![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering
how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. Thanks, halcy0n |
|
|||
|
On Sep 2, 9:36 pm, halcy0n wrote:
I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. Thanks, halcy0n It seems as if you have not posted to this list previously. Actually, this is a tea group - camellia sinesis. Not herbs. There are many herbal groups available online that may give you appropriate information. Lemon Balm is an herb whose leaves are usually dried before steeping. Good luck in finding an appropriate group for your interests. Shen |
|
|||
|
On 2007-09-02 23:03:45 -0600, Shen said:
On Sep 2, 9:36 pm, halcy0n wrote: I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. Thanks, halcy0n It seems as if you have not posted to this list previously. Actually, this is a tea group - camellia sinesis. Not herbs. There are many herbal groups available online that may give you appropriate information. Lemon Balm is an herb whose leaves are usually dried before steeping. Good luck in finding an appropriate group for your interests. Shen Thanks for the tip; I appologize for posting in the wrong list. |
|
|||
|
On 2007-09-03, halcy0n halcy0n wrote:
I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. I've only rarely gotten my hands on fresh leaves, and the lemon aroma fades significantly with drying. Since you are using fresh leaves, have you tried crushing or chopping the leaves before infusion? (This works superbly for mint, which I find also needs a huge amount of leaf otherwise to get a tolerable strength.) Also, have you tried a longer infusion time? I wouldn't expect to be able to get much out of a second infusion, though. I'd be curious how it would affect the flavor to steep it for longer with water well below boiling. If you like it, that might get you a second infusion, too. Instead of using more leaf, I usually combine it (n.b. dried) with stronger smelling herbs like lavender, spearmint, or most often verbena/lemon myrtle/(fresh) lemongrass to make the flavor more potent. Thanks for the tip; I appologize for posting in the wrong list. Nothing to apologize for -- discussion of herbal teas (though not of their medicinal properties) are explicitly on-topic according to the newsgroup's charter. There is overlap between tea drinkers and herbal tea drinkers, also. I think Shen just meant that you may get more or better quality responses in groups specifically for herbal teas. (If you do ask elsewhere and get a good answer, please post a summary here, as well.) HTH, N. |
|
|||
|
halcy0n wrote:
On 2007-09-02 23:03:45 -0600, Shen said: On Sep 2, 9:36 pm, halcy0n wrote: I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. Thanks, halcy0n It seems as if you have not posted to this list previously. Actually, this is a tea group - camellia sinesis. Not herbs. There are many herbal groups available online that may give you appropriate information. Lemon Balm is an herb whose leaves are usually dried before steeping. Good luck in finding an appropriate group for your interests. Shen Thanks for the tip; I appologize for posting in the wrong list. So tizanes are not topical according to the charter? I don't want to nit pick, but there is enough overlap with 'tea' that I don't see what the big deal is... -- HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/ The Sushi FAQ HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiotaku/ The Sushi Otaku Blog HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiyapedia/ Sushi-Ya-Pedia Restaurant Finder HTTP://www.theteafaq.com/ The Tea FAQ HTTP://www.jerkyfaq.com/ The Jerky FAQ HTTP://www.omega3faq.com/ The Omega 3 Fatty Acids FAQ |
|
|||
|
On Sep 23, 7:12 am, Warren Ransom wrote:
halcy0n wrote: On 2007-09-02 23:03:45 -0600, Shen said: On Sep 2, 9:36 pm, halcy0n wrote: I've been growing a lemon balm plant over the summer and was wondering how to best brew it. I've just been cutting sprigs off and putting them in boiling water for about 4 minutes. I usually only get 1 decent infusion however, and it takes a lot of leaves. Is there a better way to extract the oils? Does it matter whether I brew both the leaves and stems or should I be throwing away the stems. Thanks, halcy0n It seems as if you have not posted to this list previously. Actually, this is a tea group - camellia sinesis. Not herbs. There are many herbal groups available online that may give you appropriate information. Lemon Balm is an herb whose leaves are usually dried before steeping. Good luck in finding an appropriate group for your interests. Shen Thanks for the tip; I appologize for posting in the wrong list. So tizanes are not topical according to the charter? I don't want to nit pick, but there is enough overlap with 'tea' that I don't see what the big deal is... -- HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/The Sushi FAQ HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiotaku/The Sushi Otaku Blog HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiyapedia/Sushi-Ya-Pedia Restaurant Finder HTTP://www.theteafaq.com/The Tea FAQ HTTP://www.jerkyfaq.com/The Jerky FAQ HTTP://www.omega3faq.com/The Omega 3 Fatty Acids FAQ- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The RFDT charter states that tisanes are topical as long as the discussion doesn't center on medicinal properties, etc. Tisanes as a beverage are very much on topic for this group. This is an excerpt from the RFDT FAQ: 5.3. What is rec.food.drink.tea? Rec.food.drink.tea is a Usenet newsgroup devoted to the discussion of tea and related beverages. It was inaugurated in 1995 with the following charter: Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. Discussions of herbal teas (e.g. chamomile, sassafras, etc.) are also approved, but this newsgroup should NOT be used for advertising herbal tea products or discussing tea as anything other than a beverage. Tea-as-medicine discussions should take place in misc.health.alternative. So, while many of us tea snobs would rather discuss camellia sinensis, tea as a beverage in the broader sense is completely on topic. Alan |