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Bird & Blend’s Easter-themed Cream Egg tea is a lovely creamy chocolatey tea treat in a mug. It’s made with Sri Lankan black tea, cocoa nibs, cocoa shells, Jasmine blossom and sunflower petals. I believe the sunflower petals are a contributing factor to the overall creaminess of this, it tastes milky, even before you put the milk in.
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The best thing about this tea is that, thankfully, it doesn’t taste like a Cadbury’s Creme Egg. I’m not a big fan of the creme egg, to be honest, although I respect it as an iconic design in the world of chocolate manufacture. Not only is it the size and shape of an actual egg, it has a filling, which resembles a soft boiled yolk and egg white lovingly recreated in fondant form. It’s kind of genius, and I admire the artistry, but my goodness, that fondant is a bit much, isn’t it? I think it contains about 80 grams of sugar per gram which is a tricky feat to pull off what with the laws of physics and all. The chocolate to gloop ratio is all wrong.
Bird & Blend’s similarly named tea has none of these problems, having dispensed with any notion of cloying fondant filling or egg-shaped-ness. They have produced the perfect cocoa-infused cuppa. I’m sure the goddess, Eostre, after whom this holidays named would be suitably impressed. Happy Easter, fellow tea fanciers!
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Today’s featured book is my well-worn copy of The Gaia Tradition by Kisma K Stepanich which contains all the goddesses (including Eostre) that one could possibly wish for.