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Cream Earl Grey

Black tea

About this tea

Cream Earl Grey is a flavored extension of the classic bergamot-scented black tea, layering vanilla over the citrus-floral aroma of bergamot to create a warm, dessert-like cup. The vanilla softens bergamot's sharper edges, producing a smoother, more rounded profile that has become a cafe staple — particularly in North America, where it underpins drinks like the London Fog. Whether enjoyed neat or whisked into a steamed-milk latte, Cream Earl Grey is one of the most approachable entry points into the world of flavored black teas.

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

bergamot, vanilla, creamy

Often associated with

Gentle wake-up, Calm alertness

Best time to enjoy

Mid-morning, Early afternoon, Mid-afternoon

Tags

FocusSocialSweetWarm

Origin & Production

Blended worldwide — black tea bases from Sri Lanka, India or China; bergamot from Calabria, Italy; vanilla typically from Madagascar or Indonesia

Cream Earl Grey is a flavored blend rather than a single-origin tea. It starts with a classic Earl Grey base — fully oxidized black tea scented with cold-pressed bergamot oil from Calabria — and adds vanilla flavoring (natural vanilla extract, vanilla pieces, or food-grade vanilla flavoring) and sometimes blue cornflower petals for visual appeal. The black tea base varies by blender: Ceylon for brightness, Chinese Keemun for smoothness, or a multi-origin mix. The vanilla-to-bergamot ratio is what distinguishes brands.

Production process

1

Earl Grey base

Fully oxidized black tea leaves are sprayed or tumbled with cold-pressed bergamot oil from Calabria, then rested to allow the citrus aromatics to distribute evenly through the leaf.

2

Vanilla addition

Vanilla is incorporated either as natural vanilla extract sprayed onto the leaf, chopped vanilla bean pieces blended in, or as food-grade vanilla flavoring — depending on price tier.

3

Optional cornflower petals

Many Cream Earl Grey blends include dried blue cornflower petals — primarily for visual appeal, since they contribute very little flavor.

4

Resting & quality control

The blend is rested for several days so the bergamot, vanilla and tea aromatics marry, then cup-tested to confirm the bergamot–vanilla balance before packaging.

Flavored blendBergamot + vanillaCafe favoriteLondon Fog base

History & Tradition

Cream Earl Grey is a relatively modern flavored variation that emerged as specialty tea houses began pushing beyond the strict bergamot-only tradition.

1
1830s

The original Earl Grey

Black tea scented with bergamot oil became associated with Charles Grey, the 2nd Earl Grey and British Prime Minister (1830–1834), launching the Earl Grey family of teas.

2
1990s

Specialty tea house variations

North American specialty tea houses (notably Murchie's of Victoria, BC and other Canadian and US blenders) developed Cream Earl Grey variants, layering vanilla over the classic bergamot signature.

3
2000s

London Fog popularizes the style

The London Fog — an Earl Grey latte with vanilla syrup and steamed milk — was popularized in Vancouver cafes and spread across North America, making cream-vanilla-bergamot a familiar flavor profile to a generation of cafe drinkers.

4
2010s–present

Global cafe staple

Cream Earl Grey is now offered by major specialty tea retailers worldwide and underpins a generation of vanilla-bergamot pastries, ice creams and lattes.

Health Benefits

Calm focus

The caffeine (~40–60 mg per cup) from the black tea base supports alertness, while bergamot's linalool and vanilla's vanillin contribute well-studied aromatherapeutic calming notes.

Bergamot polyphenols

Bergamot fruit contains polyphenols such as brutieridin and melitidin that studies have linked to healthier lipid profiles. While oil-of-bergamot in tea contains less than the fruit, it still contributes some aromatic flavonoids.

Black tea antioxidants

The black tea base provides theaflavins and thearubigins — fully-oxidized polyphenols studied for antioxidant activity and immune support.

Mood-lifting aromatics

Bergamot essential oil is widely used in aromatherapy for its mood-supporting properties; the addition of vanilla, whose vanillin is associated in studies with reduced stress markers, amplifies the comforting effect.

Digestive comfort

Bergamot oil has been used in Mediterranean folk medicine to soothe digestion, and warm tea after meals supports gentle digestive movement.

Grades & Varieties

Balanced bergamot–vanilla

The classic Cream Earl Grey style with roughly equal bergamot and vanilla notes — citrus and dessert in balance, sitting on a smooth black-tea base. Versatile for neat drinking or with milk.

Best for

  • Afternoon cup
  • London Fog lattes
  • Pairing with desserts

Vanilla-forward

A sweeter, dessert-leaning style where vanilla dominates and bergamot plays a softer supporting role — particularly popular in North American cafes and with newcomers to flavored teas.

Best for

  • Sweet-tooth drinkers
  • Vanilla latte alternative
  • Evening (low-caffeine variants)

Bergamot-forward with cornflower

A more classical Earl Grey character with a vanilla accent and blue cornflower petals for visual appeal. The bergamot citrus remains the leading note — ideal for those who like Earl Grey but want a softer edge.

Best for

  • Earl Grey purists exploring vanilla
  • Visually striking gift teas
  • Iced summer tea

Did you know?

Cream Earl Grey underpins the London Fog — an Earl Grey latte with vanilla syrup and steamed milk popularized in Vancouver cafes in the 2000s. The vanilla softens bergamot's sharper edges into a smoother, dessert-like cup.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea