Yule Log

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Roswell Strange
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10 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Mastress Alita’s January sipdown challenge Tea #4: A tea flavored like your favorite pie Stay with me a minute – I know “yule log” is not a pie!  But I was thinking CHOCOLATE because my favorite...” Read full tasting note
    83
  • “I made a huge mug of this. In hindsight, I wish I’d started with a smaller mug for my first try. The chocolate is there, but there’s another sort of weird flavor too. The leaf had a huge amount of...” Read full tasting note
    70
  • “So we had a blackout for 3 hours starting at 5:38 pm. I know that because that’s the time that was still on the stove when the power finally came back 3 hours later after we finished the dinner...” Read full tasting note
    71
  • “The dry leaf for this tea was my favourite smelling tea of all the Pud samples that I got – which was promising because it was also the only one of the teas that wasn’t available in a smaller size,...” Read full tasting note

From Pudtea

A real festive treat that will satisfy even the sweetest tooth! Rich chocolate and fudge flavours are swirled with black tea to create an indulgent mug of velvety goodness.

Available in 50g and 100g pouches.

INGREDIENTS

Black tea, apple, dates, raisins, cocoa nibs, chocolate pieces, natural flavouring.

BREWING INSTRUCTIONS

Add 1 teaspoon per cup (2 teaspoons if, like us, you prefer your tea in a mug). Add freshly boiled water and infuse for 2 to 4 minutes.

HOW WE LIKE IT

Enjoy as it is or with a drop of milk.

ALLERGENS

Contains: milk, soya

All our tea blends are made in small batches in a kitchen where nuts, gluten, dairy and other allergens may be present.

About Pudtea View company

Company description not available.

10 Tasting Notes

83
4185 tasting notes

Mastress Alita’s January sipdown challenge Tea #4: A tea flavored like your favorite pie

Stay with me a minute – I know “yule log” is not a pie!  But I was thinking CHOCOLATE because my favorite pie is very specific.  I love most types of pie – it’s my favorite dessert!  BUT my favorite is chocolate cream pie from a local shop.  It can’t just be any chocolate cream pie but THIS chocolate cream pie with the right consistency of chocolate pudding and thick, solid whip cream, the right crust, the perfect ratios of all three.  I could have it every day and never get sick of it, despite it being so incredibly rich and decadent.  I wouldn’t even consider other chocolate cream pie to remotely reach the top of that list.  So this is a chocolate tea that fits the theme and it’s done now.
2022 sipdowns: 7

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70
2301 tasting notes

I made a huge mug of this. In hindsight, I wish I’d started with a smaller mug for my first try. The chocolate is there, but there’s another sort of weird flavor too. The leaf had a huge amount of chocolatey ingredients compared to tea, which is fine with me. There’s just something about this blend that isn’t coming together as well as their caramel brownie flavor. When it cooled, I enjoyed it a lot more. I didn’t notice the weird flavor, and there was a bit of saltiness that worked well with the chocolate (possibly just my imagination). Getting through the mug wasn’t too terrible after all.

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71
6444 tasting notes

So we had a blackout for 3 hours starting at 5:38 pm. I know that because that’s the time that was still on the stove when the power finally came back 3 hours later after we finished the dinner that my poor brother-in-law had to figure out how to cook without an oven. Thankfully we have a natural gas BBQ so he went out into the snow and cooked dinner that way. Of course we just finished the celebratory dessert lit by cell phone flashlights and portable bulbs when they came back on.

So with power comes a working kettle and tea. Plus a working frother and it is Christmas after all so an eggnog latte. I grabbed this tea because it seemed festive and though I have never had a yule log, this boasts flavors like chocolate, which tend to do well as lattes.

Drinking it now, its not bad. It is also not very interesting. Honestly, its a standard chocolate-y tea. The sort of chocolate that is like cheap quality milk chocolate that is neither as sweet or creamy as proper milk chocolate should be.

ashmanra

Oh dear! What an adventure!

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15678 tasting notes

The dry leaf for this tea was my favourite smelling tea of all the Pud samples that I got – which was promising because it was also the only one of the teas that wasn’t available in a smaller size, so I got the next size up because I still wanted to try it…

I tried it last night, and I did actually really enjoy it! The mouthfeel is REALLY oily because of all the melted down chocolate/fudge pieces in the blend but if you set that fact aside the chocolate flavour itself is very smooth and rich. It’s like a moist or more fudgey piece of chocolate cake, which I suppose is what a “Yule Log” is!? I know that a Yule Log is a dessert (I think cake) in the shape of a traditional Yule Log but I don’t think it’s something that’s necessarily very popular in North America? I have seen them before, though! This is like the third UK based company I’ve seen this year with a Yule Log tea though, so maybe it’s a bigger thing ‘across the pond’? I’m not sure, though…

Anyway, this is not my favourite tea that I’ve had from Pud so far but I thought it was nice and I definitely don’t regret going for the larger size.

Martin Bednář

Yule sounds bit Nordic, but I have heard about Yule Log somewhere else. But where? In English classes? Honestly, I don’t know :)

ashmanra

Yule Log is a cake here, rolled and decorated to look like a log. Supposedly a special log was chosen and decorated with ribbon and greenery or berries to be lit on Christmas Eve. The log was lit as festivities began and hopefully was big enough that no one needed to tend the fire until the end of the partying. I have also read a tradition that the log was chosen by the servants and they were off duty as long as it burned, so a very big log indeed would have been chosen. Don’t know how much is true and how much tradition.

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