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Tea and Life

The Iced Tea Your Canada Day Has Been Missing

par Bhaskar Dahal 20 May 2026 0 commentaire

 

Canada Day · Summer 2026

The Iced Tea Your Canada Day Has Been Missing

No bitterness. No sugar needed. Just high-altitude Himalayan tea, cold brewed overnight and poured over ice.

Most iced tea is an act of compromise. You brew it too strong and it turns bitter. You add sugar to fix the bitterness. You add lemon to balance the sugar. By the time it’s drinkable, you’ve spent five minutes fixing a problem that shouldn’t exist.

This Canada Day, there’s a better option — and it comes from a place you might not expect: the high-altitude tea farms of Nepal, growing at 5,000–7,000 ft in the Himalayas, where the thin mountain air and cool nights produce a leaf that has no bitterness to begin with.

We’re Nepal Hills Tea, and we’re based right here in Peterborough, Ontario. This is the story of why Himalayan tea makes the best iced tea you’ll drink all summer — and how to make it.


Why Most Iced Tea Tastes Bitter (And How Altitude Fixes It)

Bitterness in tea comes from tannins — naturally occurring compounds in the tea leaf. Most commercial teas are grown at low altitudes where the plant grows fast, the leaf is large, and tannins accumulate in high concentrations. Steep that tea for too long, or brew it wrong, and the bitterness overwhelms everything else.

High altitude changes the equation entirely. At 5,000–7,000 ft in Nepal’s Ilam and Taplejung districts, tea plants grow slowly. The cool nights, thin air, and mist create leaves that are dense with aromatic compounds and naturally lower in tannins. The result is a cup that is smooth and sweet from the first sip — whether hot or iced, with or without sugar.

The Nepal Hills difference Every single tea in our range is described by new customers the same way: “I can’t believe there’s no bitterness.” That’s not a brewing trick. It’s the altitude.

When you cold brew a low-tannin tea overnight, something special happens. The slow extraction pulls out the fruit notes, the floral sweetness, the natural caramel and honey depth — without the harsh edge. You end up with an iced tea that tastes like the tea actually wants to be drunk this way.


The 8-Hour Cold Brew: Your Canada Day Ritual

Set this up the night before July 1st. Wake up to the best thing in your fridge.

How to Cold Brew Nepal Hills Tea

  1. Choose your tea. Dark Oolong, Gold Black, or Ruby Black Tea are the top picks for cold brew. All three have natural sweetness that intensifies cold.
  2. Measure. 1.5 teaspoons of loose leaf tea per 500 ml of cold water. No need to be precise — this tea is forgiving.
  3. Add cold water. Room temperature or straight from the tap. No hot water needed.
  4. Seal and refrigerate. 8–12 hours. Overnight is ideal.
  5. Strain and pour over ice. A fine mesh strainer or a French press works perfectly.
  6. Taste before adding anything. You’ll likely drink it exactly as it is.

Dark Oolong cold brewed tastes like stone fruit — apricot, peach, a little honey. Gold Black Tea goes caramel and malty, like a dessert you didn’t need sugar to make. Ruby Black Tea cold brews into something close to a tart cherry drink — deep, smooth, beautiful colour in the glass.

All three are certified organic. All three have no bitterness. All three will change how you think about iced tea for the rest of the summer.


Where This Tea Comes From

Nepal Hills sources from four small farms in Nepal — none of them large operations, all of them doing something extraordinary with the land they farm.

Farmers Tea Co.
Ilam, Nepal · 5,500 ft

150 farming families, led by Dil Kumar Rai. Certified organic. Source of our Gold Black, white teas, and green teas.

Sandakphu Tea Estate
Ilam/Taplejung · 5,000–6,000 ft

Jasbirey Village community. Certified organic. Home of our Ruby Black and Dark Oolong.

Norling Specialty Tea
Ilam, Nepal · 5,000–5,500 ft

40 smallholder families, in the process of organic certification. Home of our Muscatel Black and Floral Oolong.

Pathibhara Tea Estate
Taplejung, Nepal · 6,000 ft

The highest farm in our range. Certified organic. Source of Theba Black — rare, complex, and unlike anything else.

5% of every Nepal Hills purchase goes directly to the farming families through our Farmer Fund. It’s not a marketing line — it’s baked into how we price every product. When you buy our Tea Sampler Kit, you’re funding the farmers who made what’s in it.


A Canadian Summer With a Himalayan Cup

Canada Day is a celebration of what makes this country worth living in — and part of that, for many of us, is the freedom to discover exceptional things from every corner of the world and call them ours. A Nepalese tea grown by a family at the top of the Himalayas, cold brewed overnight in a Peterborough kitchen and poured over ice in a Toronto backyard on July 1st — that feels distinctly Canadian to us.

No compromise. No bitterness. Just something genuinely great in your glass.

Start with the Tea Sampler Kit

10 teas. 4 farms. All four types — black, green, oolong, white. Everything you need to find your cold brew favourite before Canada Day.

Get the Tea Sampler Kit — $30 CAD

Free shipping on orders over $60 CAD · Ships from Peterborough, Ontario


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best tea for cold brewing in summer?
High-altitude teas from Nepal are among the best for cold brewing because their naturally low tannin levels mean no bitterness even when steeped in cold water for 8–12 hours. Nepal Hills Dark Oolong, Gold Black Tea, and Ruby Black Tea are all exceptional cold-brewed. Add 1.5 teaspoons per 500 ml of cold water, refrigerate overnight, and pour over ice. No sugar needed.
Does Nepal Hills Tea taste bitter when iced?
No — and this is what makes Nepal Hills Tea different from most iced teas. Our teas are grown at 5,000–7,000 ft in Ilam and Taplejung, Nepal, where high altitude slows leaf growth and reduces the tannins that cause bitterness. Cold brewing amplifies this: the result is a smooth, naturally sweet iced tea with no bitterness at all, even without adding sugar, lemon, or milk.
How do I cold brew Nepal Hills Tea?
Add 1.5 teaspoons of loose leaf tea per 500 ml of cold water in a jar or pitcher. Seal and refrigerate for 8–12 hours — overnight is ideal. Strain and pour over ice. Dark Oolong and Gold Black Tea are especially recommended for cold brew.
What is in the Nepal Hills Tea Sampler Kit?
The Nepal Hills Tea Sampler Kit ($30 CAD) includes 10 different single-origin teas — 5g of each — from all four of our farm partners in Nepal. It covers all four tea types: black, green, oolong, and white. Each 5g sample makes approximately 2 cups, giving you around 20 cups total.
Is Nepal Hills Tea organic?
Most Nepal Hills teas are grown on certified organic farms. Our teas from Farmers Tea Co., Sandakphu Tea Estate, and Pathibhara Tea Estate are all grown on certified organic farms. Our Muscatel Black Tea and Floral Oolong are sourced from Norling Specialty Tea, which is currently in the process of organic certification and grows without synthetic pesticides. We contribute 5% of every purchase to the farmer organic certification fund.
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