I spent a good part of yesterday at a silent meditation retreat in the city. This is the tea that I picked as the first one of the day to set me in motion. The rest of the day I spent with various oolongs.
My experience with 52Teas berried black teas has been that there hasn’t been enough berry. 52Teas appears to be remedying this issue here with this tea. Hurray for the tea to berry balance! The raspberry flavour is true and real and comes through with good proportion to the lovely black base.
Even though I had given the bag a good shake to distribute all things, I am not really detecting the piquant element here. Even if I squint.
Maybe the next cup or the one after that will be the spicy one.
I have considered that a bit of cream here would not go amiss. And vanilla cream, even better.
That said, a very enjoyable cup, nonetheless. I am starting this day off with another cup with similar results. Lovely.
Now if the neighbour with the tile cutter machinery would come to his senses and realize that it is Sunday and that construction noise is against the law. People, *&^%!
Flavors: Raspberry
The spice comes from the little bits of chili pepper in it – so you want to be sure to shake the pouch to redistribute the ingredients so that you don’t get a bunch of chili peppers in one measurement. I cut the chili peppers (in this case, there are two types, smoked chilies and cayenne chilies) in to pieces (I don’t use chili powder or pre-cut chili flakes – I get the whole chilies and cut them myself. (I do this to remove a good portion of the seeds so that it’s not TOO spicy.) Anyway – that’s the way I would recommend approaching this (and other teas spiced with chili from me). If you’re still hesitant with the spice – look closely at the tea before you steep it – and remove some of the little slices of chili peppers.
Thanks for the advice! I may remove some of the chili pieces next time – it was just a bit too hot for me but the flavour of the tea was so lovely!
yeah – I often get comments about the opposite – that it’s not spicy enough – so with this one in particular, I remember thinking, if I’m gonna call it “picante” – it better have a good kick of spice. So I cut up more chilies than I typically do. (Example: when I made the Mayan Chocolate Chai – I had several people contact me to tell me that it’s not as spicy as Frank’s version of the same tea – and the reason is that instead of using cayenne powder, I used whole dried cayenne peppers and sliced them up – the cayenne powder is obviously going to be spicier because the powder is intensely spicy – but I didn’t like the idea of using cayenne powder.)
At least with the cut up chili peppers, if someone wants something with less spice, they can see the little pieces of chili and remove some of them. (Just be sure to wash your hands after you handle those chili peppers – don’t touch your eyes!)