Organic Orange Spice Lemongrass Tisane

Tea type
Fruit Herbal Blend
Ingredients
Natural Cinnamon Flavor, Natural Orange Flavor, Organic Cinnamon, Organic Ginger, Organic Lemongrass, Organic Orange Peel
Flavors
Cardamom, Mint, Orange, Ginger, Lemon, Medicinal, Spices, Spicy
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Caffeine Free
Certification
Fair Trade, Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by Shae
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 6 min, 0 sec 8 oz / 236 ml

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

2 Want it Want it

1 Own it Own it

5 Tasting Notes View all

From Arbor Teas

Warm up with our organic, caffeine-free Orange Spice Herbal Infusion! Lemongrass, orange, cinnamon and ginger combine to create a light green infusion that is pleasantly sweet and citrusy, with a bit of heat. Like all of our flavored blends, this Orange Spice Herbal Infusion uses only the highest quality essential oils and botanical ingredients, insuring an excellent cup every time!

Ingredients: organic lemongrass, organic orange peel, organic cinnamon, organic ginger root, and natural cinnamon and orange flavors

Suggested serving size: two level teaspoons

Sustainability is a cornerstone of Arbor Teas’ business philosophy. In addition to offering an exclusively organic selection of teas, they recently became the first tea company to offer their whole catalog in 100% backyard compostable packaging. They’ve also carbon-offset the entire supply chain of their products, from origin to the customer, making Arbor Teas the greenest option for Earth-conscious tea drinkers, and one of few tea companies recognized by Green America.

About Arbor Teas View company

We’re tea enthusiasts with a lot of passion. Passion for top quality tea, the environment, fair trade, and our community. We started Arbor Teas in Ann Arbor, Michigan, intent on creating a tea company as passionate as we are. Our passion is reflected in every aspect of Arbor Teas. You’ll certainly notice it in the exceptional collection of teas we offer - one of the largest catalogs of USDA certified organic teas around, nearly three-quarters of which are Fair Trade Certified®.

5 Tasting Notes

99
2816 tasting notes

I’m finishing off the rest of my sample today, I am going to order more. yummy yum yum

ScottTeaMan

I was just on Arbor Teas site and saw a recipe for Kombucha. I remember my mom made some ONCE, many years ago, and we hated the taste. I’ll bet I’d like it now. My tastes have changed so much in the last 10-15 years.

TeaBrat

I like kombucha but i’ve been into weird health food for as long as I can remember…

Mercuryhime

Sounds tasty!

ScottTeaMan

What does…..the tisane or the kombucha??

Mercuryhime

The tusane sounds tasty. :) I’m not a fan if kombucha. Too fizzy and funky.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

79
911 tasting notes

Okay, I’m still sick so technically, I probably shouldn’t be trying new teas until my taste buds decide to fully rejoin the party. But c’mon! This one has got to encourage that along, right? I mean, ginger is good for your sinuses and lemongrass just screams healthful to me. Plus, it’s got orange and I’m a sucker for anything orange flavored. Besides, all that spice and citrus has to help my head and chest, yes? Yes.

The dry mix smells surprising – very earthy with a nice splash of sweet orange. I’m thinking mulled cider if cider came in orange flavor. He husband mentioned orange cloves. And I can see that because the more I sniff, the more I end up thinking cozy-by-the-fireplace thoughts. I really was expecting something more summer-day-in-the-sun but that’s really because I got stuck on the “orange and lemongrass” side of things and not the “cinnamon and ginger”.

When my little tea timer went off and I wandered into the kitchen to pour, the whole kitchen smelled sweetly of cinnamon. Nice! Sticking my nose in the cup, I get a very orange-ginger smell. It’s a little sweeter because of the lemongrass and cinnamon, but this smells very similar to my oh-so-adored Samovar Orange Ginger (and thus to a lesser extent, Rishi’s Tangerine Ginger which is just not cool but has a similar-ish taste profile).

My first sip, though, makes me change that assessment. Yes, I can still see similarities, but the cinnamon in this one really changes up the game and puts this in a distinct class. For me, this is officially a cinnamon tea. Cinnamon teas are hard for me because images of Red Hots (or Hot Damn – ah, college!) float through my mind with each sip and I just don’t enjoy that. But while this isn’t quite the cinnamon flavor I’d put on my toast in the morning, this registers just shy of the Red Hot comparison. Lemongrass seems to pick up next, adding a kind of clean lightness to the flavor (which honestly probably keeps the cinnamon from becoming too heavy). The ginger adds a nice warmth to it and I think the orange comes in at the bottom of the taste as a sweetness that couples with the lemongrass. There’s a nice depth to the flavor here that makes this very easy to sip. Uhm, where did the rest of my cup go? No really. Did I drink it that quickly?

This isn’t going to be competing with Samovar’s Orange Ginger for the tingly orange herbal place in my pantry but it is good so I could see giving it the cinnamon place in my pantry. Of course, I don’t currently have a cinnamon place in my pantry. But it’s hard for me to find herbals that don’t make me make a face when I sip so I might have to make a cinnamon place because this definitely ranks above the “only good enough to not make me cringe” category. I’m almost out of all smoky teas in my pantry (how on earth did that happen??) so at some point I’ll be making an Arbor Teas order to get some of their lapsang. I think I’ll throw some of this in too.

ETA: Oooh. Second steep (7:00) is like the cuddly-warm lemongrass steep. Lemongrass with a cinnamon undernote and then a warm tingle of ginger with a splash of sweet orange. Tasty!
2tsp (=2.5g)/8oz

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec
gmathis

I remember my grandma helping me make potpourri thingies by sticking cloves into an orange and then dusting it with … something powdery; maybe alum or corn starch? That’s what your description made me think of.

Auggy

Aw, yay memories! I wouldn’t be surprised if the taste made you think of that, too, just because it gave me a very Christmas-warm-by-the-fire vibe.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

54
2171 tasting notes

I picked up on a few different scents from the dry leaves: cardamom first, followed by a cooling sensation similar to that of mint, and finally a slight orange note. Once brewed, it reminded me of a chamomile or light green tea both in perfume and in flavor. I wasn’t able to taste any of the spices in the tea while drinking, but my taste buds have been a bit off since I’ve been sick so that might be it. Overall, this was a nice and simple cup for a calm, relaxing morning.

Flavors: Cardamom, Mint, Orange

Preparation
Boiling 7 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

Login or sign up to leave a comment.