Mintberry Pine Green Tea Blend from M & K’s Tea Company

MintBerryPineTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Green

Where to Buy:  M&K’s Tea Company on Etsy

Tea Description:

Sweet roasted sloe berries doused in honey and liquid hibiscus, tossed with fresh spearmint and 3-distinct green teas, paired with real pine needles. That’s Mintberry Pine. It’s our limited-edition green tea holiday blend that offers a more complex, subtle taste (as opposed to mint exploding in your mouth with the force of a white hot sun). If you’re a green tea lover, mint lover, berry lover, or all three, this tea is perfect for you. Get it while it’s here!

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

When I saw that M&K’s Tea Company had some really intriguing holiday blends, I decided that I needed (yes, needed) to try them!  Fortunately, they understood this need and they offered a Wintertime Tea Sampler!  This sampler offers five different teas:  Moroccan Mint, Pine Needle Tea, Winterwolf Tea, White Vanilla Peppermint and this Mintberry Pine Green Tea.  These samples were all packed into a special sampler package that’s just the right size for stocking stuffers.  It’s a handsome package, something that Santa would be proud to give!

Before I received my package, I received a message from Marty (the “M” of M&K’s, I think!) explaining that the Mintberry Pine (and the Pine Needle Tea) are both very subtle teas.  He recommended steeping them a little longer than the package directs and to allow plenty of steep room for the leaves (let them steep loose in the teapot instead of using an infuser tool).

To steep, I grabbed my small teapot (4 cup size) and dusted it off – it’s been a while since I’ve used this!  I have gotten spoiled with my Breville!  I warmed the teapot and poured the contents of the sampler into the teapot and heated 16 ounces of water to 180°F.  Then I poured the water into the teapot and let it steep for 3 1/2 minutes.  The package suggests 2 – 4 1/2 minutes, but I couldn’t bear to let a green tea steep longer than 3 1/2  minutes.  I was willing to sacrifice a little of the mint, berry and pine flavors but I didn’t want a bitter green tea.

Yes, the flavors are a little subtle, but I like that I’m tasting all the elements of this tea and that the green tea doesn’t taste bitter.

I like the subtle flavor of the mint here.  I like that I have a crisp, cool minty taste without it tasting like I added a shot of mouthwash to my cup of green tea.

The berry notes add some sweetness and not a lot of tartness (which I was a little apprehensive about because I saw liquid hibiscus up there in the description).  There is a light, tingly tart tone that tickles the tongue (try saying that five times fast) in the aftertaste, but that’s to be expected with berry blends.  I’m also picking up a delightful honeyed note from the honey roasting process.  Nice touch.

The pine needles are the softest flavor component of the three elements in the name of this tea.  I do get a very slight, resinous pine note to this that hits the palate right at the start and then it quickly disappears and reappears just after mid-sip, just to remind me that it is there.  It’s very faint and it’s something that I think I’d have missed if I didn’t search for it.

However, as I continue to sip, I taste more and more of the pine, and by the time I’m halfway through my second cup of this tea, I’m getting a nice pine note.  It never becomes a strong presence, but it certainly is a noticeable presence at this point.

And let us not forget that we’re drinking tea here.  There’s a soft, buttery note of green tea.  It’s lightly grassy (and I think that the grassy tones accentuate both the pine and the mint notes in a positive way), and it has a nice mouthfeel.  It’s not bitter nor is it overly astringent, even though I steeped it longer than I typically would steep a green tea.  I think that this could have even gone another 30 seconds to 1 full minute longer without bitterness!

Overall, a very unique blend.  Certainly festive and definitely different from the other teas that everyone else is producing out there!  Bravo M&K!

Organic Cranberry Lemon Black Tea Blend from Boston Tea Co.

cranberrylemonTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  The Boston Tea Co.

Tea Description:

Enjoy this tartfully-sweet tea whether it’s morning, noon, or night! The perfect blend of our premium organic Chinese and Indian black teas with organic cranberries and lemon will leave you taste buds dancing with delight!

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I wasn’t sure how I would like this blend, because even though I’ve enjoyed many cranberry flavored teas as well as quite a few lemon flavored teas – to have these two tart fruit flavors together in one tea seemed a little too tarty for me.

But this is alright.  It’s not my favorite tea that I’ve tasted from Boston Tea Company, but, I’m enjoying it.  The flavors of cranberry and lemon go together surprisingly well.  I usually see cranberry and orange as a combination but seldom do I see cranberry and lemon.  And it’s a nice combination.  Yeah, it’s tart, but it’s still tasty.

I think what really saves this tea for me and makes it tasty instead of way too tarty is the black tea base.  It’s a smooth, robust black tea.  I taste sweet notes of malt and these sweeter notes of the tea as well as it’s strong, bold taste seems to take some of the attention off the fact that we have two sour fruit flavors in this blend.

Not that the tea base overpowers the fruit notes, but, it manages to curb some of the really sour notes so that it tastes just a little less tart than I anticipated it to taste.  So I’m able to experience some of the sweeter notes of the berry and the bright, refreshing flavor of the lemon without feeling that urge to pucker when I take a sip.

I steeped one of these silky pyramids in boiling water for 3 minutes.  It produced a flavorful, aromatic cup that is not too tart, but it is a bit more tart than it is sweet, so if you’re one who fancies a sweeter cup, you might want to add just a pinch of sweetener to soften the sour just a bit.  I enjoyed it as is, and I tend to be a little sensitive to tart flavors.  This tea just “toes the line” at being a little too tart.  It’s very tart but not quite there.

Overall, a pleasant tea – this makes a really tasty and refreshing iced tea.  I think this is even better iced than hot – the tart notes mellow out just a little bit and make for a very smooth and juicy tasting drink.

Cranberry Breeze Herbal Tisane from Simple Loose Leaf

Cranberry-Breeze-HerbalTisane Information:

Leaf Type:  Fruit/Herbal Tisane

Where to Buy:  Simple Loose Leaf

Tea Description:

This perfectly balanced blend of subtly sweet cherry and rose hips with tart cranberry and hibiscus make this herbal tea refreshingly delicious and reminiscent of a fun fruit punch drink. Perfect for children and others watching sugar and caffeine; Cranberry Breeze is wonderful hot or iced and is the perfect alternative to sweet caffeinated drinks.

Learn more about this tea here.

Learn more about Simple Loose Leaf’s Selection Club subscription program here.

Taster’s Review:

This Cranberry Breeze Herbal Tisane is not one I would have selected for myself.  I am sipping on it only because it was one of the five teas in this month’s Simple Loose Leaf Selection Club and I opted for the five samplers instead of choosing an ounce or two of two of the teas.  But you know what?  I’m glad that I received this because I am enjoying it.

Yeah, normally, I’m not a big fan of hibiscus, and this is hibiscus-y!  Really hibiscus-y.  When I drink a hibiscus-based tisane, I want it to either be light on the hibiscus, or have ingredients that work well with the hibiscus.  Well, this tisane isn’t light on the hibiscus, but the cranberry and hibiscus work very well together.

Yes, it’s tart.  There are times when I’d even go so far as to say it’s sour!  But, cranberries are like that, and as I said, the hibiscus and cranberry work really well together in this tisane.

I taste notes of sour cherry too, and the cherry and cranberry together give this a very juicy, fruity, party punch flavor only healthier, because even though I am not a fan of hibiscus, it is does bring a lot of health benefits to this party in a teacup.

I like this better iced than hot because the fruity punch flavor just tastes better iced.  Not my favorite tisane, but it is something that I’d drink now and then when I want something a little bit different to give my taste buds a jump start.  Try brewing up a pitcher of this, chilling it, and then serving it to the kids the next time they want something to drink – it’s a great naturally caffeine free alternative to those sugary sodas!

Oh, and don’t forget about Simple Loose Leaf’s special April promotion!  You can get your first month of the Selection Club for just one dollar!  Yes, you read that correctly!  Use this code:  1DOLLARMONTH and enjoy up to five different teas next month for just one dollar!  Wow!  That’s amazing!  Be sure to check it out and tell ’em that I sent you!

Cranberry Flavored Black Tea from A. C. Perch

cranberryTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  A. C. Perch

Tea Description:

Sweet, refreshing tea with delicate cranberry flavour.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

This Cranberry Flavored Black Tea from A. C. Perch is one of the best cranberry flavored teas I’ve yet to try.  The cranberry here smells distinct and strong and that aroma got me to thinking that this was going to be a rather tart tasting tea.  However, the flavor is quite smooth and reminiscent of the sweet cranberry compote that I make when I serve turkey.

The flavor is definitely cranberry – there’s no mistaking that this is a cranberry flavored tea!  But, I like that it is a gentle flavor and it doesn’t obscure the flavor of the rich black tea.  It is tart … most of the tartness arrives at the finish and in the aftertaste.  At the start of the sip, though, what I taste is a sweeter cranberry, as I mentioned earlier, a taste that reminds me of a sweet cranberry compote.  Not tart.  Sweet!

As one who typically is shy when it comes to overly tart flavors, I don’t mind this sweeter side of cranberry one bit.  And what I’m enjoying most is that even though this is a sweet that isn’t typical of most things cranberry, it still tastes distinctly of the berry.

The black tea is flavorful and invigorating.  There isn’t a really bracing astringency to this, but I do notice a slight dry sensation toward the tail.  The finish is tart and tingly, and it is here where I notice most of the tart notes of the cranberry.  The aftertaste has a nice berry taste.

A really enjoyable cranberry tea.  I think I will need to order some of this and gift it to my daughter who loves cranberry.  This is likely to become a favorite of hers!  This would make a great iced tea – as the tea cools, the cranberry really pops!

Cran-Grape Shou Mei from 52Teas

Cran-Grape-Shou-MeiTea Information:

Leaf Type:  White

Where to Buy:  52Teas

Tea Description:

I assure you, I am not dead. 
I’ve been down with the flu early this week and then I got so busy with our Kickstarter rewards that I nearly forgot to post the tea of the week! Shame on me. And it’s a yummy one too. Soft, sweet shou mei blended with cranberries and grapes. Yummmmm.

Learn more about this blend here.

Taster’s Review:

As soon as I opened the pouch of this Cran-Grape Shou Mei from 52Teas, I could smell the grape.  Or perhaps, I should say, I could smell grape candy, because that’s what it smells like.  It smells like the grape <insert favorite grape flavored candy here>.  Yeah, that’s what this smells like.  The grape scent was so strong that I couldn’t really detect any cranberry notes, or any white tea notes for that matter.

Once brewed, the fragrance mellows out a little bit.  Now, I still smell grape, but it actually smells like grape … and not so much like grape candy.  There are still hints of candy-like sweetness, but, the aroma becomes a little more complex after the tea is brewed.  I even smell a wine-like note in there.  And I can smell hints of white tea too.  Much more promising than the dry leaf scent.

The grape flavor is the strongest note that I taste, and the sweetness of the candy-like grape taste is curbed with the tartness of the cranberry.  This combination keeps the grape from tasting too cloying.  But, I have to say that this isn’t my favorite fruit combination.  I’ve never made any big secret of my dislike for grape flavored things.  But the cranberry does improve the flavor considerably.

The white tea is a little obscured by the strength of the fruit flavors.  I notice the white tea notes a little more when I slurp the sip, and then I taste the earthy qualities of the Shou Mei, and a slight “hay-ish” taste that offers a palate-pleasing contrast to the fruit notes.

This tastes alright.  It’s not my favorite 52Teas blend.  (I have much higher hopes for the next blend that I’ll be tasting:  Rum Raisin!  YUM!)  I like this much better as an iced tea than when it’s served hot.