148 ml

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From Our Community

15 Tasting Notes View all

  • “BlueChai is a tasty, blue tea made from only the best butterfly pea flowers. Since I don’t want to be the first to review our own tea on Steepster, I’d love to give away a couple of samples to the...” Read full tasting note
  • “Steepsterites, you need to check out the colour of this tea. BLUE! WILD! (oh, and it will turn colour if you add lemon). The taste? A touch floral, kinda vegetal snap pea (but not grassy), sweet...” Read full tasting note
    80
  • “i think this tea is at half mast for me. the name, ‘blue chai’, with it having no spices let me down. the dry smell was very mild. the colour was striking! haven’t checked…. but i think my teeth...” Read full tasting note
  • “2/7/14 I’m experimenting with several different things with this tisane, so this tasting note is just the beginning. My sample arrived basically powdered, which made figuring out how...” Read full tasting note
    76

From BlueChai

Discover its amazingly deep blue color and experience the smooth, floral flavour of our premium butterfly pea flowers.
The luscious aroma will remind you of green tea, yet BlueChai is a herbal tisane that is refreshing, cleansing, without any caffeine and unique in color and taste. It’s wonderful hot or iced. Dried butterfly blue pea – blue tea from BlueChai

Soothing stress and improving focus are only a few of the health benefits of this tea, please visit our health section to learn more about the various health benefits of BlueChai.
The flavor is all natural, emanating from dried butterfly pea flowers (Clitoria ternatea).

But don’t just drink this tea, use it in cooking, baking – perhaps add it to oatmeal … really! The blue color of the tea can be used as natural, organic food coloring to make blue rice for example. Enjoy BlueChai hot to create comfort, calmness and warmth or add ice and lemon juice to get a mouthwatering drink that refreshes and revitalizes.

Did you know? BlueChai is magic tea … in a way. If you add a few drops of lemon/lime juice to it, the color will turn from blue to purple within seconds. This not only creates beautiful effects for teas and cocktails, but also changes the flavour of the tea. Add some honey to the drink and impress your friends and family with a complex and evolving tea or iced tea.

Let the unique bouquet of BlueChai take you right to a tropical beach with its delightful sense of summer, relaxation, and simple pleasure.

About BlueChai View company

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15 Tasting Notes

80
143 tasting notes

Ugh, today is so not how I planned it going. I ended up trying to help my moms friend get Anti virus ware on her computer. Long story short Vista is evil and I will get service pack 2 on there. Got some awesome new Asian ware though from her. She has the coolest things.

Well I had this sample and decided to give it a whirl. The smell of the leaf kinda smelled like earthy dirt; sweet earthy dirt. Or like when you are out gardening flowers…. it is a good thing.

The brew itself is ridiculously blue! I mean it almost looks like it was full of blue food coloring. I can see how this was used for dying.

The flavor is kinda different. It isn’t what I was expecting. It taste a lot like peas, and earthy taste. There is a sweet forla bit, but it isn’t very strong; not like most perume floral teas. Now I don’t like peas….. AT ALL! Seriously I hate them, but this taste kinda good. The texture is very smooth too.

I then put some honey and a bit of orange juice in it (had no lemon). It turned from deep blue to an indigo purple color. I don’t know what science makes it down that, but it was cool. I liked it a bit more. It kinda filled out the flavor and made it taste less earthy. I tried it iced but I like it more warm; it looses that smooth texture and some flavor when it is iced.

Apparently this stuff helps with eyes, which I definitely could use. Ever, since late October my eyes have not been the same. They get itchy, irritated and sore easily now. It’s not allergies. I wish I knew why they do that now, but at least since I got computer glasses they have not been as bad.

Overall I enjoyed it. I would be nice to mix in my herbal teas to help with my eyes.

Flavors: Earth, Flowers, Peas

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 4 min, 15 sec 8 OZ / 236 ML
Crowkettle

Somehow I missed out when everyone was drinking this a couple months back, or at least skimmed over the part where this tea’s place on the colour spectrum was mentioned. Wow! The flavours look interesting too.

Ze_Teamaker

It was interesting. You would expect tea made from flowers to taste really floral, but it wasn’t really at all. Still good though.

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22
1473 tasting notes

I’m not sure how I feel about this. I will add my voice to the others in saying that the blue of this tea is absolutely gorgeous. Think TARDIS blue.

I always sweeten my teas, and the back of the package says it goes well with honey, so I added honey instead of my usual sugar. I will not be doing this again. The honey makes it…I don’t know, it brings out the tang and the…funkiness of the tea. I’m not sure how to describe it. It’s very vegetal, and the honey makes it taste almost sour. Not lip-puckering sour, but kinda like milk gone off.

It’s not awful, but I need to try this without honey before I rate it.

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77
1598 tasting notes

First off, I love love LOVE the color of this. It’s such a rich and vibrant blue. I imagine that if I drank it iced the color would help convince my brain that I am tasting something amazingly refreshing.

I made this hot though. And it’s good. I wish it were more like a chai though – the spices seem fairly mild. Maybe I should have used more leaves? It said 5g but IDK how much that is and I guessed. It tastes like a flower, (but not perfumy) which is not surprising, with some interesting plant-like notes that I can’t really put my finger on. There’s also a nectar-like sweetener that lingers at the end of each sip.

It’s an interesting alternative to other non-caffeinated teas though, and for that I’m happy to have tried it!

Courtney

Whoa! Blue? Cool!

Fjellrev

The idea of blue chai breaks my brain.

TeaLady441

It really doesn’t taste like chai at all. I’m not sure why it’s called that. AFAIK it’s just the flower buds – no spices/extra flavouring.

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75
10 tasting notes

First and foremost, the color of this tisane is awesome! A bright blue when first steeped, and then it becomes violet when you add lemon. Very cool!

At first taste without lemon I wasn’t crazy about the taste. I think with Chai in the name I was expecting more spice. But after drinking it a little more without the expectation of the spice I think it’s growing on me. It’s got a vegetably taste, I’d compare it to a mild corn. With a little bit of lemon juice I think it covered up the herbal taste a little bit.

Definitely interesting, I’m going to give it a few more steeps and see how it goes.

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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