Assam Superb

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Autumn Leaf Pile, Brown Sugar, Caramelized Sugar, Dried Fruit, Malt, Raisins, Wood, Astringent, Cherry, Sweet, Tannic, Tart, Dark Bittersweet, Smoke
Sold in
Loose Leaf, Tea Bag
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 15 sec 19 oz / 561 ml

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

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From Fortnum & Mason

Assam tea, indigenous to India’s steamy Brahmaputra Valley, is one of the world’s oldest varieties. The aptly named Assam Superb has the rich, dark liquor and smooth, round, malty flavour prized by the connoisseur. Full body and flavour at any time of the day.

Tasting Notes
Our aptly-named Assam Superb is rich with body and flavour, with a malty smoothness to boot. Bold and satisfying, it pairs perfectly with savoury Afternoon Tea sandwiches like Ham and Mustard or Smoked Salmon.

About Fortnum & Mason View company

Company description not available.

20 Tasting Notes

70
15350 tasting notes

Had this earlier today from mom’s stash of tea. While its not a bad little cup, it was a little too bitter for me at 3mins. I likely won’t get another chance to have some but if I did I’d try 2.5 minutes with water just a little cooler, to see if that helps. I much prefer the breakfast tea I have from fortnums to this one but it was good to try.

Ysaurella

the F&M teas are generally very strong and malty. I recognize their qualities but maybe this is just not my kind of teas

Sil

I enjoy a few of their teas, but i’ve also had less than amazing experiences with some as well. I think they’re a hit and miss kind of company for me at least…

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92
417 tasting notes

This is the tea that my father used to always bring back from his business trips to London, and I’m always going to love it probably more than it deserves. A nice strong Assam!

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec
Bonnie

I’d drink it for the memories.

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60 tasting notes

a friend gave me this marvelous tea. it’s rare that i can find a tea that is strong enough, but this one gets there.

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2972 tasting notes

Ashmanra shared enough of this for me to have it three ways: super high-octane overleafed unleaded, a baby mild second steep, and one properly tended cuppa.

Either way, I was a little surprised to see such small leaves from a classy F & M selection. Not quite PG Tips CTC size, but close. Which resulted in plain old British breakfast tea without much subtlety—just like me and just like I like it. Very smooth, not much bite, very drinkable straight up without additives—although I added a dried orange slice to the baby mild steep and it was delicious.

ashmanra

Oooo, I have never thought of adding dried fruit…must try. I have some organic oranges standing by to become candied if I ever get around to it.

Evol Ving Ness

…super high-octane overleafed unleaded…

Hahahahaha, you’re killing me.

my local Greek bakery carries individually packaged pieces of candied fruit. I might try that as an on the side flavour enhancer. Where do you get dried orange slices, gmathis?

gmathis

I’ll have to double check because my husband found these … but the tag looks like it came from our Tuesday morning store. https://www.bellaviva.com/dried-oranges

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3397 tasting notes

FORTNUM & MASON ADVENT DAY 10

Ashman is off today so we had an everything bagel and tea in front of the fire. I forewarned him that this would probably be a milk and sugar tea for him and put some on the tea tray. He added it without tasting first. To get an idea of his tastes, he prefers white, oolong, green, and puerh plain and likes Bailin Gong Fu without additions but most other black tea is too astringent for him.

I drank it plain as long as the bagel lasted and found it to be a good tea for breakfast, with good flavor that held up even under the assault of the seasonings on the bagel. It didn’t feel too drying and it wasn’t sour. After the bagel was gone, the astringency was definitely noted and it was really drying my tongue, so I added milk and sugar and enjoyed the last bit quite a lot that way.

Ashman said it was fine, but he felt the body of the tea was not as creamy as he likes it to be when he adds milk and sugar. He said it felt a little watery to him, not in the ratio of leaf to water, but in the actual taste and body of the tea. He said he prefers to add milk to teas that already have a creamy body. He did drink two decent sized mugs of it, so he didn’t hate it. He said he didn’t find it too astringent, but he was having milk in it so probably wouldn’t have picked that up.

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78
4158 tasting notes

Sipdown! (37 | 37)

Another one I’ve been enjoying with milk and sugar lately. Apparently I’m on a tea with additions kick?

Anyway, having this last cuppa plain. I’m rather partial to Assam over Ceylon generally, and that’s the case here as well. This has a nice rich yet smooth malty flavor, pops of tart dried fruit and bottom notes of caramelized dark brown sugar. There is a touch of astringency at the tail end, despite my somewhat short steep. But it’s not enough to be distracting.

A pleasant Assam but not necessarily something I would specifically order. Enjoyed it while I had it though. :) I’m only at 5/24 for Fortnum sipdowns, heh…

Flavors: Astringent, Brown Sugar, Caramelized Sugar, Cherry, Dried Fruit, Malt, Raisins, Sweet, Tannic, Tart

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 min, 30 sec 3 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML

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65
6111 tasting notes

It appears this was likely from VariaTEA, so thank you!

I drank it this morning; found it to basically be a decent bagged black. I was pretty good on the infusion time, and didn’t find it terribly astringent, though assams are not generally my black of choice as I don’t care for the flavour profile. It had some strength, and flavour, but lacked in the chocolate/raisin/delicious black tea notes. Kinda stoked to have found a few of these teabags though; I may stash them somewhere useful in the event that I have a guest who wants “normal tea”, because I of course do not stock Red Rose or anything like that, and who wants to waste good Chinese blacks on such people? Haha.

Shanie O Maniac

I get that whole “normal tea” thing. I have one friend who only drinks pre-made instant and my mom thinks all tea is Lipton. So yeah, I keep some “normal tea” around for just such occasions. I think I may have convinced my mom to try a yunnan golden black once and if I recall her response was “It’s tea”. So frustrating.

VariaTEA

Honestly, I don’t remember this tea at all or sharing it.

Kittenna

@VariaTEA – I could be wrong, I just assumed since Sil mentioned in her notes that she got some from you. It definitely wasn’t something I picked up on my own, so my guesses were you or MissB, and she didn’t have a note on it!

Kittenna

@Shanie – yeah, we had some guests over and my mom/MIL were shocked that I had no regular tea to offer guests (we also didn’t have coffee, but my MIL brought some over because she knew that). Luckily, everyone who was over either wanted coffee or iced tea (Nestea powder).

I guess some people just can’t appreciate better teas… I used to think all black tea was like Lipton, but one taste of Laoshan Black changed that forever!

VariaTEA

It could have been me. I just don’t remember it lol

Kittenna

I suppose that just speaks to the genericness of this tea. Haha.

Roswell Strange

I also have some of this tea, which I got from VariaTEA :P

VariaTEA

Lol apparently I was just giving it all away :P

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80
735 tasting notes

Trying again with a shorter steep time. It still comes out very dark and bold. The smokiness is more in the aroma than the taste now. The bitterness has calmed, but it still stands up for itself. I bet I could get a second cup from these tea bags and have it come out even stronger than the first.

I wish the amounts of tea we fill in weren’t just in tsp or g. There should be a button for bags and tablespoons.

EDIT: Y’all, the caffeine in this is outta control. It’s going to be an herbal-only evening for me. Bzzzzz!

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 30 sec 24 OZ / 709 ML
Mastress Alita

I wish the tsp or g button let us do decimals. I nearly always do my grams as some odd measurement like 2.8g or 3.3 and it always rounds it off, not showing exactly how much tea I used.

Tabby

Yes! I had that same problem yesterday!

lizwykys

I didn’t even notice that until I read this! My 3.8 grams I logged earlier was rounded down to 3 (weirdly — why not up to 4?).Big difference.

Mastress Alita

Ya, it doesn’t even round properly, it just takes off your decimal amount. It’s very annoying.

Tabby

Agreed!

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80
262 tasting notes

My sweet wife was due some merchandise credits at the Williams Sonoma store. She so very nicely picked up this tea for me with her credits.

Assam is not my favorite tea as I prefer the Chinese products over those from India. I can’t always find Assam teas that are robust enough for my palate. However, I always try to experience new teas with an open mind. Hopefully, this Assam will be a great one.

My container for this tea was different than the one in the picture. It was also metal but round with a narrower neck. The cap had a cool plastic and reusable inner seal underneath it.

The unbrewed short brown leaves had the familiar aroma of Assam. I steeped them for five minutes at 212 degrees. The finished product was the color of maple syrup. The smell was sweet and malty.

The flavor had a sweet malty edge to it. I thought I detected a slight twinge of astringency during the first sip but it dissipated quickly and didn’t return.

I liked this Assam. It had sufficient tea flavor to keep my taste buds interested. I enjoyed the sweetness and malty emphasis in the taste. Some Assams have just tasted like weak tea to me. There was no unpleasant bitterness in the brief aftertaste. If you also are on the fence about Assam, you might want to take a chance on this one!

Flavors: Malt, Sweet

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec 3 tsp 24 OZ / 709 ML
NofarS

My favourite Assam as well :)

Stoo

It’s a good one for sure, NofarS! Thanks for your comment!

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6444 tasting notes

A friend of mine got me this as part of my holiday gift/care package when I was going through some rough times with my family. It’s not something I would have picked for myself because I am pretty picky about my straight black teas, though as far as blacks go, I have found success with Assams so I was hoping this would be the same. I took to brewing it but the directed parameters made me rather hesitant (3 mins in boiling water) especially when I saw the color of the tea getting very dark, very fast. So, I let the water cool and ended up brewing it for probably closer to 2 minutes. Unfortunately, despite the rich color, the result is pretty bland. What I am getting is a hint of smooth malt but overall it is coming off pretty monotone. Luckily I have many more tea bags to play around with in order to get this right.

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