Assam Golden Tip

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Keemunlover
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 16 oz / 473 ml

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  • “I never really love Assam teas. Not sure why I bought this one; I guess I am always hoping to be surprised. The dry leaves are beautiful, showing off a nice clean-looking and fine picking, with...” Read full tasting note
    70

From Mighty Leaf Tea

A traditional India Black Tea from the celebrated tea region, boasting bright golden tips, a sign of fine plucking.

About Mighty Leaf Tea View company

Mighty Leaf Tea was born for the sole purpose of infusing life into an ancient indulgence by creating tea products that reach new heights of quality and innovation. Our passion is creating the most incredible handcrafted tea blends found anywhere, globally sourcing the finest ingredients available. Paralleling the highest standards of quality at Mighty Leaf Tea is ongoing creative innovation.

1 Tasting Note

70
154 tasting notes

I never really love Assam teas. Not sure why I bought this one; I guess I am always hoping to be surprised. The dry leaves are beautiful, showing off a nice clean-looking and fine picking, with abundant golden tips interspersed throughout an attractive sea of black leaves. Not a dusty black like some teas, but a healthy, almost shiny, black. I think Mighty Leaf is great at picking teas, based on my sampling of some of their other teas, so I trust this is a decent example of a good Assam tea.

The tea gives a dark liquor, and a nice honey sweetness, and pretty much has a standard “black tea” flavor profile. Reminds me of a typical commercial black iced tea type flavor, but I am drinking it hot. But pretty much like buying an unsweetened bottle of Lipton or Gold Peak black iced tea or something like that.

Where this tea, and pretty much every other Assam I have ever tried, loses me, is at the end of the sip when the aftertaste emerges – Makes me feel like I’m sucking ashes out of a cigarette ashtray all of a sudden. Not a fan of that flavor. It isn’t so much the bitterness which bothers me, and there is some present, but just the “ashtray” sensation which seems to taint Assam teas in general.

Weird, because I love Yunnan black teas, and I understand they share a lineage with the Assam black teas grown in India. Not sure why it is so difficult to like them for me, then.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 16 OZ / 473 ML
Keemunlover

And as the tea cools somewhat below the temperature range in which I usually do most of my tea drinking, the ashtray taste fades away, almost dwindling to nonexistence. Which makes this tea much friendlier and more gulpable in this cooler range.

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