This started as a blog about coffee, and then I included tea. As time went by my intolerance for caffeine grew to the point where I could no longer drink either coffee or tea, so now I am exploring other hot drinks such as herb teas and hot chocolate.
Friday, 28 April 2017
Murroughs Welsh Brew
I'm Welsh, so Chrissie brought this home for me after attending a meeting where it was being served. My memory of "proper Welsh tea" is that is is strong and bitter. This is thin and tannic. Not my thing at all. Closer in style to Yorkshire tea than either the Irish or Dorset teas that I love, and nothing like my memory of the way tea was made in Wales when I was a kid. It has some of the dry tea flavour of Yorkshire, but not the body. This is pretty poor tea really. It is blended and sold by the Murrough family who are based in my home town of Swansea.
Score: 1
Wednesday, 26 April 2017
Sainsbury's Taste the Difference Colombian Coffee Beans
Smooth, delicate, and with attractive chocolate notes with hints of summer flowers and Italian red wine. An enjoyable and satisfying coffee with some character.
Score: 6
***
Colombian coffee |
Asda French Style Coffee
A fairly simple, slightly crude, coffee. Not offensive, and it is drinkable, but it is very one dimensional, and offers little beyond a basic dark roast flavour. This has been roasted an inch too far for my taste. If there are folks who don't like the taste of coffee, but like the taste of burnt toast, they will enjoy this. I suspect those who like such darkly roasted coffees also like espresso.
Score: 2
Asda tea and coffee |
Coffee roasts |
Monday, 10 April 2017
Thompson's Family Teas Irish Breakfast Blend
It seems everywhere in the British Isles there is a region specific tea. I can accept Yorkshire tea, as it is a tradition there for strong tea, and to a certain extent accept Welsh tea, as that is also strong, but not quite as strong as Yorkshire, but none of the other places that claim regional significance have any particular tradition. But, it is fun to have these teas, and there is some pleasure in the association. This is an Irish tea, and it's a breakfast blend, so I somewhat expected a strong tea, and was both disappointed and pleased that it turned out to be a soft and drinkable tea. Disappointed because I wanted some guts and glory, but also pleased because it is easy drinking and thirst quenching. There is, yes, a lack of character, but sometimes that's exactly what you want. This is a good drinking tea that quenches the thirst and washes down the breakfast without intruding. So it works as well with the fry up as it does with the jam and croissant. Flexible, refreshing, undemanding, everyday tea. Not one to offer your guests nor for that quiet reflective moment in the garden with a book, but certainly something easy to slurp down.
Date: April 2017 Score: 4
Founded in 1896, Thompson's are a family tea firm based in Belfast who have recently started marketing their tea outside of Ireland. Their Irish Breakfast Tea is based on the traditional English breakfast tea, which is a blend of teas based on Assam tea from Northern India, Kenyan tea, and often one or more others. This blend just uses Assam and Kenyan, and as such lacks character. It's probably done to save money. We found the tea to lack brightness and flavour, no matter how we brewed it. If brewed stronger or longer instead of getting more flavour, we simply got tannic bitterness and cardboard.
Not a successful blend for us.
Date: Dec 2018 Score: 3
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