All things tea related, with an emphasis on thie history and health benefits of tea.
Friday, September 7, 2012
Tea of the Week: Zhi Tea's Ancient Forest
Liquor -- Deep, warm amber
Aroma -- Rich, with a hint of caramely sweetness
Body -- Medium
Flavors -- Unusually low astrigancy for a black tea, with a note of maltiness.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
People in Tea: Jessica Evans
A. Zhi's Jeffery Lorien has made tea his passion. He samples thousands of teas, and only picks the best. He is like a curator of tea, and he has put together an exquisite collection.
Also, we are featuring a new way to make tea that allows you to steep iced tea without heat and without it becoming overly astringent.
Q. What do you want people to know about tea in general?
Thursday, July 2, 2009
Tea Tour of Austin
We went to the Tea Embassy, which is more about loose tea and merchandise than prepared tea or a food menu (although they have special tastings one weekend each month -- we just went on the wrong weekend) . It's housed in a historic building on Rio Grande steet. They have several teas available for free sampling. When we went, there was a peach flavored red rooibos, which was amazing. They also were offering samples of Thai tea. I bought a very nice chocolate mint rooibos from the very knowledgable Jake (pictured below).
From there, we went to the Steeping Room, which was very up-scale and offered a full restaurant menu. Note that in the picture, it is right next door to a Starbucks, which I find a bit ironic. They had a whole wall of loose teas. I liked the way each had an open sample cup so that you could look at the quality of the leaves and smell the blend. I bought what turned out to be a very light strawberry green tea, which had large chunks of dried strawberries mixed with the leaves. The guy at the counter mentioned that that was one of the day's featured iced teas, but I couldn't bring myself to pay $2.50 for one iced cup of the brew when I'd just bought 2 oz. dry.