Glazed Donut from 52Teas

I’ve hear about the 52Teas company for its unique and varying tea flavors (flavors like banana pudding, pumpkin cheesecake, and cotton candy), but this is my first time trying tea from 52Teas.  With a name like Glazed Donut, how could you not give this blend a try?

Glazed Donut is a black tea with organic flavors added to create the dessert-flavor of its namesake.  I brewed this tea in a variety of ways.  First, I went for my preferred style: hot tea without any sugar or milk.  With this method, the strongest glazed donut experience I had was the smell in my mug from the hot brew.  The fragrance had the sugary, frosted notes of a sweet and buttery donut.  When drinking the tea, the sweetness is much more mild, mostly tasting like quality, loose leaf black tea with the expected tart tannin flavors.

I also tried this tea as a twelve-hour cold brew.  The blend is much smoother with this method, though I didn’t find the glazed donut flavor to be any stronger.  It’s still the most noticeable in the scent and the first sip of the tea.  The later notes are all traditional black tea.

Finally, I went out on a bit of a limb for me, and I tried this tea hot, with a hefty teaspoon of sugar.  I also made sure to follow the recommended steeping instructions: brewing for 3 minutes and then letting sit to cool for 10 minutes.  Overall, I think this was the best brewing style.  Adding real sweetness to the glazed donut fragrance helped complete the flavor profile, and letting the brew cool a bit before drinking brought out more donut notes.

For best results, I recommend drinking this blend alongside a morning indulgence of your choice: cinnamon roll, danish, or glazed donut.


Here’s the scoop!

Leaf Type: Black
Where to Buy: 52Teas
Description:

I originally blended this tea as part of the Breakfast Inspired Sampler Add-On for the start-up Kickstarter campaign, but I do have a few packages of this tea remaining.

This tea was crafted with a very special tea base (a Thyolo OP1 from the Satemwa estate in Malawi). It’s a fair-trade and rainforest alliance tea – and it’s seriously good stuff!

I used this tea as the base for flavors to create a Glazed Donut like experiencece – and all I can say about this is YUM! So good!

Ingredients: single estate black tea, organic calendula petals, organic all-natural flavors.

This tea is no longer available but click below for the unique flavors that are.

Learn even more about this tea and tea company here!

Vicky’s Sponge Cake from Bluebird Tea Co.

vicky_s_sponge_cakeTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Black

Where to Buy:  Bluebird Tea Co.

Tea Description:

Think vanilla sponge cake with a dollop of raspberry jam! There is nothing better than a cuppa and cake (except perhaps a cake flavoured cuppa!) and did you know it was our good old queenie Victoria who invented the Vicky Sponge? Guess the name gives it away a bit! She loved taking afternoon tea with her home girls but decided they needed soem extra nurishment to last until dinner. Cake it is then! We like your thinking QV!

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Ah, Victoria Sponge. My favourite cake. Obviously when I found a tea that claims to replicate it, I just had to give it a try. Of all the people I’d trust to get it right, Bluebird Tea Co. top the list. The scent is right, for starters. Upon opening the pouch, I’m greeted with a waft of raspberries and vanilla. As ever with Bluebird, the dry leaf itself is a thing of beauty – fluffy green raspberry leaves, whole freeze-dried raspberries, smaller pieces of freeze-dried strawberry, and a scattering of desiccated coconut shreds. All on a black tea base, Ceylon specifically in this case. I used 1.5 tsp of leaf for my cup (the raspberries are so huge, they throw the measurement out a bit!), and gave it 3.5 minutes in boiling water. No additions. The resulting liquor is a medium golden brown. The scent, like the dry leaf, is deliciously raspberry-vanilla. I really am thinking cake now!

To taste, the initial flavour is 100% raspberry. It’s quite a tart raspberry, but just sweet enough to stop it being jarring. What’s particularly nice is that it tastes like actual fresh raspberries – there’s no candy-like or artificial-tasting raspberry to be found here. Vanilla emerges in the mid-sip, and adds a pleasant creaminess and an extra dimension of sweetness that puts me in mind of the buttercream filling that usually accompanies raspberry jam in a Victoria Sponge. There’s a tiny hint of cake right at the end of the sip, but it’s a little fleeting. The coconut just starts to come through, and I think it’s this paired with the other ingredients that produce this effect, interestingly.

I quite like the way the flavours build here, one on the other, to create the overall Victoria Sponge effect. I also like that each individual aspect seems to taste natural, and not like it’s been created from a chemical compound in order to replicate “cake” as accurately as possible and at all costs. The raspberry tastes like real raspberry, the vanilla tastes like, well, vanilla. The combination really does suggest the filling of a Victoria Sponge, and (by some alchemy) everything comes together right at the end of the sip to give – cake! My only complaint is that the black base becomes a little astringent and drying as my cup cools – this is definitely one best consumed hot. Other than that, it’s a great success. Highly recommended for all Victoria Sponge fans – cake without the calories, or just a great stop-gap until your next slice!

Gingerbread Flavored Iced Honeybush Tea from Southern Boy Teas

SBT-HONEYBUSH-GingerbreadTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Honeybush

Where to Buy:  Zoomdweebies

Tea Description:

This is a crowd pleaser. Order this today and offer your Thanksgiving dinner guests an awesome caffeine-free treat with organic flavors of gingerbread and a hint of cream cheese frosting. This is a real treat and likely to go fast. Do not miss out on this one.

Learn more about this tea here.

Learn about SBT’s subscriptions here.

Taster’s Review:

Gingerbread is not something I eat often.  I like some gingerbread, but most that I find tends to be a little on the wimpy side with no real ginger flavor.  An exception to that is the gingerbread that I’ve tasted from Nikki’s Cookies.  Good stuff.

But a lot of the gingerbread that you can buy in the grocery stores (about a month ago, you couldn’t walk into a grocery store without seeing a “gingerbread house kit.”  And most of that stuff tastes like it was made from cardboard.  No real ginger flavor – it’s as if the ginger that they use in the recipe is ground ginger that had been sitting on the shelf since Christmas in 1990.  Boring flavor with no ginger kick.

So I’m hoping this tea will give me the kind of gingerbread flavor I want!

I hot-brewed this tea.  I brought a quart of water to 195°F and dropped the sachet into the kettle and let it steep for 9 minutes.  Then I strained the liquid into my favorite half gallon iced tea pitcher and repeated the process:  heated a quart of water – 195°F – and put the same sachet into the kettle.  This time, I let it steep for 11 minutes.  Then I let the pitcher come to room temperature before I stashed it in the refrigerator to cool overnight.

Today, I have a pitcher full of gingerbread tea!  Well, I guess I should say, I did have a pitcher full of gingerbread tea.  Now I have about 1 glassful of tea remaining at the bottom of the pitcher and that glassful will be consumed soon!

This has a nice ginger flavor.  The ginger is subtle but present in every sip.  It doesn’t have a strong, peppery zing from the ginger, but there’s enough ginger in there to know that you’re tasting ginger.  And there’s a pleasant sweetness, almost molasses-y, and that’s something I want to taste with gingerbread too.

This is sweet and enjoyable without being cloying.  The ginger cuts through enough of the sweetness to keep it from tasting too sweet.  The honeybush is a good base for the gingerbread flavors because the nutty and honey-esque flavors of the honeybush really tie in well with the overall gingerbread concept.

If I’m to offer any “complaint” about this tea, it would be that I want a little more “buttery/pastry” like flavor.  That – it would seem – has become a common complaint of mine about some of the baked good flavor teas that 52Teas/Southern Boy Teas/Zoomdweebies has been producing as of late.  I’m just not getting the buttery/pastry-like flavor that I’ve come to love from some of 52Teas’ classic flavors like their Pancake Breakfast tea.  I think that would make this taste more like a gingerbread cookie.

That said, I found this iced tisane to be enjoyable.  I like the flavor of the ginger and the molasses notes are quite delightful.  It’s not my favorite iced tea selection from Southern Boy Teas, but it’s tasty and refreshing.  The fact that the half gallon pitcher is nearly empty after it being in the refrigerator for less than a day should be testament to the fact that I enjoyed the flavor and it is very easy to drink.

Please take a moment to check out Frank’s Kickstarter campaign!  He’s looking to take Southern Boy Teas to new heights and the fundraising effort will help get him started in the right direction!  Please help this small business!

Red Velvet Cake Mate from 52Teas

RedVelvetCakeMate

Tisane Description:

Leaf Type:  Yerba Maté

Where to Buy:  52Teas

Tisane Description:

Our Malted ChocoMate has been one of our most popular blends over the years, well, at least it WAS until this! Here’s roasted yerba mate blended with organic cacao nibs and organic flavors. It’s chocolate and cream cheese frosting and cake in a cup. I thought about adding some red food coloring, but I think you will agree that even if it isn’t red, it’s delicious.

Learn more about this tisane here.

Taster’s Review:

YUM!  To be honest, I wasn’t really … looking that forward to trying this Red Velvet Cake Mate from 52Teas.  And I love chocolate!

Here’s the thing … in addition to being a chocoholic and a tea addict, I have a thing for cupcakes.  I go nuts over cupcakes.  I see a cupcake bakery and I beg my husband to stop just so I can see what flavors they have … and for me, the more outrageous the flavor, the better.  (Kind of that way with tea flavors too)  I don’t get so excited over cake … oh sure, I won’t turn my nose up at cake … but a cupcake?  I love it.  I turn into a kid when it comes to cupcakes.

The problem:  it seems that every cupcake bakery has a red velvet offering.  It’s become the “Earl Grey” of the cupcake world … everyone has one.  Not that I knock Earl Grey, I love it as you’re probably aware!  And I actually like red velvet cake (and cupcakes) … but, if given a choice between red velvet cake and a chocolate cake … I’d choose chocolate because red velvet seems to me to be like … a lighter version of chocolate.  That is, it’s like a chocolate cupcake, but with less chocolate.  And if you’ve read my articles for very long, you know that I am a strong supporter of the more chocolate = better concept.  And if more chocolate = better, then less chocolate = worse.  Simple logic.

So, I guess I was thinking … OK, so this is going to be a “light” chocolate Yerba Maté and I’m going to have to write my article complaining about a lack of chocolate.  There are few things that make me more disappointed in a chocolate tea than a lack of chocolate.

Fortunately, Frank of 52Teas apparently does not subscribe to this idea that red velvet cake is a lighter version of chocolate cake, because this is nice and chocolate-y.  (However, more chocolate WOULD be better … because more chocolate = better.)  And I can taste the tangy cream cheese frosting note.  It is sweet and delicious, and I love the roasted flavor of the Yerba Maté … I love that it doesn’t have that strong vegetative note, that the roasted flavor accentuates the earthy tones which complements the chocolate notes very nicely.  And then the overtone of creamy, tangy frosting just … it’s the icing on the cake!  (haha, I made a punny!  Oh gawd I’m a nerd.  Please don’t tell my husband I admitted that.)

This is totally yummy.  It is rich, chocolate-y, toasty, and tangy!  Absolutely scrumptious.  Unfortunately, it is also sold out.  So, if you want some, you should let Frank know!  Contact him via this contact form or, you could tweet him, or visit his facebook page.  Please tell him you heard about this tea from me!

Strawberry Cupcake Black Tea from Simpson and Vail

Tea Type:
Black Tea

Where To Buy:
Simpson & Vail

Product Description:

When you sip this delectable brew the strawberry taste first hits your tastebuds followed by the rich, creamy, chocolate “cake” taste. Some of our staff like this blend with agave or sugar, but I find it’s delicious (and less caloric) as is! The aroma is as enticing as the taste – sweet, baked strawberry cupcakes. Yum! The cup leaves a lingering creamy taste of fresh fruit that makes it hard to resist another and another and another sip! Certified Kosher
Tasters Review:

I first tried this when I was in MAJOR need of some comfort food and let me tell you this sure did do the trick!

This flavored black tea has a strong black tea base. Followed by a strong Strawberry flavor. There’s also a dark chocolate flavor in there that is just as sturdy as the strawberry! There is a crusty type taste doing the jive in the middle of the sip. This has a slight bitter taste in parts of the sip but in a good way where it contributes to the overall flavor of this flavored black tea. As it cools it does seem to get a bit creamier…like frosting.

Comfort…in a cup…in more ways than one!  YUM!