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Archive for the Loose Leaf Tea Category


The Tea SpotLight- Lady Lavender

by Katie on 05/11/2012 in Black Tea, Iced Tea, Loose Leaf Tea

Lavender lovers unite!

The Tea Spot has just released a brand new blend just for you. As a “lavender lady” myself, I have fallen completely head over heels for this month’s Tea SpotLight- our Lady Lavender.

Lady Lavender has one foot firmly planted in the Earl Grey blend we have come to know and love, and the other in something completely new. We’ve taken a classic Earl Grey black tea with bergamot base and embellished with lavender, vanilla, orange peel, and other citruses. This unique twist is soothing and uplifting all at once, is lovely hot and exceedingly refreshing iced!

The health benefits of black tea are numerous and include- anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-oxidant, and anti-aging properties. As always, our loose leaf tea is completely calorie-free, fat free, and gluten free so you can indulge without a care. And to sweeten the deal, lavender flower tea infusions are well known for relieving headaches and stress.

For best steeping practice infuse one teaspoon of leaves per eight ounces of boiling water for 3-5 minutes. Happy Sipping!

Lady Lavender Steeping

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If strength is your weakness, Assam is your tea

by maria on 04/28/2012 in Assam Tea, Black Tea, Loose Leaf Tea

Assam tea

Assam black tea - photo credit: The Tea Spot

So the saying goes, about “the strong one” – Assam tea is the one many of us wake up to. This brisk black tea is blended into English and Irish breakfast teas, and more than 400 different single estate Assams are available from this most prolific of all tea regions in the world.

Assam valley

Assam valley - photo credit: doniv

Everything about this tea is big – even the leaf. The larger leaves produce a darker and stronger tea, which makes it stand up well to milk and sugar. Local people love to drink spicy masala chai (brewed sweet tea with milk and spices) using Assam loose tea leaves. Amongst black teas, you can always pick out Assam by its distinctive malty aroma and honey finish to the taste. Even though it’s a very strong tea, Assam is velvety smooth.

The varietal of tea plant that comes from Assam is Camellia sinensis assamica, and its leaves are about twice as big as the Chinese varietal Camellia sinensis sinensis. Assam is one of only two regions in the world with native tea plants (along with Southern China). This very wet Himalayan valley extends over 500 miles along the Brahmaputra river. It gets 80 – 120 inches of rainfall annually, and parts of it look like a tropical jungle. Assam is home to the largest wildlife sanctuary in India, where you can still see the one-horned Indian Rhinoceros and the Asiatic Elephant.

One-horned Rhino - photo credit: Lip Kee

Assam tea steeps up into a beautiful dark liquor. Adding milk to the tea turns it to a characteristically ruby-amber hue.

The way to make a traditional English cuppa would be to put one teaspoon of loose leaf tea per cup into a warmed teapot. Fill the teapot with freshly boiled water and stir a few seconds with a tall spoon to “elevate” the tea. Let the tea steep for 3-5 minutes. The tea will get stronger and more bitter the longer it steeps. Many Britons add milk to their tea, a habit which began when tea was thought to be bad for your health. Milk was added, in an attempt to make it healthier. “Builders’ Tea” was inspired by British builders who would not work on a house without tea breaks as a way of structuring a hard day’s work. They prefer strong, smooth and mellow tea, like Assam, and drink it with milk and sugar. Builder’s Tea goes especially well with digestive biscuits, making for a hearty snack.

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The Tea SpotLight- Jasmine Pearls

by Katie on 04/15/2012 in Green Tea, Loose Leaf Tea, Reviews

This month, The Tea Spot “SpotLight” is on our Jasmine Pearls Green Tea. This delectably floral green tea is an absolute treat at any time of the day, and has been my afternoon “go to” for the last few weeks. Let’s take a quick timeout today to talk about what makes this tea so unique! Our Jasmine Pearls hail from the Fujian region in China. They are hand-picked in the Spring, layered/scented multiple times with jasmine petals, and are then expertly shaped into pearl form.

Pretty pile of our Jasmine Pearls

This pearl form is a truly unique twist on loose leaf tea. Tightly rolled, when steeped in water, these pearls slowly unfurl and can actually get better and better with each additional infusion.

Our Jasmine Pearls start out in pearl form (left), and after the first infusion the two leaves and leaf bud that compose the pearl can be clearly seen (right).

Pearls Before and After First Infusion

While preparing this spotlight, I was able to take one teaspoon of Jasmine Pearls and make four 8 ounce cups of tea in one day! With this tea, you really can get “bang for your buck” with the potential for so many delicious re-infusions! Just remember when re-steeping tea in this way, you want to add about 30 seconds of steeping time with each additional infusion.

The brew and leaves after one infusion

Best steeping practices- use one teaspoon per 8 ounces of water, steep 2-3 minutes with water that is 175° F (bring water to a boil and let cool three minutes).

Enjoy!

Jasmine Pearls is featured here with our Steeping Cup!

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Farmer’s Market Begins!

by Bo on 04/05/2012 in Boulder Roots, Hot Spots, Iced Tea, Loose Leaf Tea

Well, it’s that time of the year again. It always comes so soon. The weather is beautiful, sunny, things are starting to turn green, and this weekend marks the year’s first Farmer’s Market here in Boulder.

There’s a lot to look forward to: we’ve got a new and exciting tea list, some great new signage premiering our new look (not pictured here), and I can’t wait to see a few familiar faces out there. Oh, and the food. How could I forget the amazing food? It might still be early for some of my favorite veggies, but it should be a gorgeous day to grab a taster of tea by the creek. While you’ll have to come on down to see everything we offer, I can say with confidence that I’ll be serving out some Climber’s High, Chocolate Peppermint Patty, and Iced Blue Mountain Nilgiri (if it’s warm enough!). There will be other samples as well, so if you’re a Boulder local, come on down and check it out.

As always, our website offers a Farmer’s Market Pickup option so that you can pick up orders from us directly at Saturday Farmer’s Market and save on shipping.

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What a difference a [tea] leaf makes

by maria on 03/20/2012 in Black Tea, Loose Leaf Tea, Tea Travel

I never start my day without the ritual of greeting the day with an extraordinary cup of tea, so that means I never travel without my loose leaf tea… but this week I did.  I remained hopeful, however. Alas, here in my College Park, MD, hotel and government lab research facility, nothing but LIPTON. Nothing against Lipton, the company that’s probably done more to promote tea in the US in the 20th c than any other – it’s just not what I drink any more. And I’d forgotten how different it was, from my daily loose leaf tea ritual. Lipton two mornings in a row, in fact! Humpf.

So when I came home, I thought I’d try the closest tea I thought we had to a Lipton tea bag here at The Tea Spot: Blue Mountain Nilgiri. Our bread and butter plain organic black tea. It was heavenly… and I kept on drinking it – hot, chilled, you name it. BMN, as we call it, tastes like it’s from another planet – but why? The difference is in the leaf. Leaf vs.dust. I wouldn’t be so surprised if I were to compare lettuce dust to the leaf, spinach dust vs a leaf, or basil dust vs. basil leaf… and tea’s no different :)

Chilling Blue Mountain Nilgiri

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The Tea SpotLight- Blood Orange Smoothie

by Katie on 03/09/2012 in Herbal Tea, Iced Tea, Loose Leaf Tea, Reviews, Rooibos, Tea Health

This post begins a new segment- “The Tea SpotLight” where we put one of our premium loose leaf teas front and center for the month. We tell you why we love this tea, what it can do for you, along with the ideal way(s) to prepare and enjoy it. After years of waitressing at various restaurants, I appreciate the value in asking your server what their favorite dishes on the menu are. Servers know their menu inside and out, and because they usually eat the restaurants food during every shift, they know what’s really good. This is precisely our inspiration behind The Tea SpotLight segment of our blog… we’ll tell you what teas we love, and more importantly, why we love them. Perhaps this will inspire you to try something new, or make a current favorite that much better!

As The Tea Spots Customer Service Rep, I’m often asked what my favorite tea is. (As a side note: it is impossible to answer that question with just one tea. It’s like asking me to pick just one favorite flavor of ice cream, or one favorite pair of shoes. The joy is in the variety!) But, I do have flavored and unflavored favorites in each tea category, and am always more than happy to ‘break it down’ for anyone interested.

To start things off I’m going to delve right into my personal favorite flavored herbal tea: our Blood Orange Smoothie.

In my house, it has been affectionately dubbed “The Boss”, quite simply, because we think it’s the best. Blood Orange Smoothie is a caffeine-free red rooibos based tea from South Africa. We’ve loaded it up with all the goods- orange peel, apples, hibiscus, rosehips, safflowers, rose petals, and vanilla and citrus flavors. These ingredients combine to make a naturally sweet, refreshing cuppa that reminds many happy sippers of an orange creamsicle. “The Boss” is delicious hot, and is also incredibly refreshing when served over ice.

To make Blood Orange Smoothie, add 1 teaspoon of tea per 8 ounces of water, and steep for at least six minutes with boiling water. You cannot over-steep this delicious tea, the more steep time the better!

The health benefits associated with red Rooibos tea are numerous. Rooibos contains copper, iron, potassium, calcium, fluoride, zinc, manganese, alpha-hydroxy (for healthy skin) and magnesium (for the nervous system). It is naturally caffeine free, and as such, is perfect before bed and is a very popular choice among kids. According to studies conducted in South Africa and Japan, Rooibos has been shown to aid in health problems such as insomnia, irritability, headaches, nervous tension, and hypertension. In South Africa, Rooibos has been used to treat allergies such as hay fever, asthma and eczema very effectively. Rooibos contains antioxidants which can help slow the aging process and boost the immune system.*

I hope you’re ready to try Blood Orange Smoothie now! You can find it on our site here, in a sample size, ¼ pound, and 1 pound bags. Now if you’ll excuse me, all this talk about “The Boss” has made me thirsty…

Cheers!

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food & Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

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What Does ‘Handcrafted’ Mean?

by Bo on 03/06/2012 in Green Tea, Loose Leaf Tea

If you’re familiar with us here at The Tea Spot, you know that we often characterize our tea blends as “handcrafted.” Today, I’d like to show you exactly what that means and how our blends come to be.  

Our teas come from all corners of the world–traditional regions like India, China, Sri Lanka and Japan–into our warehouse where we turn them into our own creations. Our herbal and botanical blending elements come from a whole host of other places: Washington mint, South African rooibos, Moroccan rosebuds, to name a few. These ingredients are hand grown and picked at the source, but when they arrive here at our warehouse on the eastern slope of the Rockies, we try to turn them into something more. Our blends are our babies, carefully formed through rigorous (and largely enjoyable) taste testing sessions where we sometimes butt heads, but often agree exactly when we’ve produced the best cup.

When we’ve agreed on a recipe, we bump up the scale. This is when I roll up my sleeves and get to work. Typically, I’m blending a batch for packaging and sale that comes to about 30 lbs. It’s a simple but careful process of combining just the right amount of leaves, in the right order, so that the blend comes out even and smooth. Donning my hairnet, gloves, and trusty large scoop, I dole out the leaves and ingredients into a weighed container, pound by pound. Then comes the fun part: the physical blending. I use something I call the ‘badger method,’ but that’s far too embarrassing to comment on at length. Suffice to say it’s my way of making sure every cup has the perfect ratio of flavors, so that you can come to expect consistency from your favorite teas. Today we’re producing our Organic Jasmine Petals tea, a blend of a lovely Chinese Green and whole Jasmine Flowers (from Oregon). A simple but elegant blend. You’ve seen the before, so here’s the after:

Have questions about how we do things here at The Tea Spot? Post a comment below, or come say hello on our Twitter or Facebook!

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An Affair with Puerh

by maria on 02/24/2012 in Caffeine, Loose Leaf Tea, Pu'erh Tea, Tea Health, Tea Travel, Weight Loss

With the recent attention brought to my favorite tea type – Puerh – by Dr. Oz, I thought I’d give our fans some more perspective and reasons to love this most luscious, healthful and comforting tea.

Puerh Tea

Puerh Tea Bricks

All Puerh teas are made with sun-dried broad tea leaves from the southeast Chinese Province of Yunnan, where the tea-growing season lasts eight or nine months out of the year. This Puerh family of teas includes semi-green teas and dark-green fermented teas, which may be aged for many years. Puerh is often categorized as a black tea, maybe due to its dark red infusion, but it is not the same as a black tea. Puerh is substantially higher in caffeine than black teas, with about 60 mg per 8-ounce serving (as opposed to 40 mg per 8 oz serving, on average, for black teas). It’s a very unique tea. In both its fermented and aged forms, it has been through secondary oxidization done by organisms that continue to develop in the tea, which gives it strong antibacterial characteristics – like blue cheese, or yogurt, also well known for their antibacterial qualities. The resulting aged tea is mellow, very smooth and nourishing in its flavor. Puerh teas are often classified by the year of their production (like wine vintages). Their value increases with more aging. Puerh has even been purchased as an investment tea. On one of my first tea-buying trips, in Hong Kong I saw Japanese businessmen picking up Puerh tea cakes from their personal tea lockers at a very exclusive purveyor’s shop.

Puerh tea

Steeping Puerh tea with Tuffy Tea Steeper

Puerh teas come in a variety of finished forms – from loose smaller-leaf teas, to very large leaf bulk teas, or tea cakes and bricks. The mini-sized bricks are called Puerh tuochas, and they’re perfect for travel, or for when you take your loose leaf tea with you camping. Personally, I’m never caught without my Puerh for the morning, so I carry either mini Puerh tuochas or a mini-tin of Bolder Breakfast tea and a Tuffy Tea Steeper with me on all my travels.

Tuffy Tea Steepers

Tuffy Tea Steepers

According to traditional Chinese medical practice, Puerh tea has body-warming and digestive properties. Puerh is often taken to dispel or cleanse the body of fat and toxins. Many people drink Puerh tea as a detox tea, and feel that Puerh is the best cure for a hangover. Puerh is also very popular with many as a weight loss tea.

Only in the past few decades has Puerh made its way into the U.S. I was personally involved in selecting the Puerhs we offer at The Tea Spot – both the organic loose-leaf as well as the organic tuochas, which are my travel teas of choice. Our best-selling signature tea, Bolder Breakfast, which you may have already guessed has a good helping of Puerh as well as bold black teas and dark chocolate, is our top selling tea, so I’m not alone in being a fan of this warm, cozy way of starting my mornings.

Bolder Breakfast Tea

Bolder Breakfast Chocolate Puerh Tea

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Holiday Teas Are Back!

by Bo on 11/05/2011 in Black Tea, Herbal Tea, Loose Leaf Tea, Red tea

Tea lovers, rejoice! The holiday season is just around the bend, and we’re preparing ourselves by bringing in the season’s finest flavors: cinnamon, orange, and a whole host of wintery spices. Our Holiday Spice black tea blend is back for the season, but we’re also adding a new blend to the line up: Red Hot Chai. Nothing serves to remind us of the holidays quite like the aroma and flavor of these teas. They both take incredibly well to milk, brew strong and compliment the season’s charm with every sip. When I brewed myself a cup of this season’s first batch of Holiday Spice, it felt as though the holidays had really begun out here. More below on these delicious seasonal blends:

HOLIDAY SPICE TEA

This limited-edition spiced tea blend soothes the body and excites the taste buds with its heavy notes of cinnamon, orange and clove. Our Holiday Spice Tea pairs perfectly with cold winter mornings and evenings by the fireplace. It carries an aroma reminiscent of mulled spices and cinnamon candy emerging from a full body and dark liquor.

RED HOT CHAI

This strong and spicy blend kicks the cold away with the season’s boldest flavors: red rooibos, cinnamon, chai spices and a kiss of vanilla come together in this complex yet balanced tea. Naturally caffeine-free and high in antioxidants and minerals, Red Hot Chai’s rooibos base provides health benefits and a mild honey sweetness to compliment the bold flavors of a traditional chai. Great prepared with or without milk, our Red Hot Chai is sure to please palates at any time of the day.

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Innovating Tea – or, where there there’s a will, there’s a way…

by maria on 10/11/2011 in Eco-friendly, Loose Leaf Tea

Brewlux

The Brewlux™ product that The Tea Spot is distributing is a concept patented by my brother and me. The initial inspiration for the product, however, came out of a brainstorm that included his wife Karen and my daughter Laura as well. And the funniest part of the story is that Brewlux™ might never have come about if Ohio eisweins were more to my liking.

Ashtabula County, Ohio

My brother Alex lived midway between where my daughters were doing their undergraduate work, in Oberlin, Ohio and Rochester, New York. I liked to take the opportunity to visit them all in one trip, and particularly enjoyed our Fall gatherings in this beautiful, rural area of Northeastern Ohio. Two years ago, we were enjoying a gorgeous brisk and sunny day touring the wineries in Ashtabula County, who specialize in eiswein, which is a kind of extreme form of the late harvest wine. The grapes are left to hang on the vine long after the usual moment of harvest. But whereas late harvest wines are commonly brought in from the vineyard in the Fall, grapes destined to make eiswein are left until winter fastens an icy grip on the vines. This makes for an exceptionally sweet dessert wine.

Ohio Eiswein Vineyard

After our fourth or fifth winery stop, we stopped to get some pizza. I was so enjoying the wonderful pizza aromas emanating from the giant oven. But, they were offering eiswein to taste while you waited for your pie! I couldn’t take it anymore, and became almost desperate for a great cup of tea. Needless to say, that wasn’t an option at this pizza-wine barn. All I could do was complain and fantasize about my loose leaf tea

Yummy Pizza

Being engineers, we started to scribble and draw up designs on a napkin. Our loose leaf tea would need to have sufficient volume to expand in, you should be able to brew it in a standard to-go cup, and it could not contribute to the landfill issue. Lots of ideas, more eiswein and a delicious pizza later, we were on our way home and stopped at a convenience store where we found a set of 10 styrofoam cups and lids. Drawing, cutting and designing into the night, we had a few concepts completed by the end of the weekend, and Alex got them into a computer-aided design model right away.

Brewlux Inventors

We have just been granted a Small Business Innovative Research Grant by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) to do market research in commercializing the Brewlux™. And two years into the development process, and many iterations later, we’re still always working on optimizing the “next” generation model… but now fully able to serve folks a legitimate cup of loose leaf tea to-go, in our fully biodegradable Brewlux™ filters. Thank you Alex, Karen and Laura, and I should add – Ashtabula County, Ohio and the USDA.

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