Organic Black Tea Powder

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea Leaves
Flavors
Ash, Astringent, Bitter, Brown Sugar, Caramel, Chestnut, Cinnamon, Cocoa, Coffee, Cream, Dust, Earth, Forest Floor, Grass, Leather, Lemon, Mushrooms, Nutmeg, Nuts, Paper, Raisins, Smoke, Walnut, Wood
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by eastkyteaguy
Average preparation
Boiling 3 g 8 oz / 236 ml

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From Mandala Tea

Portable goodness comin’ at cha!

Drink your tea… drink ALL of your tea. Delicious and earthy made hot. Mix it into a paste with a teaspoon or two of boiling water and add more hot water and drink up.

Tea-riffic in smoothies for an added boost. Throw a 1/2 to 1 teaspoon of this in a shaker with lemonade and ice and shake shake shake, shake shake shake, shake your black tea. Such a treat! See recipe in “additional info.”

About Mandala Tea View company

Company description not available.

4 Tasting Notes

70
1048 tasting notes

Now this was a weird one! This was the last tea I drank before I got sick in September, and prior to trying it, I had never previously tried black tea powder. I expected it to basically be prepared like matcha, and I was right. To me, it kind of came off somewhere between a Yunnan black tea and either a ripe pu’erh or a Liu Bao.

I prepared this tea by dumping approximately three grams of loose tea powder in an eight ounce mug and then adding a little 212 F water. After mixing the water and tea powder into a paste, I filled the mug with 212 F water and stirred briskly with a spoon. That’s it.

Prior to preparation, the tea powder gave off aromas of dust, earth, wood, old paper, smoke, and grass. After preparation, the aroma profile of the tea liquor did not seem different from that of the tea powder. In the mouth, I detected notes of earth, mushroom, forest floor, dust, grass, lemon rind, wood, cocoa, old paper, leather, smoke, and cream that were balanced by hints of ash, raisin, caramel, nutmeg, roasted walnut, brown sugar, coffee, roasted chestnut, betel nut, and cinnamon. The tea liquor was very gritty and bitter in the mouth and possessed a pronounced astringency. The aftertaste was odd, reminding me greatly of either a ripe pu’erh or a Liu Bao from Guangxi.

Honestly, I still have no clue how I feel about this tea. It was strange and not something I would be in any rush to try again, but at the same time, it was not exactly unpleasant. I kind of hated it at first, but the more of it I drank, the more I warmed up to it. If you can get past the gritty texture, the bitterness and astringency of the tea liquor, and the odd combination of aromas and flavors, this is actually something of a fun little offering with more depth and complexity than one should reasonably expect.

Flavors: Ash, Astringent, Bitter, Brown Sugar, Caramel, Chestnut, Cinnamon, Cocoa, Coffee, Cream, Dust, Earth, Forest Floor, Grass, Leather, Lemon, Mushrooms, Nutmeg, Nuts, Paper, Raisins, Smoke, Walnut, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 3 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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77
15695 tasting notes

Made a huge mug of this one, with some added milk.

This was a perfect example of smooth, full bodied black tea with really sweet notes! I found it incredibly malty in the body notes with top notes of honey and milk chocolate and supporting undertones and finishing notes that were really bread heavy. Freshly baked, sweet French bread in particular! So smooth, so tasty! It was incredibly delicious!

Does anyone else know any companies that sell black tea matcha like this? I’d love to explore more teas/‘matchas’ like this one!

Mastress Alita

I’ve been really curious about this one; is it prepared the same way as matcha?

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