My dad had a friend give him this Masala tea from Qantas and I can't find the brand anywhere online. Anyone know what it is? He says it was really good.

https://i.redd.it/5mlzd7j6elcg1.jpeg

8 Comments

  1. walkingmelways on

    Look at the batch number format and see if it matches the batch number format of brands you find at the shop.
    I’d imagine Dilmah is a possibility. They used to supply Macca’s fwiw.

  2. Domestic flight or international? If international, they might use the overseas products.

    Edit: This is probably a powdered tea mix rather than the sachet of an individual tea bag. Reasons: the tear to open the bag is too small for a tea bag and all you need to do is add hot water (whereas masala tea is often taken with milk).

  3. friendlyfredditor on

    He’s probably just tasting powdered milk and sugar tbh.

    I can’t imagine it’s much better than any standard chai powder. 50gms is quite a lot though. He could also be enjoying the huge dose. I know for me like 3heaped tsp is crazy strong but I’ve had people prefer 10.

  4. MarionberryUsual3302 on

    Quantas has their own tea flavour made by Yarra Valley Tea Co. called their ‘Quantas inflight’ blend. Not sure if they would also use this company for tea for their employees, but it is worth a shot looking into it more since they are an institutional sale company.

  5. BorryOrbsander on

    I’d say it’s a Girnar product.

    QFF uses (or at least used to after Q Catering and SNAP acquisition by Dnata) Yarra Valley Tea Co, Dilmah, Binjang Tea, and Girnar Teas. These are all generally done through Dnata who does all the onboard catering.

    My best guess is that because it’s a masala tea, it’s most likely going to be a Girnar product of some kind, as I don’t think the other ones do masala teas.

    Source: I sold over 380,000 bags of crackers and dip in 6 months to a major Australian airline, and also supplied pilot and crew meals for another airline for a few years. We worked with Dnata, LSG SkyChefs, GateGourmet amongst others. Also sold pies to trains in England.