Tea type
Black Herbal Blend
Ingredients
Ceylon Black Tea, Chinese Black Tea, Flowers, Red Clover, Safflower Petals
Flavors
Clover, Flowers, Graham Cracker, Honey, Honeysuckle, Malt, Milk Chocolate
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Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Daylon R Thomas
Average preparation
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From Artemis Tea & Botanical

are | Golden Buds + Helichrysum Breakfast Black

malt • milk chocolate • clover

The perfect breakfast tea to awaken your senses, sharpen your mind, and fill your heart with the inspiration to achieve great things each day. Dominate notes of malt, cacao, graham, and clover, with aromas of wildflower honey, eastern spice, and a hint of ripe cherry.

Immortelle Blossoms

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1 Tasting Note

80
1705 tasting notes

Easy favorite. I wanted to get this one with Ursa, which was a cocoa bean laoshan blend with some dried berries, but I wanted this one because I love dramatic history of luxurious places. Byzantium gets often ignored by history classes despite continuing Rome’s legacy and served as a major influence over Christianity, trade, and the futures of Eastern Europe. The makers of the tea definitely have an idea of that vibe with the picks of flowers. It would have been cool to have purple with the yellow flowers to really hammer Byzantine aesthetic, but the tea looks exactly like the picture you see above.

I’ve done this tumbler style, and western, and western is the way to go. The flavors are smooth and incredible, but gets mistaken as a generically good black tea in a tumbler. Western style draws out and balances out the nuances. The teas picked are on the more chocolaty/milky side for black teas. I think there’s some Laoshan in this too, but I think the blend has changed from years to years. There’s some god buds, but not too many. The clover is especially prominent, and the immortelle has a bit of a taste between chamomile and chrysanthemum. My mom wondered if it was an Earl Grey when she drank it blind. The aftertaste is a little bit different and more subtle, yet there’s enough sweetness to make the tea a little bit more distinct. Malt, graham cracker and honey are good descriptors too, yet the clover is distinct enough for me.

It heavily weakens after steep two. Graham cracker and black tea with light malt are the main players. Tannin and vague florals are all that remains after a while.

I’m pretty happy with this one. If it were more flexible in a tumbler, it would be an easy breakfast and work tea. Since I have to pay attention, I’ll have to wake up earlier, or reserve it for lunch or the weekends. It’ll do the job of getting me up well, though I’m missing some of the other teas I’ve sipped down for breakfast.

Flavors: Clover, Flowers, Graham Cracker, Honey, Honeysuckle, Malt, Milk Chocolate

Leafhopper

These sound like interesting teas! And yes, the history of Byzantium is fascinating and often ignored.

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