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Apple Cinnamon Black Tea

Black tea

About this tea

Apple Cinnamon Black Tea is a flavored black tea built around one of the most beloved seasonal flavor pairings in the world — crisp apple and warm cinnamon, layered over a malty black tea base. Unlike single-origin black teas defined by terroir, this is a flavored-tea creation: the leaf supplies body and a backbone of malt, while dried apple pieces, cinnamon bark, and natural apple-cinnamon flavoring do the talking in the cup. The result tastes like a gentler, less sugary cousin of apple pie — fruity and slightly tart up front, with cinnamon's dry spice-warmth trailing through the finish. It has become a defining autumn flavor in tea aisles and cafés, the tea equivalent of a pumpkin-spice latte for people who want comfort without coffee. Served hot it feels like a mug-shaped sweater; served iced it makes a bright, spiced refresher that still tastes unmistakably like fall.

How to brew: 95°C, 3.5 min, 2.5 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

95°C
3.5 min
2.5 g per cup

Flavor notes

fruity, spiced, sweet, warming

Often associated with

Warmth, Comfort

Best time to enjoy

Afternoon, Evening, Mid-afternoon

Tags

SweetSpicedWarm

Origin & Production

Blended product — black tea base typically from Sri Lanka, India, or China, flavored with dried apple and cinnamon at tea-processing facilities worldwide

Apple cinnamon black tea is not anchored to a single tea-growing region — it is a flavored tea, meaning a base black tea (commonly a Ceylon, Assam, or Chinese black leaf chosen for its malt character and ability to carry added flavor without clashing) is combined with dried apple pieces, cinnamon bark or chips, and natural apple-cinnamon flavoring after the leaf has already been harvested and processed. The flavoring and blending step happens at a separate facility from the tea garden, where the dried fruit and spice pieces are mixed through the leaf and natural flavoring is sprayed or tumbled on to round out and intensify the apple-cinnamon character so it reads clearly even after the tea is steeped. The category grew alongside the broader rise of fruit-and-spice flavored black teas in the late 20th century, riding the same wave that made apple pie, pumpkin spice, and mulled cider flavors into seasonal retail staples. Quality varies: better versions use real dried apple and true cinnamon (Ceylon cinnamon or high-quality cassia) plus natural extracts, while lower grades rely on apple-flavored sugar granules and artificial cinnamon flavoring sprayed onto tea dust or fannings.

Production process

1

Base leaf selection

A black tea with a smooth, malty profile and moderate body — often Ceylon, Assam, or a Chinese black tea — is chosen as the base so it can carry fruit and spice notes without becoming muddy or overly astringent.

2

Dried apple and cinnamon preparation

Apple pieces are dehydrated to a low moisture content so they store safely alongside the tea leaf, while cinnamon is added as small bark chips or ground cinnamon for visual texture and a slow-release aroma.

3

Natural flavoring application

Natural apple and cinnamon flavoring extracts are sprayed evenly onto the dried tea leaf in rotating drums, reinforcing the fruit-spice character so the cup tastes consistently of apple and cinnamon, not just dried tea with fruit bits in it.

4

Mixing and resting

Dried apple, cinnamon, and flavored leaf are blended together and left to rest in sealed containers for 24–72 hours so the aromatic compounds bind fully to the leaf surface, preventing a 'sprayed-on' or separated taste.

5

Quality control and blending

Batches are cupped to confirm the apple-to-cinnamon balance — too much cinnamon turns the cup peppery and sharp, too little apple leaves it tasting like plain spiced tea — before lots are blended for consistency.

6

Packaging

The finished blend is packed quickly in aroma-sealed pouches or tins, since both the fruit flavoring and the volatile cinnamon oils fade faster than the natural character of unflavored black tea.

Flavored black teaAutumn seasonal favoriteReal dried apple piecesCinnamon bark or chips

History & Tradition

Apple cinnamon black tea belongs to the modern flavored-tea category, but it draws on a much older European and North American habit of warming cider and wine with apples and cinnamon — a comfort pairing the tea industry eventually bottled into a tea bag.

1
1800s

Mulled cider and spiced apple traditions

Long before flavored tea existed commercially, households across Europe and North America simmered apples, cider, and cinnamon together as a cold-weather drink, establishing the pairing as a deeply familiar cool-season comfort flavor.

2
1980s

Flavor-extraction technology matures

Advances in food-flavor chemistry made it commercially practical to produce stable, natural apple and cinnamon flavoring extracts that could be sprayed onto dry tea leaf at scale, alongside dried fruit pieces.

3
1990s

Specialty tea retail expansion

Specialty tea companies in North America and Europe began offering apple-spice and apple-cinnamon black teas as cozy, dessert-adjacent blends, positioned for the cooler months alongside chai and orange-spice teas.

4
2000s

Seasonal marketing takes hold

Apple cinnamon black tea became a recurring autumn seasonal release for major tea brands, marketed alongside pumpkin and spice flavors as the tea-aisle answer to fall-flavored coffee drinks.

5
2010s

Year-round and iced expansion

Demand grew strong enough that many brands moved apple cinnamon tea from a strictly seasonal release to a year-round staple, while cafés began offering iced versions as a caffeinated alternative to apple cider.

6
2020s

Clean-label reformulation

Growing demand for recognizable ingredients pushed many brands to reformulate apple cinnamon black tea with visible dried apple pieces and true cinnamon bark rather than relying solely on sprayed flavoring.

Health Benefits

Steady, moderate energy

As a black tea, apple cinnamon tea carries a moderate caffeine level that gives a steadier lift than coffee, useful for sustained focus during a work session without the sharper spike-and-crash of espresso.

Antioxidant base from black tea

The underlying black tea leaf retains the theaflavins and thearubigins typical of fully oxidized tea, the polyphenol compounds most associated with black tea's everyday antioxidant reputation.

Cinnamon's traditional warming role

Cinnamon has long been used in folk traditions worldwide as a warming spice associated with comfort and circulation; here it lends that traditional warmth to the cup without needing any added sweetener.

A naturally sweet-tasting ritual

Because apple and cinnamon both read as sweet to the palate, many drinkers find they need little or no added sugar, turning what could be a sugary treat into a lighter comfort drink.

Cozy, seasonal comfort ritual

The combination of hot black tea, baked-apple aroma, and cinnamon spice is widely used as an autumn and winter afternoon ritual — a cup that feels indulgent and grounding on a cold day.

Grades & Varieties

Naturally flavored, whole leaf with real apple pieces

Whole-leaf black tea base flavored with natural apple and cinnamon extract and finished with visible dried apple pieces and cinnamon bark chips. The roundest, most layered version of the flavor, with a clean finish.

Best for

  • Slow afternoon brewing
  • Gift tins and premium autumn blends
  • Hot cup with a touch of honey

Standard flavored, broken leaf or fannings

Broken-leaf black tea flavored with apple and cinnamon extract, with smaller fruit and spice pieces. Brews faster and stronger than whole leaf, with the flavor hitting upfront. The most common tea-bag format.

Best for

  • Quick everyday tea bags
  • Iced apple cinnamon tea
  • Office or workplace brewing

Spiced blend with extra cinnamon and clove accents

A bolder seasonal variant that adds extra cinnamon, a touch of clove, and sometimes orange peel to the base apple-cinnamon blend, pushing it closer to a mulled-cider or apple-pie spice profile.

Best for

  • Cold-weather evening ritual
  • Mulled-tea or stovetop simmering
  • Fans of a stronger spice profile

Did you know?

Long before flavored tea existed commercially, European and North American households simmered apples, cider, and cinnamon together as a cold-weather drink in the 1800s — apple cinnamon black tea is essentially that centuries-old mulled-cider comfort ritual bottled into a modern tea bag.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea