95
drank Zabaglione by Design a Tea
259 tasting notes

Design a Tea was offering free samples—perhaps they still are. Today I got mine only a few days after I had requested them. One of my picks was Zabaglione because I love the flavor mixes. It’s difficult to make a good zabaglione and because the dessert requires so much intensive, last-minute cooking and detailed attention, few restaurants seem to offer it. Sometimes it’s called a “Sabayon”.

The ingredients for the Zabaglione are “Koslanda-Dimbulla blend from Sri Lanka” and “All natural flavoring”. My tea revealed a complex unfolding of flavors. As you might expect, the eggnog flavor predominated but there were little rushes of true marzipan, almond, and a general sweet creaminess. The only tea I’ve tried which is similar is, not surprisingly, an eggnog tea by David’s Teas. This one, of course, offers more than the generic eggnog—not that that is not delicious alone.

I drank most of it straight up and then added a soupçon of sugar and milk which enhanced the creamy sweetness.

I’m impressed with Design a Tea. They have a similar concept to Adagio’s, but seem to be smaller and perhaps offer a purer, more organic, and focused product. I plan to order from them after the fantastic tea prOn experience of spending time on their site.

Preparation
4 min, 30 sec
Cait

Okay, I need to check out this website offering tea pr0n! :)

sophistre

I giggled, because Zabaglione is spelled differently in your tasting note in every spot in which it appears. What a weird word. Until today I didn’t even know what Zabaglione was. How can I have been to Italy so often and not had this? Especially since creme brulee is among my favorite desserts ever?

Learn something new every day! I’m very curious about this company…thanks for the heads-up!

Doulton

I tried to fix the spelling. I think it must have been my enthusiasm—-I was just humming along and typing far too quickly. A true zabaglione is must better than a creme brulee and must be made at the last moment. They are hard to find. I’ve had a good one in London,a good one in Venice, and a really ersatz fake one in Ohio that tasted like plastic. Even in Italy they are not on the menu as often as I’d like.

sophistre

It’s a weird word!

I can’t remember ever seeing it on any menu in Italy, which is a tragedy, as it seems like my kind of sweet. To be fair I rarely had room enough left for dessert by the time we were ready to eat it…so I wasn’t often looking. Needless to say though, I will be keeping my eyes peeled from now on.

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Comments

Cait

Okay, I need to check out this website offering tea pr0n! :)

sophistre

I giggled, because Zabaglione is spelled differently in your tasting note in every spot in which it appears. What a weird word. Until today I didn’t even know what Zabaglione was. How can I have been to Italy so often and not had this? Especially since creme brulee is among my favorite desserts ever?

Learn something new every day! I’m very curious about this company…thanks for the heads-up!

Doulton

I tried to fix the spelling. I think it must have been my enthusiasm—-I was just humming along and typing far too quickly. A true zabaglione is must better than a creme brulee and must be made at the last moment. They are hard to find. I’ve had a good one in London,a good one in Venice, and a really ersatz fake one in Ohio that tasted like plastic. Even in Italy they are not on the menu as often as I’d like.

sophistre

It’s a weird word!

I can’t remember ever seeing it on any menu in Italy, which is a tragedy, as it seems like my kind of sweet. To be fair I rarely had room enough left for dessert by the time we were ready to eat it…so I wasn’t often looking. Needless to say though, I will be keeping my eyes peeled from now on.

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I really love big, bold, brash teas. Smokiness enthralls me. I don’t seem to do subtle.
I don’t do rooibos.

My rating system:
0-30:
Never again in a hundred million years

31-55: This tea probably has some redeeming qualities but I won’t would not seek it out again.

56-70:
Shows some promise but also has a fundamental flaw. I probably owe these a second taste but am unmotivated.

71-80:
Good with at least one strong quality; I probably would not buy it but would drink it cheerfully.

81-90: Worthy contenders; they might be ranked 100 on somebody’s else’s scale. I like them a lot but have not fallen in love. Will probably buy and use.

91-95: These are the true loves, the chosen ones, the ones I dream about and crave. Unless they are in a limited edition—la! how you tease me!—I will always keep in my cupboard.

96-100: I cannot be separated from these teas and would develop a panic attack if I were to run out.
-

“She is too fond of books and it has turned her brain.”

Elderly dowager. Quintessential cat lady.

Tea which must be in stock always:

Black Dragon LS by Upton Teas: My choice every morning.

Florence & Lapsang Souchong by Harney & Sons

a good Gen Maicha

Samovar: Russian Blend, Maiden’s Ecstasy, Ryokucha

Mariage Frères: Confucious, Vivaldi, Eros, Aida, Marco Polo

American Tea Room: Brioche

Leland Teas: Bogart

Life in Teacup:
An Xi Tie Guan Yin Grade II modern green style & also Charcoal Style

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In the midst of the middle of the heart of nowhere in particular.

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