LOOSE TEA

loose tea | posts


STEEPWARE

tea steepers | posts


ECO-FRIENDLY

eco-friendly | posts


10% PLEDGE

cancer wellness | posts


HEALTH

tea health | posts


COOKING & TEA

tea recipes | posts


GIFTS

tea gifts | posts


BOULDER ROOTS

posts


FREESTYLIN'

posts


HOT SPOTS

posts


GREENS

green teas | posts


WHITES

white teas | posts


BLACKS

black teas | posts


OOLONGS

oolong teas | posts


MATES

yerba mates | posts


REDS

rooibos | posts


HERBALS

herbal tea | posts

Archive for the Hot Spots Category


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.

TAGS:
Comment on this post


Share |




Yellow Scene Magazine visits Tee & Cakes, The Unseen Bean

by Bo on 05/25/2011 in Boulder Roots, Hot Spots

Visit The Unseen Bean!

Hey, Boulderites! Two of our favorite coffee+tea spots around town recently got a visit from Yellow Scene Magazine and Boulder’s Local Table Tours. No word on whether or not anybody tried out a cup of Tea Spot tea, but I’m not afraid to report that the coffee at both Tee & Cakes and The Unseen Bean is phenomenal. So if you’re a tea drinker in a circle of coffee nuts (as most of us tea drinkers seem to be), these are places that are sure to satisfy both of your palettes. Check out what Yellow Scene has to say about these spots here, then go grab a cup of Organic Dark Roast Oolong at The Unseen Bean, or try out slightly sweet cup of Boulder Blues at Tee & Cakes while your friends chug-a-lug their lattes!

TAGS:
Comment on this post


Share |




Breadworks in Boulder Now Serving Tea Spot!

by Bo on 04/12/2011 in Boulder Roots, Hot Spots, Oolong Tea, Red tea

We’re more than pleased to be teaming up with our farmer’s market neighbors Breadworks at their bakery/cafe in North Boulder! They’ll be carrying a few more of our teas as time goes on, but are currently serving our Red Rocks and Coconut Oolong. If you’ve ever had either of these teas, you know they’re a real treat.

I’m on the fence about whether or not they’re quite as tasty as Breadwork’s amazing baked goods, sandwiches, soups (oh my, that tortilla soup) or salads. There’s just got to be a multitude of fine food and tea pairings on hand over at Breadworks, which I’m excited to taste as I help them build their tea list. So go go go check out Breadworks at 2644 North Broadway in Boulder, have a cup of tea and a treat, sit outside and look at our beautiful mountains!

TAGS:
Comment on this post


Share |




2 New Locations Serving TeaSpot Teas!

by Bo on 03/07/2011 in Boulder Roots, Hot Spots, Loose Leaf Tea

Exciting news, Boulderites! Tea Spot teas are now being served at two great centrally-located coffee shops, so take your sipping to the streets!

THE UNSEEN BEAN

If you haven’t heard of The Unseen Bean and their amazing Blind Roasted Coffee, you’re missing out! These guys are located just off Pearl on the east side of Broadway, and in addition to bringing on a few Tea Spot teas, their roaster Gerry Leary creates some mighty tasty beans. Check out Gerry’s story here and see how he learned to roast entirely by sound and smell, and stop by the shop for a cup of goodness.

TEE & CAKES

I’m super excited that Tea Spot is being served at my favorite hangout, Tee & Cakes. Not only is this shop a Boulder favorite for its inventive, saliva-inducing baked goods, but it’s also run by one of the friendliest crews in cafe history. You think I’m exaggerating, but I’m not. Stop by and say hi to owners Kim Boos & Brian Wood, sample some of our tea or manager/barista Jenny’s new girl scout cookie inspired latte, and don’t you dare forget to dig your teeth into this famous Boulder nosh:

Chocolate. Bacon. Cupcake. The sheriff of baked goods in Boulder. If you’re not already on your way to Tee & Cakes, then you didn’t make it this far into my blog post. As for the rest of you, who can’t make it to our delightful mountain home, wander over to www.teeandcakes.com and get distracted by Brian’s fine graphics and Kim’s fine oven-baked creations.  And if you are from Boulder, what are you still doing reading this? Go get yourself a smile and a sweet from the crew at Tee & Cakes!

TAGS:
Comment on this post


Share |




Barbie’s Blog Debut and Rebuttal

by anna on 02/17/2011 in Freestylin', Hot Spots, Tea Gifts

The first order of Blog business today is to thank Bo. I appreciate the shout out and lovely depiction of, as he put it, “dedication.” I can’t thank you enough for taking the time to feature me in the midst of having my eyes-wide-dilated and wearing The Tea Spot Tee. Awesome!

Now, I’m going to pay it forward (or backward). I’d like to introduce you to our newest team member, Tea Spot Barbie. I was lucky enough to capture this beautiful moment between Bo and Barb. I don’t want to jinx it, but I think they have a good thing. Excited to see where this goes!

Bo & Barbie

Bo serving Tea Spot Barbie

Public Disclaimer: Unfortunately, there is only one Tea Spot Barbie. That’s right. She’s a one of a kind and not for sale. However, Barbie with a tea set can be purchased, but my sister modified that model, gifting me the one and only T.S. Barbie… sorry folks.

PS. Which tea to you pair with sarcasm??

Cheers to sass!


Comment on this post


Share |




Farmer’s Market Wrap-Up

by Bo on 11/17/2010 in Hot Spots

Well, the farmer’s market has finally come to an end for us here at the Tea Spot. I had a great time (actually got used to the Saturday wakeup) running the booth out there, seeing old store customers again and making friends with new ones. Not to mention eating some great foodstuffs. From the rain of the early months to the blistering heat of high summer to the crisp blustery fall, I watched the seasons pass by each Saturday morning out there at Canyon and 13th.

I hope we were able to accomplish our mission–to remind the downtown crowd that we’re still here, we have more teas and more steepware than ever, and to find new loose leaf lovers out there in the boulder area. There were slow days, there were days that flew by, a few great successes and a few mishaps. All in all, I felt much love from the Boulderites at the market, made some good friends, and was glad to be there. I’d like to extend my thanks to all who came by to see us at our little blue booth, who hopefully fell in love with a few teas, and who made my day with a joke or a smile.


1 comment


Share |




Tea in the City! Metropolis Coffee Serves The Tea Spot

by The Tea Spot on 07/22/2010 in Hot Spots, Loose Leaf Tea

Image Taken from http://tinyurl.com/252pzkaMetropolis Coffee is located in the heart of Denver, or the area called the Golden Triangle. Metropolis Coffee seems to be the softer side of Starbucks.  A coffee shop that is cozy and clam, surrounded by an arts and culture district and up and coming housing developments and therefore perfect for most anyone from the local student, to the young business man or woman, to the vibrant retirees in the area. Image taken from http://tinyurl.com/29kfq64

Carrying only the finest products, Metropolis Coffee serves coffee roasted from X in Seattle, WA and The Tea Spot’s loose leaf teas  both of which offer high quality and a variety of tastes for the clientels discriminating pallets.  Not only does Metropolis Coffee serve our loose leaf teas hot, they can make any of our nine teas into refreshing iced teas as well.  If you’ve never had iced tea made from loose leaf tea,  you’re in for a treat!

I like all my shops, highly recommend going there if you’re in town. The place is clean and cozy, the staff are all very friendly and the drinks are delicious.  Stop by and tell them we sent you!

Metropolis Coffee is located at

300 W 11th Ave
Denver, CO 80204
303.534.1744

TAGS: , , , ,
Comment on this post


Share |




Our Teas Just Moved into Wash Perk!

by The Tea Spot on 07/15/2010 in Hot Spots, Loose Leaf Tea

Image taken from http://washperk.com/

So if you live in Denver you should know where Washington Park is, or more aptly known, as Wash Park.  However you may not know the little coffee shop a few blocks to the west of the park called Wash Perk! It is truly a blissful coffee shop and it has everything you could want. Great service, great coffee and tea, a perfect outdoor patio that is shaded with umbrellas and a few trees, and comfortable individual and community tables.  With all the things to see and look at Wash Perk has all  the coziness of a well loved home.

Image taken from http://washperk.com/photos/

 

The first time I walked in EVERYONE seemed to know everyone. I felt a bit nostalgic to have that type of community atmosphere for myself, but I also felt like I would easily be accepted as well. Wash Perk had been in business for two years and I am excited that we have now 15 teas in their shop for them to serve to their customers. Everything from Earl of Grey to Mate Limon Chai to Climber’s High and Strawberry Fields.  I think our teas will be a perfect fit for their customers! Wash Perk is also incredibly friendly. Teri the owner knows practically everyone that walks through her doors and if she doesn’t she’ll know soon enough. Teri realizes that her shop, being so close to the park, is perfect for all the athletes in the area to come and grab a drink when they’re done.  I was so excited, when I went in the other  day,  because I was given a pair of biking socks that I wore fore 120 miles on my Triple Bypass ride! 

Wash Perk is one of those gem coffee shops that is not to be missed. They’re located at 853 E. Ohio Ave. (Ohio and Emerson – 3 blocks west of Washington Park). (720) 542-9202

TAGS: , , , ,
Comment on this post


Share |




Parallel 17 Restaurant Serves The Tea Spot Teas!

by The Tea Spot on 07/09/2010 in Black Tea, Green Tea, Herbal Tea, Hot Spots, White Tea

Starting back in May Parallel Seventeen started serving The Tea Spot teas! Parallel 17 is a restaurant where quality, taste and style all coordinate well together in a Vietnamese cuisine.  The plates are not only delicious, where you want to savor every bite (and you do, I’ve eaten there and didn’t want dinner to end) but they’re gorgeous to boot, and not in that over the top pretentious way.  Therefore, it was the perfect fit for our gourmet loose leaf teas.

Image by Andrea Doenges

The server will present the table with four of our teas, Earl of Grey (black tea), Boulder Blues (green tea), Meditative Mind (white tea) and Red Rocks (herbal tea), in a simple and classy display.  Once the customer decides on what tea they’d like to drink, they are treated to a tasty finish to their meal, almost a subsitution for a dessert I daresay.  I highly recommend going to try this restaurant yourself, not only for their teas, though we wouldn’t mind if you did, but to have a fun and tasty experience in uptown Denver.

Parellel Seventeen is located at 1600 East 17th Avenue, Denver 80218
303-399-0988

TAGS: , , , , , ,
Comment on this post


Share |




Brasserie Ten Ten Steeps it Loose…

by The Tea Spot on 09/30/2009 in Boulder Roots, Hot Spots

We are excited to announce that Brasserie Ten Ten is now serving our hand-crafted loose leaf tea in our artisan-made Steeping Mugs. Executive Chef Anthony (Tony) Hessel says ‘Personally I enjoy giving our customers a wide range of choice in teas, the fact that it is local and the customers really enjoy it is an added plus. Karen’s Knowledge of the teas have brought us to another level of service to the brasserie.’

Brasserie Ten Ten is located at 1011 Walnut St. in historic downtown Boulder, CO. Directly across the street from its sister restaurant, The Med. Brasserie Ten Ten seats about 88 customers and serves lunch, dinner and brunch on weekends. The restaurant is co-owned by Med owners Joe and Peggy Romano, Rob Kukura and executive chef Anthony (Tony) Hessel. Offering a French inspired cuisine since July 2003, Hessel uses French cooking techniques that include saucing, braising and sautéing as well as preserving meats. French classics include Bouillabaisse, Daube de Boeuf, Duck Confit and Bocuse.

Hessel, like many chefs’, learned how to cook by helping his mother. “My mom was an amazing chef and I would frequently help her out in the kitchen.” Growing up he always hated school but loved food. In high school he got a part time job at a big restaurant in Wilton, Connecticut where he fell in love with the restaurant industry. He starting washing dishes and worked his way up to busing tables, tending bar and eventually made his way into the kitchen where he worked with chef Steve Alwood who taught him how to keep his head down and ears in open.

During the early-80’s, after graduating highschool, Hessel moved to NY where he attended culinary school and worked with executive chef Patrick Clark at Tavern on The Green. Clark, an innovator of American Cuisine, taught Hessel how to combine flavors. Dropping out of culinary school right before his final exam, he decided to move to Paris. Like Julia Childs, his passion for cooking and food was ignited in Paris. Working illegally in kitchens for two years he learned how to see and taste the final dish before it was even made. He learned hands-on where the food came from. For example, he learned how to kill and pluck chickens in order to prepare it for the night’s dinner. After learning almost every aspect of the restaurant business, he moved to Denver and worked all over. He eventually made his way to San Francisco to work at Stars with executive chef/owner Jeremiah Towers. Towers, a crusader for ‘California Regional Cuisine’, worked with Alice Waters at Chez Panisse for many years until he opened Stars in 1984. At Stars, like in Paris, Hessel learned the importance of using locally grown ingredients to elevate simple dishes to fine delicacies. After 9 nine months he moved back to Denver. Working all over the place he eventually moved to Boulder where he worked at Pour de France and took trips to NY to work at their sister restaurant, Windows of World. Working himself to exhaustion and a divorce, he decided he wanted to step back from management to just work the line.

In 1995 he got a job in Boulder at the Med, where he kept his head down and his ears open. With a passion for food and a talent to control chaos, he was quickly promoted to executive chef. A few years later, Hessel began talking with Kukura and the Romanos about opening up another restaurant where Hessel could offer patrons dishes that would be more delicate to prepare. When the restaurant Dandelion closed across from the Med, the location and timing were perfect. The space fit the partners’ concept of a bustling European brasserie and the menu was already outlined in chef Anthony’s head.


BBocuse, another popular item on their menu is a spin on Paul Bocuse’s classic chicken dish that he created some 35 years ago. Hunger-style braised and pulled chicken thigh and leg, mushrooms, five lily (shallots, garlic, scallions, Bermuda onion, & sweet onion) served in a brandy cream sauce and nestled over seared spinach. The brandy cream sauce is made of veal stock, chicken stock, cream, butter, salt and pepper. I highly recommend pairing the Earl of Grey with the Bocuse because it complements the brandy cream sauce and five lily. Lunch $9.95 / Dinner $14.95

The most complicated, time consuming and popular item on the menu, the Duck Confit is served with Potato Gratin, glazed baby carrots & pommery mustard crémeis. I highly recommend pairing the Green Roasted Mint with the duck because it helps cleanse the pallet after every bite of the rich flavor.

For Duck: Make a green salt of equal parts, basil, thyme, rosemary, chives & marjoram with 3 cups of kosher salt, liberally cover duck legs (not breast) and cure for twenty-four hours. Wipe off excess salt and cover with clarified duck fat and cook for 12 hours at 175 degrees.

Remove from oven and chill until needed. For gratin: thinly slice Kennebec on mandolin, julienne onions, fresh thyme, salt pepper, butter, cream & olive oil. Mix all ingredient together, let sit for 1 hour and then place in a buttered hotel pan, cover with aluminum foil and bake at 350 degrees until done, about 1.5 hours. The Pommery Mustard sauce is a two part sauce of fist brandy, Coleman’s mustard, bay leaf, shallots that is reduced by half and strained. Then take 2 tbsp of that reduction with a bottle of white wine, veal stock & thyme and reduce by half, add cream then reduce by half again. To finish, add Dijon mustard, brown mustards seeds and season with salt, pepper, cayenne and lemon juice. To Compose dish: heat grapeseed oil in sauté pan add duck leg and sear on both side then place in oven to crisp. Heat a portion of the potato gratin in the oven until ready. Sauté the carrots (organic is best from one of the local farms, regular carrots don’t have flavor) in butter until the natural sugar is released and they begin to caramelize slightly (be careful, too much heat will burn the carrots) To Plate: Place 2 oz of sauce in the center of the plate, place duck in on top place gratin to one side and carrots on other and serve immediately. Lunch $13.95 / Dinner $18.95

Aside from fabulous lunch and dinners, they probably have the best happy hour in town and brunch on the weekend.

What’s your favorite meal at Brasserie Ten Ten?





2 comments


Share |