Crazy Good Wild Mint and Stinging Nettle Tea

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  • Опубликовано: 21 июн 2024
  • foragerchef.com/nettle-tea/
    Edit: For the best flavor you MUST infuse the nettles and mint in the liquid overnight, or at least for, say, 6 hours or so. Made fresh it will be too mild. I wanted to have serving it fresh as an option to make it inviting for people to make but it's just not anything as strong as an overnight infusion. Make it and you'll see. It's soooo good.
    I wrote off nettle tea (and other wild crafted teas) for years as a novelty and I was so wrong. If you haven't tried it, nettle tea made from fresh plants with a few leaves of mint is fantastic and absolutely worth the small effort it takes to prepare. Sweetened with a touch of maple syrup and a few extra mint leaves it makes a killer iced tea that'll make you feel like an elf.
    I really love the flavor of boiling fresh plants here, but you can also use dried stinging nettle leaf sold in coops and high end grocery stores too. There's also many types of nettle tea sold online.
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Комментарии • 12

  • @lorenzo__cooks
    @lorenzo__cooks 12 дней назад +3

    hell yeah. love how fired up you sound in this

  • @kringsja922
    @kringsja922 10 дней назад

    great video, cant wait to try it with spruce tip syrup.
    Have a great day :)

  • @Humandesignmagyarul
    @Humandesignmagyarul 12 дней назад

    Thank you ✨

  • @jimphubar
    @jimphubar 12 дней назад +1

    It's a tisane, a steeped drink that doesn't contain tea. A heap of lemon balm and a modest amount of fresh sage will go very well with this. I usually sweeten with a little bit of molasses. It's restorative I'm sure.
    I've been using nettles for years as an analgesic, not sure whether analgesic is technically correct. I've suffered chronic pain for a very long time and whenever I see them I grab a juicy stem and swipe my lumbar area. It feels like if 'DEEP HEAT®' cared about you.. Lasts for half a day.
    Really enjoying your channel Chef.

    • @foragerchef4141
      @foragerchef4141  12 дней назад

      Technically it’s a decoction as it’s boiled. Tisane is an outdated word thats rarely used imo.

    • @jimphubar
      @jimphubar 12 дней назад +1

      ​@@foragerchef4141 You're absolutely right with the boiling, I steep mine for a while. I retract.
      I had a fine tea supplier once who also pointed out that I was far from à la mode, I think for using that exact term.
      I'll be quiet now.

  • @RobynFfrancon
    @RobynFfrancon 12 дней назад

    Thanks for the recipe! I've just given this a go.
    Didn't have maple syrup so used honey. I think maple syrup would have been better, i will get some and try again.
    It was definitely very nice. I think i need to make it stronger. So I'm going to reduce it a bit and maybe add some more Moroccan mint at the last minute.
    Great channel, thanks!

    • @foragerchef4141
      @foragerchef4141  12 дней назад +2

      It will get stronger as it sits too. You can let it cool completely with the nettles in it, then strain.

  • @alaskansummertime
    @alaskansummertime 12 дней назад

    What about the Oxalic acid in older nettle leaves? I couldn't find much about making tea out of older nettles.

    • @foragerchef4141
      @foragerchef4141  12 дней назад +1

      Just grab the tender-ish tops, they’re best. I don’t often harvest them as old as I demonstrate here for fresh, but for dried you can. I wanted to show multiple ages, mostly to mention that young nettles don’t taste like much and it’s good to get them in late spring or early summer. I can’t speak to oxalate content.

  • @HaileyWatson
    @HaileyWatson 12 дней назад

    ... Did he just say "ya I talked to Sam Thayer bout it..." Damn what a name drop in the north american foraging community 😨

    • @foragerchef4141
      @foragerchef4141  11 дней назад

      Sam's a close friend mine. We're actually making this tea for a weekend long retreat we're doing this weekend in N WI.