Sipdown! 975.
Thanks to Janelle for sending me the last of this tea to sample :) I was in the mood for some herbals tonight, and figured I’d try out this tea, since it has fennel + two ingredients I enjoy (in food, at least)… and the fennel in Kapha Ayurvedic was actually quite a pleasant surprise both in the initial infusion and tonight’s resteep.
The aroma very, VERY strongly reminds me of an Indian restaurant, or grocery – cumin and fennel dominating. My boyfriend has some aversion to the smell of Indian spices, and I imagine this tea would make him gag (I find it makes me crave Mutter Paneer and Aloo Gobi and all that yummy stuff). Flavourwise, it’s primarily coriander, followed up by cumin (ok, those two switch depending on the sip) and surprisingly little fennel. Like, not even any sweet aftertaste of fennel. It’s also very weird to have cumin-flavoured water. Coriander, I can handle, fennel in small amounts is ok, but cumin is SO savoury, it’s throwing me off.
Despite this tea being reasonably pleasant, I’m finding that all it’s really doing is causing me to have severe food cravings, so I’m glad I only had a single cup’s worth of this.
Preparation
Comments
Oh yeah, cumin in tea? Weird.
That poor guy not liking the smell of Indian spices. Now I want curry!
My partner doesn’t do Indian food either, but I swear it’s because most of what passes commercially for Indian in the UK is oddly not awesome. Canada does a surprisingly superior saag paneer!
But yeah, I’m not sure cumin in tea would do it for me, either. Just like I get thrown off by too much cinnamon in savoury foods, I think cumin in something I’m used to falling on the sweet end of the spectrum (even if only marginally so) would be super weird, especially since when I think of Indian tea, I’m thinking masala chai, which should be sweet and milky. Odd.
Oh yeah, cumin in tea? Weird.
That poor guy not liking the smell of Indian spices. Now I want curry!
My partner doesn’t do Indian food either, but I swear it’s because most of what passes commercially for Indian in the UK is oddly not awesome. Canada does a surprisingly superior saag paneer!
But yeah, I’m not sure cumin in tea would do it for me, either. Just like I get thrown off by too much cinnamon in savoury foods, I think cumin in something I’m used to falling on the sweet end of the spectrum (even if only marginally so) would be super weird, especially since when I think of Indian tea, I’m thinking masala chai, which should be sweet and milky. Odd.
Yeah – I love Indian food, so it makes me sad that he doesn’t. Our food preferences are not entirely compatible, unfortunately.
I’m trying a second cup, steeped even longer… this might be even weirder.