I’ve been on a milk tea kick lately, so I thought I’d open up this tin and churn out a tasting note. What can I say? It tastes a whole lot like caramel, and not much like anything else. The caramel is similar in taste to homemade, slightly-burnt, caramelized sugar. The caramel flavor component is quite strong and can be easily detected by tongue, but it balances well with the black tea flavor. Luckily, the tea doesn’t taste fruity the way Adagio’s black base often tastes. It’s just a nice, solid black tea flavor that supports the caramel. It is a bit astringent (drying) but not particularly bitter. However, I would imagine that oversteeping this one would lead to a very bitter cup.
I know some teas are all smell and no flavor. Adagio’s Caramel is not one of those teas. This tastes just as much like caramel as it smells. With a little milk and sweetener, it’s almost as though someone melted a milk caramel and stirred it into some black tea.
While there’s not a lot going on in this tea, I rather like it. It’s simple, and seems like it would be great for mixing with other teas.
congrats for the Peru – you’ll come back with wonderful memories and you’ll probably drink Peruvian blended teas to share ideas with us
Thank you!!! I will be sure to link to my photos once I get back! I’m thinking that there will be a lot of days and nights filled with coffee and tea drinking!
Ooooh!!! You are going to be right next to me (as in Ecuador and Peru share borders!) hope you enjoy!!
That’s so cool that we’ll be close! I’ve never gone out of the country before, so that part is getting me a bit nervous!
Don’t worry about it! I am sure you’ll do great! Feel free to pm me if you have any questions or need advice on anything! :)
Thank you for the encouragement! I’m so glad that I’ll be travelling with my professor because: (a) I trust him and (b) he spends tons of time there. Right now I need to figure out how to learn decent Spanish in a year.
This is delayed but where in Peru are you digging? One of my arch classmates did his secondary field school in Peru last summer near Nazca.
I’ll be in the Pomac Forest working on the Sicán project. :)