Showing posts with label black tea. Show all posts
Showing posts with label black tea. Show all posts
Tuesday, August 14, 2012
Tea Review: Numi Tea Breakfast Blend
One of my favorite bagged teas in the morning is Numi's Breakfast Blend. The tea blends four Fair Trade organic black teas: Assam, Ceylon, Darjeeling and Keemun. The blend combines the best of the four types into a flavorful and pleasing brew; strong flavored yet mild.
Numi Tea was founded in 1999 by brother and sister team Reem and Ahmed Rahim and is based in Oakland, CA. All of Numi's teas are USDA Certified Organic.
And now, the details of my review:
Liquor - a caramel reddish/coffee appearance
Aroma - raisins and toast
Astringency - mild astringency, dry finish
Body/texture - nice body, has substance to it
Taste - Roasted quality. Hearty but mild. Not overpowering.
Aftertaste - slight tannin flavor
I like to save my Breakfast Blend for days that I can savor it and start the day off right!
In an upcoming blog, I'll be tasting the individual black teas that go into the blend and seeing what they add to the flavor and quality.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Tea Tasting Class
My partner and I stepped into the inner sanctum of Temple Coffee & Tea in Sacramento where a quiet ritual was about to take place: a Tea Processing and Tasting class. Several tall tables with cups of labeled tea leaves, water, cup placement mats and note paper stood at the ready. The din from the outer cafĂ© faded as the ten initiates waited to hear the word from our tea guide Leslie Fraser. “It’s time. Let’s start.”
As Leslie asked us about our favorite teas, our wide disparity in knowledge became immediately evident. One man in the class talked about his specialty Sencha green tea air-shipped from Japan directly to him in vacuum-sealed bags. Others were hard-pressed to identify what type of tea they liked best (white, green, oolong or black). I refrained from mentioning that I most often drank store-bought teabags, because it might label me as hopelessly uncool. It’s not that I don’t drink the finer loose leaf teas on occasion, but I don’t know a lot about what’s available or what I like. Plus, I’m often in a rush and teabags are so much easier.
Leslie talked a bit about the background and processing of tea (I’ll share similar information in future blogs) and then we moved into the experiential component of the class. Leslie prepared the teas using filtered water heated to around 200 degrees and then cooled to the right temperature for each tea. She poured each of us a white tea and a green tea to compare and then an oolong and a black. She noted that having two different teas to compare side-by-side makes it easier to sense the differences.
We touched and sniffed the dry leaves and buds, admired the color and aroma of the poured “liquor” in our cups and tasted the brews. I could see, smell and taste the differences, but had trouble finding words to describe them. Was it chocolaty? Plastic-tasting? Like something dripping from the drain pipe or the sweetest nectar of the gods? Classmates described, as best they could, the body, flavor, astringency and finish of each sample. “Subtle, strong, woody, apricot-like, smooth” for the Silver Needle white and “Seaweed, grassy, pale green, subtle, astringent in the finish” for the Jade Cloud green.
The reactions to the teas were as varied as the tasters themselves. The Wuyi oolong was described as “unsmoked tobacco” but also contrastingly as “floral, dry, raisin-like sweetness on the tip of the tongue”. The Darjeeling 2nd Flush black tea was “dark amber, smooth and caramel-like” but also “perfume-y, complex and bright”.
I gave up on finding the right words and instead focused on whether I enjoyed it or not. I loved the white tea for its gentleness and the black for its sweet boldness. The Jade Cloud green tea didn’t make me a convert to green teas.
Our tasting ended with a tisane, in this case a tangerine-ginger herbal blend. This brew made me recoil with its unnaturally bright blood-orange color and overpowering aroma and flavor. It was a quality blend, but it felt so artificial and strong compared to the lovely real teas. Fortunately, the tea barista offered to bring out another white tea, so I was able to leave the class with a pleasant taste in my mouth.
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