Bold Coast Breakfast

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Malty, Salty, Seaweed
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec 10 oz / 300 ml

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  • “The TTB has arrived! So big, so many teas… no chance to try them all! Tea #23 Living in landlocked country means that I have very limited experience to seafood and though it is getting slowly...” Read full tasting note
    82
  • “This was a treat from Michelle, and a fun one at that! Breakfast tea with oarweed, which, not being a marine life expert, is a completely new revelation to me. Didn’t read any reviews before...” Read full tasting note
  • “Interesting tea concept… It’s basically just black tea and seaweed. That’s this company’s whole “thing” I believe – seaweed teas. What fascinates me is that they use all different types of seaweed,...” Read full tasting note
    78

From Cup of Sea

Our traditional English Breakfast tea is malty and invigorating. Kelp adds fortifying iodine, calcium and iron. Hearty as a day boat captain.

Ingredients: Black tea & kelp (laminaria digitata)
Contains Caffeine
Low/no Seaweed taste

About Cup of Sea View company

Company description not available.

3 Tasting Notes

82
1944 tasting notes

The TTB has arrived! So big, so many teas… no chance to try them all!
Tea #23

Living in landlocked country means that I have very limited experience to seafood and though it is getting slowly better in bigger cities, living in small town means it’s also hard to get any. I remember having some seaweed flavoured nuts, peanuts possibly and honestly I didn’t liked it at all.

So, when I saw this in the TTB, I have been very hesitant if I should try this. But considering that that most of the black teas there are sweet flavored, decided to go this way. Tea with seaweed. Seaweed taste scale on the bag shows low so possibly a good start.

I used two teaspoons for my 300 ml cup as always and steeped for 4-5 minutes as recommended by the vendor. On a first, hot sip, it was plain black tea with nice robust taste and I liked it. As it was cooling down, the seaweed was more prominent, with its salty taste, but nevertheless, it was just right level of its flavor. Certainly not overpowering the base, but ceratinly noticeable. Actually I liked this twist and right after I checked if there are other blends available to try more.

In fact, I haven’t found any international shipping info and their sampler is sold out, so maybe it’s not a time to order this tea now. Good for my wallet and cupboard.

Flavors: Malty, Salty, Seaweed

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 10 OZ / 300 ML
Michelle

I added this to the box and I’m glad you got to try it. I am a fan of savory tastes, so I had to try this one. I have wondered if adding the seaweed that sushi is wrapped in to a good black tea would have a similar taste. I might need to experiment :)

Courtney

How unique!

gmathis

Michelle, I may get daring: my son shared some little dried seaweed chips that I haven’t figured out what to do with. You’ve inspired me!

Cameron B.

Based on the tea photo, I would think kombu seaweed would be more similar than nori. But I bet both would be delicious.

Martin Bednář

Cameron, this tea is with kombu, I believe :)

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2972 tasting notes

This was a treat from Michelle, and a fun one at that! Breakfast tea with oarweed, which, not being a marine life expert, is a completely new revelation to me.

Didn’t read any reviews before steeping, so based on the description alone and the hefty chunks of seaweed, I expected something somewhat fishy and very salty. Not so much. There is a hint of salinity, but otherwise it’s a good, thickish English breakfast tea with a little bit of sweetness and cereal at the end of each “ship.”
(First, that was a typo. Then I decided to leave it in, matey.)

Nattie

Hahaha just roll with (the waves)

Michelle

Sometimes the universe speaks to us through appropriate typos. I find this funny because I used to drive big ships for a living, not sure I’ve mentioned that before on this site? In my first career I was a ship’s navigator and I have been all around the world on cargo ships. Now I teach the weather to those mariners who still go to sea :)

ashmanra

Michelle: thats sounds unbelievably cool.

gmathis

(This just makes me wish all the more I had my sister’s Ancestry.com info that linked us to a pirate!) Have you tried any of the other Cup of Sea varieties? Their little seal logo is pretty adorable.

Martin Bednář

Michelle: I haven’t noticed this (but I am much “younger” here), but it sounds very cool indeed!

Michelle

Gmathis, I picked this up at a tiny grocery in small coastal Maine when I was visiting Acadia NP. I didn’t go back into that store again so I didn’t pick up their herbal tea. I was thinking that I need to search for some seaweed to add to my favorite Assam!

Michelle

Its been 18 yrs since I’ve been on a ship going to sea, so maybe that’s why I don’t bring it up. Everyone has a bit of backstory that we don’t always include here. I also didn’t drink tea in those days, for shame!

Nattie

That’s so cool Michelle !

tea-sipper

I don’t think you have mentioned this, Michelle! It’s a little like “Oh and years ago, I was an astronaut, I don’t think I mentioned it”. (To me it is, anyway!)

Michelle

Hahaha! tea-sipper you crack me up! I mean I never said I was ‘normal’ I do drink an awful lot of tea :)

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78
16557 tasting notes

Interesting tea concept…

It’s basically just black tea and seaweed. That’s this company’s whole “thing” I believe – seaweed teas. What fascinates me is that they use all different types of seaweed, and when you look at their website the teas sort of rank the “level” of seaweed taste present in the cup. This one is ‘low taste’ or something like that…

I’ve had seaweed in tea before – notably in Kusmi’s Algothe blend which I actually really love. You usually can’t actually taste that in the blend at all though; it’s more focused on the mint. With the only other ingredient in this blend being black tea, I found the flavour a lot more detectable. However, while it was present it wasn’t unpleasant. Kind of just a little bit of an extra savory/salty note in the cup? I didn’t realize just how salty until I drank a sip of something else and returned to my mug and then was hit with more of that “oomph” from the salt – but I do still think it’s a totally reasonable and drinkable cup.

Aside from that slight saltiness, the tea has a bit of a honey/malty note. I think it’s the honey sweetness that I was picking up on which really helped balance out the seaweed. It makes up like 20% of the blend, so that’s not an insignificant amount – all things considered this is well balanced.

My only other note is really that this is best consumed hot – once it had cooled down, around the last quarter of the mug, the taste kind of turned a bit funky and I struggled to finish the rest of it; just a bit brine-y…

Kittenna

Seaweed tea. Sounds neat.

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