Can’t Take the Heat? Try Cold Brewing Tea

This post is part of the Natural Living Series. Guest Maria shares with us how to cold brew tea. For more information about Maria, be sure to check out the bottom of this post and for more posts on Eating Naturally, check out our week of Eating Naturally posts.

With the dog days of summer and some serious heat waves upon us, daily hydration becomes vitally important. I’m a big fan of loose leaf tea, but even for people who just want to add some flavor to their water without adding caloric or artificial sweeteners, cold brewed tea turns out to be a great option. Not only do tea leaves infuse plenty of flavor and antioxidants into your water – they give you a metabolic boost as well.

When you brew tea, you’re just putting water into contact with dried tea leaves. This infuses the water with active substances – like caffeine and polyphenol antioxidants, fresh flavor and color – all specific to the type of tea you’re brewing.

Cold brewing loose tea is easier than hot brewing it, because when the tea leaves infuse more slowly into cool water, you don’t run the risk of oversteeping, or having your tea beverage turn bitter from having left the leaves in for too long. This is because the slower process of cold brewing results in a simpler and purer extraction than hot brewing. When you bring your dried tea leaves in contact with hot or boiling water, they’re extracted much faster and more completely, but this process also transforms some of the active ingredients as it extracts them.

The bottom line is – fresh cold brewed teas are a refreshing alternative to bottled and sweetened iced tea – so how do you cold brew?

Cold Brewing tea with Steep&Go

Because cold brewing is a more forgiving process, proportions and steeping times aren’t as critical as when you’re hot brewing – It’s simple and produces a well-balanced iced tea without bitterness or clouding. The same cold brewing method works well for many loose leaf teas, including green teas, white teas, oolong teas and some herbals. As you can see, in my fridge I’m keeping plenty of hearty chilled teas on hand to help keep my appetite and thirst quenched in these hot afternoons. Left-to-right are three organic iced teas: a green tea (Clouds & Mist), Pu-erh tea mixed with rosebuds, and Dark Roast Oolong. And yes, I make it easy by using my favorite new Steepware® tea infuser, the Steep & Go, in a different color on every bottle.

You may notice that the flavors are a bit different than the hot brew version – but every bit as likable. One of the best things about loose leaf tea is that variety is just as pleasing as consistency, and the journey you take with a tea leaf through multiple infusions is multi-faceted. Cold brewing is yet another dimension in which to discover the beauty of loose leaf tea.

How to Make Cold-brewed Tea

1. Place about 2 teaspoons of loose leaf tea in a liter bottle of water.
2. Place in the refrigerator and steep for at least 2 hours, or for 10-30 minutes at room temperature.
3. Drink it cold, straight from the fridge without any ice to dilute the flavor (my preference) or serve over ice.

This is edited from a previously published post at The Tea Spot Blog.

154681_462445453433_4762354_nMaria Uspenski is CEO and Founder of The Tea Spot. As a cancer survivor, she was drawn to the health benefits of tea during her recovery. She set forth to promote wellness by making loose leaf tea an everyday luxury. Her message is simple and powerful: tea in its freshest form renders incredible flavor, unmatched health benefits, and is eco-friendly.

Leave a Reply to Cold Brew Some Tea | Hello Tea Cup Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

CommentLuv badge

%d bloggers like this: