How long can this winning streak last? Authori-tea gives our Nepal tea top marks!
It’s like your favorite local sports team that breaks out strong at the beginning of the season. We are headed for the Super Bowl of Tea! Super Bowl!
Thursday, March 5th, 2009
How long can this winning streak last? Authori-tea gives our Nepal tea top marks!
It’s like your favorite local sports team that breaks out strong at the beginning of the season. We are headed for the Super Bowl of Tea! Super Bowl!
Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
Don’t pretend you don’t Google yourself sometimes, nobody will believe you… We’re proud of our self-adoring ways.
We got a great shout from Karen at Cool Hunting. It’s so damn complimentary I had to post it.
Wednesday, March 4th, 2009
I hate to write snarky reviews but since I have a spare moment, what the hell. Have you tried the Ntingwe Kwazulu Leaf Tea from Taylors of Harrogate? I have, and it is with deepest regret that I must inform you of its inadequacies. Really, it’s not that good. Taylors of Harrogate is one of those brands that always fools me into thinking it will be better than it is. (Note to readers — beware of tea that comes in fancy packaging. Except for ours, of course!) Much like Twinings, this brand looks good on the shelf and can usually be found at high-end groceries like Balducci’s, but I swear it all tastes the same.
According to the box, Taylors discovered the South African Ntingwe tea estate deep in the wooded hills of Kwazulu Natal, perhaps while searching for the lost apostrophe that belongs in their name. The package description is a little vague — they personally select only the finest hand-picked seasonal teas yet they don’t specify whether this is, in fact, one of them. Looks and tastes like a machine-farmed tea to me. The hip, tea-insider term for this type of tea is CTC, or cut, tear, curl. You might as well be saying rape, pillage, burn to an orhodox tea enthusiast but I’m usually more forgiving. One thing I like about CTC teas is that after brewing the leaves look like milk-logged Grape Nuts. I enjoy that. If you were never a fan of Grape Nuts you may have a different reaction.
Getting back to the tea, it’s totally unremarkable. Let’s face it, it’s kind of a pain to brew loose tea in the first place so if I’m going to go through all the trouble I want there to be some benefit, some reason why I’m not just drinking a Tazo teabag tea. Come to think of it, Tazo seems a little more refined than this. Crikey.

Monday, March 2nd, 2009
“Wow. A Dragonwell that doesn’t smell like funk….imagine that!”
Now that’s a great start to a great review.
Jessica over at Authori-Tea.com is known for her honest tea reviews so we knew we had to get our Series 1 Set in her hands, pronto.
She doesn’t disappoint: it’s a fantastic review of our Dragonwell and we couldn’t be happier. We’re blushing, honestly.
Saturday, February 28th, 2009
The only problem, if there is one, with being busy tea executives is that we’re often inundated with tea samples. Inundated, I say. I am compelled to try them, studiously, and give them a fair assessment and all that. I make notes, sometimes compose a little poem if I really like one. A real hardship, I know. There are times, however, when I just want to drink a cup of tea and not have to think about it, and at times like these I turn to trusty old favorites like Harney & Sons Earl Grey. I just finished up another big tin of the stuff (the standard grade — not the supreme) and I highly recommend it.
Like pretty much all of the teas I’ve tried from Harney this one is a solid citizen. Traditionally, Earl Grey is a strongish black tea scented with the oil of bergamot, a relatively obscure but talented citrus fruit. Many Earl Greys I’ve tried have a really cloying perfume-laden taste that I can’t stand. Even worse, some have a vanilla or “creme” scent thrown in as extra punishment. Harney’s is no such beast — the base tea is good and strong and the bergamot oil they use is bright and a little tart (as it should be) but has what I can only describe as a wide taste. Dynamic & mellow. I’m not usually one for flavored tea but in general the goal is to find one that manages to taste like tea in addition whatever scents and headbands have been used to dress it up, and this one succeeds.
Best of all it is cheap and readily available. I usually pick it up at Williams Sonoma in and 8oz. tin for a mere $12. They make a wide assortment of higher-grade Earl Greys but I really like this coach-class bev.
