Experience JetBlue Mint: The Ultimate Premium Transcontinental Inflight Service

We were the guest of JetBlue to try out their trans-continental premium inflight service, Mint. Mint, which operates between New York’s JFK Airport and San Francisco International and Los Angeles International airports, is the carrier’s twist on first or business class. As usual, it was a great flight, and below is a list of our eight favorite things about it.

1. A Premium Line

The Mint experience begins as soon as you arrive at the airport. Flying out of LAX, there’s a special line for Mint customers. Since we didn’t get our usual TSA PreCheck, it was nice that we didn’t have to stand in a long security line. Although there wasn’t a JetBlue lounge past security, the gate we used was away from the teeming masses at LAX Terminal 3, and there was soothing music playing, which was greatly appreciated.

2. A Friendly Flight Crew

We have always been a fan of JetBlue flight crews, no matter where we’re sitting. They always make you feel like they’re happy you’re there, and it was no different on the Mint flight. There was a welcome card signed by the flight attendants at each seat. One of the attendants personally welcomed each person in Mint class and explained the seat for those of us who were new to the product.

3. The Suite Seat

JetBlue created these seats to fit their vision of a first/business class experience. No other airline in the world has them. The long-range aircraft features 12 first class and four “suite” seats. The suite is a single seat that has a door for additional privacy, which is a nice feature. All the Mint seats feature a massage unit, lumbar support, and the ability to recline or go into a fully lie-flat bed. The pillow was comfortable, and the duvet was heavy enough to avoid a chill, but not so heavy that you felt overheated.

The only small gripe is that the foot space can feel a bit confining when the seat is in the lie-flat mode. Nevertheless, it surely beats sitting in Coach! Finally, the seat features lots of storage that can hold your electronics.

4. Birchbox Amenity Kit

JetBlue offered its own twist on an amenity kit by partnering with Birchbox to offer curated kits for men and women. Inside the box was Fekkai Hair Mist, a wonderful Perlier Shea Lavender lotion, Dr. Jart + facial cream, Mirenesse Glossy Kiss – Cheeky Kiss lip crayon, Yes To Cucumber Facial Wipes, and a Grab & Go Pony stretchy hair tie.

5. Upscale Food and Beverages

The flight started with the signature Mint Lemonade, available with or without Vodka. JetBlue offers a nice selection of wines from Jon Bonne, its wine expert, including Chardonnay, Rosé, Counoise, Zinfandel, and Sparkling wine.

Additionally, there’s an assortment of beers, liquors, coffees, teas, and non-alcoholic beverages. There’s also a space in the seat that holds bottled water. The meal was created by New York-based Saxon + Parole.

For our red-eye flight, we started with artichoke and black truffle on a crostini as the appetizer. The plate also included three small dishes: a chicken pot pie, a baby heirloom tomato confit with Serrano ham, Kalamata olives, frisée, and an Asian pear salad with blue cheese and candied hazelnuts.

Dessert options included fresh fruit or organic mango sorbet from Blue Marble Ice Cream. If you were still hungry, you could walk over to the snack pantry.

Before landing, we were given a biscuit sandwich with chicken sausage, eggs, and pimento cheese. As we left the flight, we received a small box containing two shortbread cookies and a blondie from Mah-Ze-Dahr Bakery.

6. Power to the People

JetBlue offers three power outlets and USB ports in the seat, making it easy to charge an iPad, iPhone, or MacBook Pro.

7. Inflight Entertainment

The inflight entertainment system features a 15-inch television screen and 100 channels of TV shows, movies, and radio on DirecTV and SiriusXM. Additionally, there’s FlyFi, the carrier’s free and robust inflight Wi-Fi system, ensuring you’ll never be bored.

8. The Price

For this complete Mint experience, fares start at a bargain $599 each way. Competition is fierce on the transcon flights out of New York, and other airlines have their premium products.

A JFK-LAX flight booked 30 days out on United Airlines’ P.S. service cost $5107, while Delta charged $2666, American charged $3067 (for first class), and Virgin America charged $2074.

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