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Just received this tisane today and have been eager to try it! Have been looking for some chamomile and fruity blends. Steeped a heaping teaspoon of leaf in 8 oz. 95°C alpine spring water for 4 min., as directed by Tealyra, western style using a stainless infusion basket.

The aroma is pungently pleasant, of fruit salad, with discernible chamomile and citrus and a touch of ginger and hibiscus. The flavors are wonderfully proportioned. The chamomile was there without dominating, and the tangerine & orange oils gave a great citrus accent and sweetness, while the bite of ginger announced itself as well. I was glad to find the hibiscus was tame, and present at just the right level to round out the flavors on the tongue., without being overly tart. Probably residual sugars in the schizandra berries and the licorice root helped keep the ginger, hibiscus, and rose hips from being too sharp, though I had difficulty identifying the flavor elements of the berry, which is new to me. I’ll have to pick out a few of the dry berries and chew on them a bit to see what they have to offer. The licorice root was undetectable to me, even in the finish, and that was my only disappointment. Nor did I taste anything rose-y, though the hips may have added to the floral aroma.

I did not sweeten this cup, though I sometimes do add splenda or raw sugar to herbals like this, and I’m sure it would be nice too. The aroma and the lingering finish are the winners with this concoction, which will be nice on cold, snowy winter evenings to come!

Flavors: Chamomile, Ginger, Hibiscus, Orange, Tangerine

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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Pan-American: Left-coast reared (on Bigelow’s Constant Comment and Twinings’ Earl Grey) and right-coast educated, I’ve used this moniker (and Email) since the glory days of AOL in the 90’s, reflecting two of my lifelong loves—tea and ‘Trek. Now a midwestern science guy (right down to the Hawaiian shirts), I’m finally broadening the scope of my sippage and getting into all sorts of Assamicas, from mainstream Assam CTCs to Taiwan blacks & TRES varietals, to varied Pu’erhs. With some other stuff tossed in for fun. Love reading other folks’ tasting notes (thank you), I’ve lurked here from time to time and am now adding a few notes of my own to better appreciate the experience. You can keep the rooibos LoL! Note that my sense of taste varies from the typical, for example I find stevia to be unsweet and bitter. My revulsion to rooibos may be similarly genetic.
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Photo with Aromatic Bamboo Species Raw Pu-erh Tea “Xiang Zhu” by Yunnan Sourcing, which is most definitely aromatic!

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Chicagoland-USA

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