That is tea

It looks like chocolate with crispy wafers in the middle
Hmm, I wonder if this means almost all fruit flavors in teas are artificial? I've been adding real fruit juice to some of my teas lately as there are plenty of recipes on the Internet for "Mango Green Tea" "Grape Black Tea" etc., mixing fresh brewed tea with with juice to replicate the flavor you get in restaurants and teahouses without all that unhealthy high-fructose syrup.daidokorocha wrote:Sarai, many people on here will tell you that the dried fruit in flavored teas is really more for visual appeal and that most of the flavor comes from the flavoring additives applied to the tea itself. That could be why it tasted quite artificial despite the presence of real strawberries. How accurate this is for all forms of dried goods in flavored teas, I honestly have no idea.
I'm not so sure about the production of fruit teas, but for "scented" teas like Jasmine green there are two methods:Sarai wrote:Hmm, I wonder if this means almost all fruit flavors in teas are artificial? I've been adding adding real fruit juice to some of my teas lately as there are plenty of recipes on the Internet for "Mango Green Tea" "Grape Black Tea" etc., mixing fresh brewed tea with with juice to replicate the flavor you get in restaurants and teahouses without all that unhealthy high-fructose syrup.daidokorocha wrote:Sarai, many people on here will tell you that the dried fruit in flavored teas is really more for visual appeal and that most of the flavor comes from the flavoring additives applied to the tea itself. That could be why it tasted quite artificial despite the presence of real strawberries. How accurate this is for all forms of dried goods in flavored teas, I honestly have no idea.
I would strongly advise skipping giving Teavana the benefit of your money and time, and go straight to other companies who sell unflavored pu-erhs. Preferably, vendors who have a minimum of 10+ pu-erhs available to choose from.Sarai wrote: Teavana currently offers a total of three Pu-Erh's, the other two of which are Weight To Go! Pu-Erh Black Tea and Yunnan Gold Pu-Erh Black Tea. Weight To Go is flavored with strawberry, apple, hibiscus, and mint; and Yunnan Gold is a straight, of course. I will eventually purchase 2 ounces each of these two just to give Teavana's Pu-Erh the benefit of the doubt. Then I will be moving on to Pu-Erh from other companies to see how much I really have a taste for it, as I've given Teavana enough of my money the way it is.
Teavana has some excellent teas, none of which are puerhs. They have some flavored teas that make great iced teas. I too bought the strawberry slender puerh before I got into real puerh. I have not thrown mine out, yet. I don't buy their puerhs which I doubt are even puerhs. Their regular puerh is just as bad.Devoted135 wrote:I would strongly advise skipping giving Teavana the benefit of your money and time, and go straight to other companies who sell unflavored pu-erhs. Preferably, vendors who have a minimum of 10+ pu-erhs available to choose from.Sarai wrote: Teavana currently offers a total of three Pu-Erh's, the other two of which are Weight To Go! Pu-Erh Black Tea and Yunnan Gold Pu-Erh Black Tea. Weight To Go is flavored with strawberry, apple, hibiscus, and mint; and Yunnan Gold is a straight, of course. I will eventually purchase 2 ounces each of these two just to give Teavana's Pu-Erh the benefit of the doubt. Then I will be moving on to Pu-Erh from other companies to see how much I really have a taste for it, as I've given Teavana enough of my money the way it is.
ftfyAllanK wrote: Teavana has some ok teas, none of which are reasonably priced