What is black tea?
Black tea is made from the leaves of Camellia sinensis, the same plant that produces green, white, and oolong tea. What makes it black is full oxidation. After harvesting and rolling, the leaves are exposed to air and allowed to oxidise completely, darkening them and transforming their flavour into something robust, malty, and warming.
New Zealand has one of the strongest black tea cultures in the world. The British influence runs deep: the morning brew with milk is part of daily life in a way few other drinks can claim. T2's black tea range starts with that tradition and takes it further, from the city-inspired breakfast blends that have become T2's signature to the Earl Grey family, creative flavoured teas, and a few harder-to-categorise picks worth exploring.
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The breakfast collection
T2's city breakfast series is the backbone of the range. Each blend has a city name and a personality to match.
Melbourne Breakfast is smooth, malty, and vanilla-sweet: the one most New Zealanders reach for first and keep coming back to. English Breakfast is the straight classic: bright, citrusy, clean structure that works at any point in the day. New York Breakfast brings maple syrup sweetness over a bold malt base, unexpectedly good without milk. Sydney Breakfast is crisp and citrus-forward, built for an energising start. Scots Breakfast is mineral, malt-heavy, and grounding. Irish Breakfast is bright, direct, and uncompromising. Singapore Breakfast is the most distinct of the group: toasted coconut and molasses depth over a strong black base. Canberra Breakfast goes chocolatey and biscuity, sweetly suited to the afternoon.
The Earl Grey family
Earl Grey is black tea scented with bergamot oil, extracted from the rind of the bergamot orange grown primarily in Calabria, southern Italy. The bergamot gives it a floral, slightly tropical fragrance that makes it as enjoyable without milk as with.
French Earl Grey is the most aromatic of T2's New Zealand Earl Grey range: bergamot-scented black tea with tropical floral notes, sweeter and more complex than the classic. Melbourne Grey is T2's own take, adding a vanilla warmth to the bergamot that softens and rounds the brightness into something distinctly T2. Earl Grey is the straight classic: well-balanced and always right.
Chai
If black tea is your starting point, chai is the natural next step. T2's chai range builds on a strong black tea base, adding cardamom, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and star anise to create something warming and deeply satisfying. Chai lattes have become one of the most ordered drinks in New Zealand cafés, and making one at home is more straightforward than most people expect. Spi Chai offers the same spice profile without the caffeine, making it a good evening option. Explore T2's chai collection for the full range.
FAQ
What does black tea taste like?
Black tea has a robust, malty, and warming flavour with a pleasant natural astringency. The exact character varies significantly by origin and blend: Melbourne Breakfast leans vanilla-sweet and smooth; English Breakfast is bright and citrusy; Earl Grey adds the floral citrus of bergamot. T2's flavoured black teas extend the range into caramel, hazelnut, and spice.
Does black tea contain caffeine?
Yes. A standard cup of black tea contains approximately 40 to 70mg of caffeine, depending on the blend, steep time, and water temperature. This is roughly half the caffeine of a standard cup of coffee at around 95mg. For caffeine-free alternatives, T2's rooibos and honeybush range and herbal and floral collection are both worth exploring.
How do you brew black tea?
Use water just off the boil at 95 to 100°C. Steep for 3 to 5 minutes depending on how strong you like it. Four minutes is a good benchmark for breakfast blends served with milk. Earl Grey-style teas are worth trying without milk at around 3 minutes: the bergamot comes through more clearly. Freshly drawn, freshly boiled water gives a noticeably brighter result than water that has been sitting in the kettle.
What is the best black tea to start with?
Melbourne Breakfast is the go-to for our Kiwi customers: smooth, malty, and vanilla-sweet, it works with or without milk and is very easy to enjoy. English Breakfast suits those who want something brighter and more traditional. For those curious about Earl Grey, French Earl Grey is more approachable than the straight classic, with tropical floral notes that make it easy to like from the first cup.
How should black tea be stored?
Store in an airtight container away from direct sunlight, heat, strong odours, and moisture. In New Zealand, moisture is the real enemy: the humidity that comes with an Auckland summer or a Wellington southerly can work its way into loosely sealed tins faster than you'd expect. Properly stored, black tea stays at its best for up to two years, with peak flavour within 12 months of purchase.