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You are here: Home / Tea & COCKTAILS / Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Hibiscus Citrus Tea

August 10, 2015 By Susan Nuyt Leave a Comment

IMG_9129 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

It’s a bright summer flower, a large beautiful red–Moon Marvel Hibiscus–and it’s simply grand for brewing into a cold glass of iced tea.  Kick back your feet in the afternoon shade and enjoy some good old-fashioned down-time with me.  Watch out for the horse fly…IMG_9128 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

If you’re blessed having pesticide-free Hibiscus plants in your yard, capture their short-lived blossoms when they freshly fold up, closing their blooms.  These are showy flowers but they’re also unique to cook and bake with.  I’ve made them into BBQ sauce, and I’ve canned with them for Hibiscus butter.  This remarkable flower can help in maintaining fluid balance and normal body temperature, plus, supports the heart and skin.  It’s great for cholesterol and blood pressure.  Bravo, push on.IMG_9130 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Pluck them as soon as they’re closed to prevent mold on the spent petals, then unfold and lightly clean with a dry cloth or paper towel before cooking with them.

IMG_9132 HIbiscus Citrus Tea

A 1.5 quart-size stainless sauce pan is what I use.  I make my tea strong, then allow the ice cubes filled to the rim of a large pitcher to settle into the tea for the right strength of tea that I like.  This way, the ice doesn’t dilute the tea as far as weakness goes.IMG_9133 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Remove the inner part to discard, and snap off the white sections on the petals that hold the center in place.  IMG_9138 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

This kind of gold dust isn’t what you want!  As I mentioned, clean the gold specks of flower dust off with a clean dry towel–a paper towel does alright.IMG_9137 Hibiscus Citrus TeaIMG_9141 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

The petals look like pleated skirts.  

For a 1.5 quart pan, use all the petals of 2 blooms.  Cover with a lid at a slant so the water doesn’t flow over, on low heat.  IMG_9147 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Bring to a slow boil, and as soon as you do, turn out the heat.  Cover with the lid completely and let the tea set for a few minutes.IMG_9148 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Squeeze and discard the tea bags and petals.  IMG_3499 Marigold Tea

Freshly squeeze the juice of 1 lemonIMG_2314 Moon Marvel Hibiscus Butter

and 1 orange.  Stir into the tea, and add sugar to taste.   IMG_9152 Hibiscus Citrus Tea

Fill a pitcher all the way to the top with ice and pour the tea over; cover and let chill as the day goes by.  

flowered tea

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