Little Red

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Chestnut, Malt, Toffee, Caramel, Honey, Sweet Potatoes, Cocoa, Creamy, Musty, Wood, Chocolate, Spices, Bitter, Earth
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Matu
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 21 oz / 626 ml

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20 Tasting Notes View all

  • “When I first got my samples in from White2Tea this wasn’t listed on Steepster; at the time I didn’t know if it was going to become a part of their regular stock, so I didn’t add it. But it’s since...” Read full tasting note
    80
  • “This is the second time that I have tried this tea. In the front of the tea there is some bitterness and a lot of maltyness with a hint of caramel that then melts into a sweetness that tastes like...” Read full tasting note
    90
  • “Opened up a sample of this tea today and what an interesting little delight. The dry leaves have a spiced malty almost chocolate like smell that doesn’t translate to the flavor of the liquid. But...” Read full tasting note
    83
  • “GCTTB noms. I’m enjoying this one this morning. cocoa, fruit, smooth…kinda reminds me of a faint LB sort of tea but with a little spice note to it. I’d pick this one up again in future i think…” Read full tasting note
    84

From white2tea

The Little Red is a great every day black tea from Fujian province. It is has tangy, spicy component akin to cumin and cinnamon. Made from the Fujian cai cha varietal, this is an ideal tea to brew either gongfu or western style.

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20 Tasting Notes

921 tasting notes

First I have to say that I am rather miffed that W2T doesn’t sell this one, because man is it good! I could see it becoming a daily drinker for me for sure, but alas, no dice. These pretty little leaves are made from the Cai Cha varietal, which is pretty popular in Wuyi, used to make Jin Jun Mei, Lapsang Souchong, and Tan Yang Gongfu, so it gets around. The aroma of the dry tea is nom…om nom nom. Strong notes of chocolate, and you know, the info sheet wasn’t lying when it said cumin, and that is pretty awesome. There is also a creamy undertone and a slightly tangy dried fruit note as well.

Brewing it up, the aroma of the tea is immensely rich, heavy notes of chocolate and molasses with notes of saffron and malt. The aroma and taste remind me of a cake I make on occasion using chocolate, saffron, cumin, and lots of molasses…this cake is stupidly rich, especially when you count the saffron vanilla glaze. Seriously the similarity between this tea and my cake concoction are uncanny, I never need to go on the hunt for cheap saffron again if I just keep drinking this tea. You can get many steeps out of these tea, it has decent longevity.

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106 tasting notes

Amazing bitter dark, dark chocolate aroma. Taste does NOT taste like chocolate whatsoever, really, despite the aroma, :(. It has strong malt base, color is not as dark as I would have expected from the smell. Definite earthy bitterness (almost musty in the same way very dark chocolate starts to taste like musty dirt), but it doesn’t really increase across steeps and is very manageable, the taste was kind of similar in profile to mild/moderate strength coffee in a lot of ways in my opinion. Didn’t really get much cumin or cinnamon until the fifth steep (started catching a tingle of cinnamon or something on the tongue at that point). Held up a lot better to resteeping than the other two I tried so far.

I think what I’m starting to learn from this month’s White2Tea club is I don’t really like black/red tea very much, heh.

Flavors: Bitter, Earth, Malt, Musty

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 3 tsp 90 OZ / 2661 ML

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