Now this may all be a gimmick, who's to say, but Cha Dao describes their teas as "Fresh," meaning instead of a bottled tea that is shelf stable that could have been brewed over a year ago, these teas are kept refrigerated and have a relatively short shelf life. The one I'm drinking right now expires next Saturday.
Both the Sencha and the High Mountain Oolong taste over-brewed. They have a high level of astringency I find typical in many unsweetened bottled teas. The oolong does have a distinct jade oolong taste, setting it apart from the Ito en or Adagio oolong.But the Yin Yang, a lightly sweetened blend of black tea and coffee is surprisingly good. Much better than my attempt to make a coffee tea. It is wonderfully balanced, both the coffee and the tea are distinct without overpowering the other. It has a very clean taste, nothing artificial. The 9 grams of sugar per 8 oz is almost perfect, in my opinion--I usually use 5-7 grams (one tsp.) for black tea.* As trite as it may be, Yin Yang is a fitting name for this tea.
*This is my public confession; yes, I use sugar in my tea. Only in my black tea, though. Never in anything else. The coffee drinker in my wants it to be strong, dark and sweet.
4 comments:
The coffee+tea is nothing more than a bottled version of Yuanyang, maybe without the milk (I'd imagine the drink will spoil very quickly with milk)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuanyang_(drink)
Very common in HK.
Thanks marshal. Cha dao's website said it was a popular drink in Asia. I was curious about that, but didn't feel like sifting through the Google results for coffee tea.
You say 'nothing more' like that's a bad thing.
I take it by "Popular drink in Asia" they mean China and/or Taiwan?
Mostly in Hong Kong, actually, although the drink is getting a little more popular elsewhere.
Well.... I said "nothing more"... meaning it's not a new thing.
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