159 Tasting Notes

92
drank Pai Mu Tan by Unknown
159 tasting notes

Ah Pai Mu Tan
You understand me and support me,
Encourage and exhort me to better things
On soft orange yellow wings of taste, aroma and style
Salty and sweet and complete

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 7 min, 0 sec

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34

“Why not try it again?” I thought.
“it can’t be as bad as I remember” I thought.
I was making my other half a giant Velvet Kilimanjaro layered Latte with a shot of Father O’leary’s Irish Cream (a cheap Bailey’s substiute my mother-in-law buys) and I hasd a sudden post-pradial attack of laziness as far as my own tea was concerned, so I went for the bag.
I only have myself to blame. It was murky and leathery. Not nice

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 6 min, 15 sec

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89
drank Assam by Custom
159 tasting notes

My better half was eating Turkish delight, so I changed my mind from Darjeeling and reached for this malty assam to cut through the sweetness.
It is everything I want in a tea, great black for me or with milk for anyone else.
malty and caramelly, luscious.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 15 sec

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83

Just having one of these neat – no milk, no sugar, no wineglass.
It’s silky smooth and refreshing.
Must remember to dig out the Quince version I have at home

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87

Minty and great, with breakfast, which is cheese and tomato on toast.
Wonderfully mediteranean feel with this meal, this tea, in this glorious sunshine ahead of a hot day.
Hard to resist a second cup.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 15 sec
Cofftea

Then don’t:)

Robert Godden

I didn’t !

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92
drank Pai Mu Tan by Unknown
159 tasting notes

I am specifically reviewing a cup that is a long way down the chain.
Yesterday, I made a Pai Mu Tan for myself and my better half at about 3pm. Nice
I did a second small steep on the spot.
Just before dinner at about 7pm I had another. Thean around 8:15 had another.
So, now we come to this one. It’s the next wmorning, just before seven. This tea has produced 5 cups from 4 steepings prior to this; and we come to number 6 or 5 depending on your point of view.
It’s a little insipid.
I was asking too much of it. To be fair, it has no bitterness, no staleness, nothing wrong at all – just a little underflavoured.
It would be unfair for me to change the rating. This tea has done very well.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 6 min, 0 sec

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79
drank China Gunpowder by Unknown
159 tasting notes

Hmm, good midday boost. Had it with diet jelly and diet yoghurt.
Smooth, not very bitter. This time, I just dumped the leaves in a cup and sipped off the top, about 100ml at a time.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 45 sec

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96
drank Smooth Chai by Custom
159 tasting notes

Talking with Cofftea about chai and stuff, so I had to have one.
really frothed the hell out of it in small steaming jug. Piping hot, sweet, smooth, creamy, foamy.
At this moment, I am king of the world!

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 6 min, 15 sec

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71

One of the joys of being male is that Rasberry tea holds no fears. After all, raspberry leaves should be avoided in pregnancy as they can bring on labour.
Having established that I can drink it with impunity, the fact remains I have waited 45 years to actually do so, But whilst on a tea-stealing mission last night in my son’s cupboard, I found this and decided to give it a go.
It seems to be a good black tea, possibly a nilgiri, with raspberry leaves, obvious dried raspberries and I imagine some oils.
I had some trobled pouring it, the dried raspberries swelled up and blocked Clarence’s spout. That’s not really a negative, though.
Overall, the aroma ahead of drinking it, and the aftertaste, are better than the actual tea. It’s sweetish, and basically tastes like raspberries. There’s a hint of tea. I’m glad they used nilgiri (if indeed it is) because a lesser tea would have vanished completely.
It’s OK. I might indulge occaisionally.
I suspect it would make a great syrup. I might make up a big batch, reduce it with sugar and then pour over pancakes on the weekend.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 30 sec

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88

Last time I went to the tea shop I used to own and asked for this, they told me it had never existed.
So when I found some in my son’s cupboard last night, I demanded a cup on the spot.
It’s just a lovely tea.
The cornflowers always remind me of those pink lolly cigars and musk sticks we had as children (I don’t suppose it’s legal to make a sweet that looks like a cigar any more, ones that look like cigarettes were banned thirty years ago)
So it really shouldn’t work, a good dryish black tea with something that has a rather childish taste.
But it does, it does so well. I used to make this tea up as a base for muffins and put extra cornflowers though them.
So, you have a fine edge of sickly, flowery sweeteness running through an otherwise impeccable Ceylon black.
It’s a bit of a guilty pleasure.
I purloined a little of this for home, along with a black rasperry tea I shall review next.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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It’s All About tea! The link is to my blog. Co-Owner of The Devotea.

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