DavidsTea’s Dragon Pearls

Dragon Pearls by DavidsTea
Green Tea / Straight
$14.98 for 50g

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First Impressions

Dragon Pearls is a very pretty tea. It’s hand rolled tea leaves that are mostly two colours. I found with the bag that I had purchased from DavidsTea, they’re generally uniform in size. There’s a fragrance to the pearls that is very floral with a heavy jasmine aroma. This is a green tea, so a jasmine scented green tea isn’t out of the realm of possibilities. The ingredients do not include jasmine, however, like DavidsTea’s jasmine green teas are often described as being ‘scented’. The ingredients for Dragon Pearls are: Chinese green tea from Zhejiang Province. As far as green teas go, this isn’t the least expensive option that DavidsTea has (it also isn’t the most expensive – that honour goes to their Butterfly Jasmine and some expensive matcha options).

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Preparation

DavidsTea recommends steeping Dragon Pearls in 85°C (185°F) water for 3 to 4 minutes. They steeping instructions also mentions using 1 ¼ teaspoon of tea. Because the pearls will expand and unfurl, I would not recommend using that much. I used about 10 of the little pearls in my Tea For One pot (which produces about 2 cups of tea) – I would recommend using about 5-6 pearls for 1 cup of tea.

First Taste

Dragon Pearls is a very nice green tea. The pearls unfurl to reveal full tea leaves, which is nice. The steeped tea has a light floral aroma to it, which is nice. The tea itself is very smooth with a buttery quality to it. There is a natural sweetness to the tea. I had steeped it for about 3 minutes for the first steep, I feel that the steeping time recommended by DavidsTea is fair – I would not over steep this tea (or any other green tea) because it could go bitter very easily. Steeping for 3 minutes resulted in a cup of tea that was not bitter at all and was very enjoyable.

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A Second Cup?

I resteeped the same tea leaves an additional three times. I add about 30 seconds of steeping time for each subsequent steeping. The flavours did get better for steep #2 – it was a little sweeter, the floral taste was more present on my tongue, and it had the same great buttery quality. I think steeps 3 and 4 were very similar to steep #2. This tea does improve when you resteep it, which is a nice quality to have in a tea.

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My Overall Impression

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I loved DavidsTea’s Dragon Pearls. While it isn’t the least expensive green tea I’ve tried, it has some added value by being very easy to resteep – which is a bonus whenever you have an expensive tea, you get more bang for your buck with resteeping! It has a great natural sweetness that I think is easy on the palate. The buttery quality kept me wanting to resteep it, it’s just a very enjoyable tea overall. It doesn’t need anything extra (in my opinion), the only thing you need to watch is that you don’t burn it with water that’s too hot or steep it for too long.

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DavidsTea’s Mom’s Apple Pie

Mom’s Apple Pie by DavidsTea
Green Tea / Flavoured
$7.98 for 50g

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First Impressions

I bought a little bag of Mom’s Apple Pie from the store purely because it smelled amazing. The dry leaf has this amazing apple cinnamon aroma that I love from apple pie, so I was pretty much sold on it as soon as I smelled it. Mom’s Apple Pie is a green tea and the ingredients are: green tea, apple, cinnamon, natural and artificial flavouring. Mom’s Apple Pie is (yet another…) limited release tea, so if you’re interested in giving it a try now would be a good time.

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The tea itself has plentiful pieces of apple and cinnamon in with the green tea, which is nice to see. It has a great smell to it, definitely reminds me of apple pie. The problem with teas that come with flavouring is that it can often be lost when steeping, or when resteeping.

Preparation

DavidsTea recommends steeping in 85°C (185°F) water for 3-4 minutes. I steeped in my Tea For One pot for about 4 minutes.

First Taste

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This tea has a beautiful smell when it’s steeping and after I pour a cup of it. It has a very rich apple cinnamon smell. The unfortunate thing is that the taste of apples is weak in the tea, and the cinnamon is fairly lost in the tea itself, which is disappointing because it is very much present in the smell of the steeped tea. I added a bit of sugar to my cup of tea and found that it brought out the taste of apples and cinnamon quite a bit, but it wasn’t enough to overcome my disappointment in the tea. I like trying green teas, and I’ve had good teas with apple in it before (Honeycrisp Apple is one that I wound up getting a whole tin of). Mom’s Apple Pie raised my expectations of itself because of the great smell it had, but the taste is just lacking.

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A Second Cup?

I attempted to resteep Mom’s Apple Pie but found that the weak apple taste was even more lost. I would not recommend doing one more steep with Mom’s Apple Pie.

My Overall Impression

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I didn’t like DavidsTea’s Mom’s Apple Pie. I found the smell of the dry leaf and steeped tea to be much better than the taste of the tea itself. The cinnamon was missing in the tea and the apple flavour was weak, I had high hopes for this tea because of how good it smelled, but I found it sorely lacking in flavour. I would definitely recommend adding a little sugar/sweetener if you’re going to give Mom’s Apple Pie a try because it does help bring out more of the flavours in the tea. Because of the disconnect between dry and steeped tea, I just had to give this tea one cup. I wanted to love it, because of how good it smelled, but there are much better flavoured green teas out there.

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Two Leaves and a Bud’s Jasmine Petal

Jasmine Petal by Two Leaves and a Bud
Green Tea / Straight
$8.49USD for 37.5g (15 sachets)

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First Impressions

I received this box of Two Leaves and a Bud’s Jasmine Petal as part of a swap, so it did get a little bit crushed in the packaging. Each tea sachet comes individually wrapped in a clear plastic wrapper. There is some print on it that tells you the name of the tea and type (Jasmine Petal; whole leaf green tea) as well as the caffeine level (light) and steep time (3 minutes). At the bottom it states “compostable tea sachet” which is something important because I always feel bad if I have tea in a sachet that can’t be composted (can I really enjoy tea if I’m contributing the landfill?).

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The sachet itself is a pyramid with a handy string to fish the tea back out. It smells amazingly floral – it has a very bright and strong jasmine scent to the dry tea. If you look in the tea sachet, you can see fairly large tea leaves in there. No fannings or dust for these tea sachets, that’s for sure.

The side of the box states that the ingredients are from China (ingredients of Jasmine Petal are: green tea, jasmine flowers). The other information includes the fact that the tea has about the same amount of caffeine as a third of a cup of coffee, to use water that is 180F and to steep for 3 minutes.

Preparation

Two Leaves and a Bud recommends steeping in 180°F (82°C) water for 3 minutes.

First Taste

I steeped Jasmine Petal for about 3 minutes. It steeps to a familiar yellow colour that I’ve come to expect from a green tea. It smells amazing, the jasmine scent is a lot stronger in Jasmine Petal than in most jasmine green teas that I’ve tried before. I think this is because it contains jasmine flowers, rather than just having been scented with jasmine flowers. The tea itself is quite nice. It’s got a smooth taste to it, with a touch of bitterness at the end of each sip. I think 3 minutes might be a little long for this tea, I would try it again on a first steep at maybe 2 or 2.5 minutes to see if that makes a difference. The bitterness isn’t terribly off-putting because the tea itself still has a great flavour. The jasmine taste isn’t as strong as it smells, but I don’t mind that too much because I’d prefer to have my green tea tasting like green tea.

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A Second Cup?

I tried resteeping the sachet and it didn’t do too well. While the sachet uses whole leaf, it just didn’t do as well as I would have expected for a sachet that uses whole leaves. The second steeping was weak in flavour and aroma.

My Overall Impression

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I thought that Two Leaves and a Bud’s Jasmine Petal was just okay. It makes for a good cup of jasmine tea, and I really appreciate that Jasmine Petal contains jasmine flowers instead of green tea that’s been scented with jasmine flowers. I think that 3 minutes is entirely too long to steep this tea for, because of the fact that it begins to get bitter and nobody likes a cup of bitter tea usually. I would have rated it higher if it had more appropriate steeping instructions. Overall, I think that Jasmine Petal does okay as a jasmine green tea and I will definitely have another cup again, but I don’t think I would buy it when there’s so many jasmine green teas out there that don’t give me too long of a steeping time in the instructions.

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