I brewed this one for about two minutes at first with boiling water. Malty, smooth, sweet, with a little bit of tannin. Steep two for about 2 min and 30 sec and water at 190 degrees. Still malty, smooth, and sweet, but more cocoa and sweetness coming through with sweetness. Steep three at three minutes, and a stronger surge of malt, cocoa, sweetness, and a sneaking fruitiness.
I stopped, put the leaves in the fridge over night, and steeped it again at three minutes and fifteen seconds. Stronger fruitiness-almost citrus like hinting the dominant malt and cocoa, almost dashed by caramel. Steep four at about four minutes, and even sweeter with the same notes, but a more recognizable fruit. Cherry? Steep five at four minutes and 10 seconds. Something like chocolate covered cherries or raisins. I’ll stop here. Stored in the fridge again. The adventure to be continued another day.
I gotta say, I liked this black tea way more than the handmade one, though I need to sample that one again. This one was considerably smoother and sweeter. The first steep was okay, but as you can infer, I enjoyed it more and more as I steeped it. Maybe the fact that an ambrosia apple and an orange were close to the leaves in storage had an effect, but this tea has been one of my favorite samples so far from What-Cha.
Flavors: Astringent, Caramel, Cherry, Chocolate, Cocoa, Malt, Raisins, Sweet, Tannin