Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea, Jasmine Green Tea, Natural Flavours, Rose Petals
Flavors
Astringent, Bergamot, Bitter, Floral, Jasmine, Lavender, Powdery, Rose, Tea
Sold in
Bulk, Loose Leaf, Sachet
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Eelong
Average preparation
Boiling 3 min, 45 sec 10 oz / 295 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I will admit to having been swayed by the Tealyra description and reviews posted on their site. And I had not seen eelong’s tea note here on Steepster — a note that might have dissuaded me from...” Read full tasting note
    75
  • “I am begging run-of-the-mill tea blenders to stop adding green teas to black blends. Please. If you want a jasmine flavor, add actual jasmine flowers and not a cheap “jasmine green” that tastes...” Read full tasting note
    28

From Tealyra (formerly Tealux)

Lush, feminine, floral- roses are the most luxurious in the world of flowers- pair that with an English classic and you have it! Our Rosy Earl Grey is a blend of luxury black tea scented with bergamot essential oil, jasmine, lavender, and roses. With the classic distinctive flavor of Earl Grey- a traditional black tea complemented by rich citrusy bergamot oil, you would think there is no way to make a better brew, nothing could top it until now! Our inspiring Rosy Earl Grey is a slightly sharp black tea, bold, a tad bitter, with high rose floral notes, there is lavender in the mix but it isn’t prominent in the flavor. It tastes like a Turkish delight earl grey- It is absolutely wonderful. Sure to become an all-time favorite.

About Tealyra (formerly Tealux) View company

Company description not available.

2 Tasting Notes

75
184 tasting notes

I will admit to having been swayed by the Tealyra description and reviews posted on their site. And I had not seen eelong’s tea note here on Steepster — a note that might have dissuaded me from purchasing Rosy Earl Grey. However, I have been captivated by roses and rose scents since childhood, and was eager to try this blend. And I liked it! Mostly. I do also enjoy jasmine scents (and have before remarked on my memories of summertime play amongst the Star Jasmine bushes as a kid in California).

I do wish tea purveyors would be more strictly precise in their claims and ingredients. When a claim of “bergamot essential oil, jasmine, lavender” is made, I expect to find those precise ingredients listed, and not obscured behind the anonymity of “natural flavors” or a vague compound ingredient like “jasmine green tea”. The dry leaf was nicely fragrant of rose petals (not rosehips), and I was optimistic.

I steeped (a single cup) western style, according to direction: 1 tsp leaf in 8 oz (boiling alpine spring) water, for 3-1/2 min, in a stainless microscreen infusion basket. The jasmine aroma was more pronounced in the tea vapors, though I also detected scents of rose and bergamot. While sipping, I found it easy to identify each of the named ingredient flavors, largely in my sinuses, but with bergamot on the sides of my tongue, and with the lavender arriving late to the center back of my tongue in the finish of each sip. I only saw the green tea leaves and smelled their jasmine, but couldn’t really parse out a distinct taste of green tea. Perhaps the green tea accounted for the slight bitterness and bite with a little astringency that I noted (and which Tealyra described, too). The clear amber color undoubtedly came from the black tea content, though it was only barely detected as a flavor. Finally, in the last few sips of the cooler tea, I got a powdery floral hit on the roof of my mouth. Overall, this was a satisfying springtime bouquet that I would recommend and continue to enjoy from time to time, giving it a rating of 75 today, mostly docking points for the use of generic flavorings rather than actual biological components. I prefer a cup of plant origin, rather than the cheating of chemistry, which steals the magic.

I did not detect any notes of bubblegum, as reported by eelong. Thankfully.

Flavors: Astringent, Bergamot, Bitter, Floral, Jasmine, Lavender, Powdery, Rose, Tea

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 15 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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28
66 tasting notes

I am begging run-of-the-mill tea blenders to stop adding green teas to black blends. Please. If you want a jasmine flavor, add actual jasmine flowers and not a cheap “jasmine green” that tastes like bubblegum because someone tried flavoring it with essential oils instead of real jasmine. This would be a great inexpensive tea blend if it weren’t for that green tea. There’s just enough of it to overpower the taste of the earl grey and rose petals and give you the oversteeped boiled green tea taste instead (but with a note of bubblegum.) Eugh, I’d put the rest of the bag into the worm bin if there weren’t clearly essential oils in this. Those don’t belong in tea! Leave them out!

Flavors: Bitter, Jasmine

Preparation
Boiling 4 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML

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