August Uncommon Tea
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This tea is a Fujian black tea, and tastes pretty much like what it is supposed to. Unlike my other August Uncommon Teas, this one doesn’t really have a noticeable scent other than the expected black tea scent on either opening the pouch or steeping. The tea is perfectly serviceable black tea, a little thin in the body, but not too bad. The scent of the tea when the package is opened and while brewing is a major selling point for flavored teas for me, since I’m not able to detect finer flavors and such when drinking. I’ll finish out the 50 gram bag, but I don’t foresee buying this tea again.
Preparation
I was intrigued by August Uncommon when I saw ads on IG. I’d gotten out of the habit of drinking tea, but decided to try a few blends. Combray was the only green tea blend that appealed. The first time I prepared it, I brewed 3 teaspoons in 750 ml water and steeped for three minutes. The vanilla and cardamom were strong, but were overpowered by the bitterness of the brew. The steeping recommendations that come with the tea are wildly off the mark, in my opinion. Rather than using a tablespoon of tea, steeping for five minutes, using one teaspoon per 8 ounces is more than sufficient. The second preparation I made steeped for only two minutes, which yielded a much more pleasant tea. The brewed tea has a nice vanilla scent, and the cardamom vanilla flavor doesn’t overpower the green tea base. It seems fairly well balanced. I’ll probably buy more of this tea when I use up my current stash.
Flavors: Cardamom, Green, Vanilla
Preparation
I’m not the target for this tea. I don’t even know why I bought this when I don’t enjoy the combination of fruit flavoring and menthol (in this case eucalyptus).
This smells like a fruity Hall’s cough drop. The taste is bland with no depth. The eucalyptus menthol that is so strong in the aroma is much less prominent in the mouth. I can taste a generic melon flavoring (watermelon, cantaloupe, honeydew), grass, eucalyptus. I can’t taste the lemongrass, rosehips or dragonfruit, which is I think easily overshadowed by the euc leaf and melon flavor. There is a quality that skirts mineral into metallic. It is a cooling tea, I’ll give it that.
Boring. Last serving of the sample pouch is cold brewing. Will it find redemption?
Wait, I do taste the lemongrass when it cools a bit on the second steep.
Flavors: Artificial, Eucalyptus, Fruity, Grass, Lemongrass, Medicinal, Melon, Menthol, Metallic, Mineral
Preparation
This feels like the innocence of limber and languid ice cream truck summers at my grandparents’ house, rolling right past the tumultuous teen years and into those humid days and hazy nights of — hey nineteen — living on my own. A still impressionable girl developing her poise and confidence as a young woman.
Strange. Tasty. Needs a stronger base.
Edited to add: If you ever come across this review, Dad, thanks for the memories. It was nice to talk yesterday.
Song pairing: Steely Dan — Hey Nineteen
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5J7IrPVLc4U
Flavors: Cream, Grass, Mineral, Orange, Orange Zest, Spicy, Vanilla, Wood
Preparation
It’s 100F currently and not even peak temperature for the day. So what am I doing? Drinking a hot black tea of course!
I’m digging these August Uncommon blends that I received as a gift from Mastress Alita. This one’s mellow, medium-dark and herbal, not so in-your-face as the Dots and Loops I had yesterday and this morning.
Light earthy, rich and herbal aroma. Sip is thyme and juniper, with rosemary to a much lesser extent. The tea quickly expands into a moderate earthy puerh note with light malt from the black tea, tanginess I attribute to the black currant, minerals and a hint of molasses. The juniper persists but isn’t dramatic. The herbs flow through lightly. It finishes the same with additions of tannins and oiliness. Despite the thin body, everything’s slick, my tongue, my teeth and there is a soft and persistent tongue-numbing effect.
Overall, it’s definitely a smooth, savory tea — herbal, woodsy and earthy. Pretty neutral taste for me that makes a fine hot tea for a blistering and dry California summer day.
Addendum: brewed 4g to 8oz western and the liquor was substantially thicker. I really enjoy the character of this tea! Upped from 80 to 85.
Flavors: Cedar, Dark Wood, Earth, Forest Floor, Herbaceous, Herbs, Malt, Mineral, Molasses, Smooth, Tangy, Tannin, Thyme
Preparation
This tea is so good!
The dry leaf, wet leaf, aroma and taste all stick to the same palette with no surprises. That doesn’t mean it’s a straightforward tea. This blend of savory, sweet, tart, fruity-floral and spicy has a load of depth.
The apple aroma and flavor is unique; I wouldn’t say it’s green apple but very close — almost sweet like candy but very floral, somehow reminiscent of both crisp and tart fresh green apples and the deeper, comforting aroma of some kind of heritage red apples baked with brown sugar. Clove, fennel and caraway create a sweet, herbal, citrusy, almost peppery and pungent rye-like taste, of which the perfume lingers as an ether after the swallow. All of these flavors are layered into a black tea base that’s malty and somewhat bready with cleansing tannic and mineral qualities.
The tea is actually pretty refreshing for a liquor so savory. I think I’ll keep sipping on this with today’s 95-100F temps. I’d love to try it in the fall since it reminds me of Oktoberfest but the remainder of this gift from Mastress Alita won’t last more than a week. August Uncommon has some interesting teas. Maybe I’ll suck it up and place an order later this year. Thanks, MA :)
Edit: 2nd infusion is watery but still has the flavors of added ingredients. Going to try with higher leaf, shorter steep next time in hopes of pulling out a more substantial resteep.
Flavors: Bread, Brown Sugar, Citrus, Clove, Fennel, Floral, Fruity, Green Apple, Malt, Mineral, Pepper, Red Apple, Rye, Spicy, Tannic, Tart
Preparation
I still haven’t even gotten around to trying this one yet. And now it’s buried deep in a moving box with all my other teas. Le sigh.
Finally close this Thursday, I can’t wait to finally get all my shit out of boxes! I’ve had everything boxed up for pretty much two months straight now. Ugh!
I seem to enjoy this one more than the other Steepsterites. The dry leaf hits you with warm prune (hey, I like prunes) and a shot of booze. Steeped, I don’t really get hazelnut brittle but mostly creamy cocoa butter and brandied prunes. The base is subtle and pairs perfectly with the fruit. Adding milk does kill the soft cocoa butter background, and you are left with a whisper of plum. I’m glad I just got a sample size, but for what it’s worth, it was money and time well spent even though it’s not my favourite blend of theirs.
This one was malty yet had a thin mouthfeel, which was a little strange since I find malty teas to have a thicker mouthfeel. Also, of the three times I had it, each and every time, it was simultaneously astringent. All it did was make me crave a strong, malty Assam.
Don’t get me wrong, it was good, but it didn’t knock my socks off.
I bought a sample in my last order but polished it off a couple weeks ago. All I recall is that this was vaguely sweet but lacked an obvious caramel note. The pumpkin was very mild? The good news is that the base wasn’t crazily woodsy. Quite well-behaved in that respect. Adding milk just made it taste like a sweetened pumpkin. Still no warm, browned caramel.
Sipdown:112
I revisited this one and this last cup was not good. Since it was the bottom of the back there was way too much blackberry leaf. Between the much sweeter than usual taste with the savory ingredients, it was rather unpleasant.
Definitely a strange tea but I wish it was tastier given that it’s a Twin Peaks-inspired blend. Though I didn’t dislike it to the degree that many others on here have. Excluding this particular bottom of the bag cup of course. Of course now that I just finished off my sample pouch of this I notice the recommendations. It seems that the company recommends adding milk or adding booze and making a hot toddy.(a hot toddy with this tea sounds odd to me though)
Silly me ordering tea when I have barely been touching the stash I have as it’s been collecting dust over the past while. But once I saw that August restocked on Passage, I just had to do it.
Sample size of this. The fennel is the most prominent note here, tannins quite strong, but the apple is on the faint side, which I don’t mind. I’m at the very least glad it isn’t a fake, strong candy apple flavour you get from other companies (I think we all know…). The mouthfeel is thin and I’m left with astringency.
This is one I’ve been looking forward to trying for a long time now, and I have to say – it was worth the wait! At this point, I probably have three other beloved orange-flavored teas in my stash, but this one still has a place! The green tea is mellow and almost buttery. The orange isn’t fake or overbearing. There’s a vanilla flavor that complements the whole thing. I sipped this cup slowly at work yesterday, and I loved every drop.
The main flavor here is eucalyptus. It’s light, cooling, and not at all bitter. I enjoyed it without sugar, and once I put the sugar in I kind of regretted it. Definitely a unique flavor! At first, I wished I could have tasted more of the melon, but the flavor was pleasant and interesting enough that I’m glad it just has its own thing going on. This is a good one! Best lukewarm.
Inkling Advent Day 9. I remember ordering this tea in one of my first AU orders 5+ years ago, and I didn’t love it at the time. I’m happy to say that tastes change, and I’m enjoying this a lot more. I liked it warm. The flavors were complex and different. It was tangy in a pleasant way!
Warm, I taste lime and peach with a bit of creaminess and some bitterness. As it cools, there’s more bitterness and I can’t find the other flavors anymore. I didn’t get any pistachios in my strainer, so that’s probably why I don’t taste any. I quite enjoyed the fun flavor combination, and next time I’ll make sure to drink it all while it’s hot!
Sipdown! (2 | 349)
Mastress Alita’s Sipdown Challenge (November) – “A tea the flavor of a favorite cake”
Okay, so it’s not really a normal cake flavor, but I looooove orange cake! Little Debbie used to make orange-flavored zebra cakes, and I miss them so much. The sweet orange just goes so well with vanilla frosting for those yummy creamsicle vibes.
Anyway, this is a nice enough lovely orange-vanilla tea. The orange is sweet, like those jelly orange slices. A little more zestiness or tartness would be nice, actually. The vanilla is decadent and creamy, while simultaneously reminding me of a marshmallow. I definitely get the aromatic woodiness that I guess is from the jatoba, and it does remind me somewhat of sandalwood (as the description promises).
I think my only issue with this tea is the base is a Chinese sencha, and it just tastes like slightly grassy nothing. It’s not offensive per se, it just makes the flavoring overall taste too strong because it lacks the flavor to support it. So I probably won’t reorder it, but enjoyed my pouch! Also, I could see this making a lovely perfume…
Flavors: Candy, Creamy, Floral, Grass, Marshmallow, Orange, Perfume, Sandalwood, Smooth, Sweet, Vanilla, Woody
Preparation
I agree re: the sencha! I was just drinking this one the other day and wishing the base were a little stronger.