Green Pear

Tea type
Fruit Green Blend
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Pear
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Jason
Average preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 30 sec 17 oz / 500 ml

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From Art of Tea

This is what springtime tastes like! Succulent, juicy essence of pear blended with fragrant and fresh organic sencha, organic pan fried greens, marigolds, and apple bits. Renew your senses from the inside out with this sweet, crisp, blossomy infusion.

Water Temperature: 180-185 F degrees
Steep Time: 3 minutes
Ingredients: Organic Green Tea, organic Apple Bits, Organic Marigolds, and Natural Flavors
Origin: Art of Tea Blend

About Art of Tea View company

Art of Tea is a tea importer and wholesaler based in Los Angeles, California. We hand blend and custom craft the world’s finest organic teas and botanicals. Our teas are carefully selected directly from growers, each one offering a unique story.

3 Tasting Notes

85
2 tasting notes

Actually had this prepared for me as an iced tea by Art of Tea at their office in Los Angeles. As is with ice, it was surprisingly sweet. No added sugar needed.

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75
2 tasting notes

Delicious both hot and iced.

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90
2036 tasting notes

Pear seems like a tricky flavor. I’ve had pear teas and while they’re always tasty, they don’t always taste like pear.

If the dry leaf was any indication, though, that wasn’t going to be a problem here. The tea in the tin smells like the juicy run off from canned pears, without the sugar.

Steeped, the aroma is less intense and greener — the tea base comes out a bit more. But there’s still more than a definite hint of pear in the aroma. The tea is an intense gold color and remarkably clear.

It’s in the flavor, though, that this really shines. Though I have to focus my mind a bit on the warm pear desserts I’ve had in the past to get past the initial jarring effect of hot pear, that’s what this is. Hot pear, not sugary, with a grassy green sencha coming through mostly around the edges. It’s amazingly true to flavor, without any artificiality.

I dub this my official top pear tea so far.

Flavors: Pear

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 30 sec 2 tsp 17 OZ / 500 ML
ashmanra

I just realized I have never had a canned pear. In fact, I am not sure I ever registered that they were sold in cans, but now that I think about, my mother-in-law used them for a pear salad she made at Christmas but I never ate it. I think she put mayo on it and topped it with cheddar cheese. It’s a southern thing?

Starfevre

pear and mayo and cheddar sounds revolting, but that might be my northern sensibilities talking.

__Morgana__

My parents were raised in the depression and they always had canned fruit (and other canned goods) because they were very cheap, and they lasted essentially forever. So you could stock up during sales. :-) I switched to frozen vegetables when I got older and had my own house to avoid the sodium, but I still can’t really keep fresh vegetables in the house. I don’t get around to making them in time and they spoil.

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