50-50 Delight

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Cream, Orange, Tart
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Fusion Teas
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 30 sec

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I think I’m gonna hang in the towel after this one and just drink favorites for the rest of the night. Nothing new is tasting great to me, and I think it might be me today, not the tea. This is...” Read full tasting note
  • “What to drink while watching protesters storm the nations capitol? Something new while listening to all the conspiracy theorists rage on! I wonder if I’ll forever associate orange tea with...” Read full tasting note
  • “It’s that time of year! Sip-down time. All those teas are piling up, and piling up, and piling up and I need to drink them. I was saving my fusion teas to make ice-tea with in the summer but this...” Read full tasting note

From Fusion Teas

Imagine a tea that gives you memories of hot summers and Creamsicles to cool you down. The popular 50-50 Bar has officially made a comeback, this time in a black tea blend. Bold citrus notes and creamy vanilla create one very satisfying blend.

Ingredients: Black Tea, orange peel, rose hips, apple bits, safflowers, rose petals with orange vanilla and lemon flavor.

About Fusion Teas View company

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3 Tasting Notes

612 tasting notes

I think I’m gonna hang in the towel after this one and just drink favorites for the rest of the night. Nothing new is tasting great to me, and I think it might be me today, not the tea.

This is tangy-orange more than sweet-orange, though it does have a creamy softness to it (not over-the-top, lightly so). It’s ok but I need to find my “screaming straight-up creamy sweet kiddie creamsicle” tea at some point. They’re all either too bright/zesty or too refined/soft to sate that particular craving. Hm.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec
Sil

i haven’t had it in a while but my vague recollection is that Herbal Infusions does a great orange lapacho tea that was like a creamsicle to me..sadly it’s not on the website yet..and i’ve been waiting and waiting and waiting…so that i can order it and see if my memory is right or if my tastebuds have changed too much in the year. If i manage to get some, i’ll poke you and send you a cup or two to try heh

ifjuly

how funny, i just placed a HI order thanks to all the raves in that “i want hot chocolate tea” thread. i’m in a habit now of checking steepster’s top picks for a company before i order stuff to see if there’s anything highly rated i wouldn’t have thought to get, and the lapacho’s right up there so i was bummed it’s not on the site yet too, ha. i will keep that in mind though—i don’t know why i’m so hellbent on creamsicle tea lately but i am! thanks for the heads up and the super kind offer for a sample someday too. :D

Sil

oh i was on an orange creamsicle kick for the longest time…there’s another company that had a really good one but i totally can’t think of which it was.. hmmm

MissB

I might be wrong, however Tea Gschwendner’s Orange Creme is quite lovely. http://shop.tgtea.com/Orange-Creme-001601-500/

Sil

mmm good to know missb!

ifjuly

yes, thank you! tick, another shopping list entry…

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1724 tasting notes

What to drink while watching protesters storm the nations capitol? Something new while listening to all the conspiracy theorists rage on! I wonder if I’ll forever associate orange tea with unrest.

This is very orangey! I expected there to be chocolate in it since chocolate and strong orange seem to go hand in hand in tea, but there isn’t any here! There is something dark/deep tasting in this that balances the brighter notes of the orange nicely in the way that chocolate does. There is a dry mouth sensation after each sip that I’m not into. I think I like this tea, but further investigation is needed!

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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30 tasting notes

It’s that time of year! Sip-down time. All those teas are piling up, and piling up, and piling up and I need to drink them. I was saving my fusion teas to make ice-tea with in the summer but this guy was lurking at the bottom of my tea-basket, untried! How dare it avoid my taste-buds for this long.

The loose leaf is a mixture of black tea and bits of dried plant material. There are rose-hips and a bunch of other stuff that are in the description for anyone that is interested. The smell is creamy oranges, and some coconut? It’s pleasant, not offensive. Good signs.

I brewed this tea following the instructions provided. I also added a touch of sugar. I have found the Fusion teas that I acquired do like a little sugar. Like salt when cooking used to heighten the flavour, but not make the food salty I believe that sugar with certain teas can be used to accentuate the flavours hidden within. I’m sure some purists will disagree with me, that’s fine, flavoured teas are at times a whole different animal and must be treated as such otherwise you might be left with a lack-lustre experience. Also it is worth trying just to see what you can tease from the tea.

But I digress, something that I am fond of doing and at times find myself inexplicably and ineffably incapable of illustrating why. So this tea is pretty good. Orange creaminess, and a sour tang that I think is from the rose-hips. If you have ever eaten rose-hips you will understand. The sourness is not nice in this tea, even though I do enjoy sour flavours. It doesn’t work with the orange cream flavours. Whilst this is a nice cup, and I think that it will make a wonderful ice-tea, I do think that the flavouring is a tad confused and there is too much going on. It all becomes muddled. Would I drink it hot again? No. Would I drink it iced? Yes. Just like Fusion tea’s key lime tea, I think iced is the way to go with this one.

All in all, good tea, confused a little, thinking about it more, the sourness is actually kind of like wood sorrel. Anyone who forages will know the tangy taste of Oxalis acetosella. There is a sorrel tea that is common in Jamaica, this tea has a similar colour and flavour, other than the orange flavours. Look up sorrel-ginger tea if you are interested in finding this particular stuff.

Flavors: Cream, Orange, Tart

Fjellrev

I had no idea sorrel was an alternate term for it!

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