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Re: Lemon Verbena Tea

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I would use as much as you think would equal half of the weight at the black,

green or white tea you choose. See how you like it & then increase or decrease

the amount as you like it.

God Bless

Skye

Audrey wrote:

I have a nice large lemon verbena plant growing and dried a little bit

of the leaves to make tea and flavorings with, but am wondering how

many leaves would I use to make with kombucha tea, would it need to be

with black or probly green would taste better, or none?

Audrey

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As a nursery family member, I'd very definitely

advise you to wash the leaves, carefully with a

soft wash cloth by hand. Good old vinegar

can be the next to last rinse, then plain, clean

water. I grow some of my own herbs, and since

my car gets dirty just sitting in the front of the

house, I'd guess plants also get that same amount

of dirt, dust, and whatever else is blowing in on

the wind.

Pat in CA

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Hi Skye,

Well I doubt it is organic where I purchased the plant, but I did not

spray anything on it, It has been in a pot outside though, so should I

wash the leaves first, then dry them??

Audrey

<snippet>>

> I would use as much as you think would equal half of the weight at

the black, green or white tea you choose. See how you like it & then

increase or decrease the amount as you like it.

>

> God Bless

> Skye

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>As a nursery family member, I'd very definitely

>advise you to wash the leaves, carefully with a

>soft wash cloth by hand. Good old vinegar

>can be the next to last rinse, then plain, clean

>water.

I'd reverse this. The vinegar is fine to go into the KT, and it's better

than the water. Also for washing salad greens, veggies for

steaming/wokking, etc.

--V

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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Hi Pat,

So to add the leaves fresh for flavoring, or dried in partial

replacement of the tea?

Audrey

<snippet>>

> As a nursery family member, I'd very definitely

> advise you to wash the leaves, carefully with a

> soft wash cloth by hand. Good old vinegar

> can be the next to last rinse, then plain, clean

> water. I grow some of my own herbs, and since

> my car gets dirty just sitting in the front of the

> house, I'd guess plants also get that same amount

> of dirt, dust, and whatever else is blowing in on

> the wind.

> Pat in CA

>

>

>

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Hi V,

Thanks, I agree.

Audrey

<snippet>

>

> I'd reverse this. The vinegar is fine to go into the KT, and it's

better

> than the water. Also for washing salad greens, veggies for

> steaming/wokking, etc.

>

> --V

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>

> So to add the leaves fresh for flavoring, or dried in partial

> replacement of the tea?

> Audrey

> ------------------------------------------------------

When I make mint tea, I just use the fresh leaves, freshly washed.

You are putting it in hot water, just like you make regular tea,

and then you take it out after brewing, like the tea bags.

So, in this case, I think I would simply use the fresh leaves. You

could dry some for winter, of course, and use them then as dried.

It's nice that you have your own supply, in case you develop a

real taste for this flavor.

Try lots of herbs, some of them might surprise you at how well

they marry with our dear Kombucha's flavor.

Pat in CA

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> > So to add the leaves fresh for flavoring, or dried in partial

> > replacement of the tea?

> > Audrey

Audrey you can do it either way, but remember that there are always

concerns about what a particular herb may do to the culture if you ferment

with the herb rather than adding it to the bottles afterward.

So if you do ferment with herbs, pretty much everyone agrees that you must

take care to reserve a vessel for brewing that does not have any additives.

If you add some leaves of the herb to the bottles when you decant and let

those age a bit, whether on the shelf or in the refrigerator, you'll also

get an herbal beverage. The KT is so acidic that it definitely is

extractive of herbal essences when given the chance.

--V

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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One more thing on this subject, which is, fresh leaves are almost always

preferred over dried for medicinal value. Some things do need to be dried

to potentize them in certain ways, but if you have the choice for typical

kitchen tincturing or flavorings, fresh is better. So either way,

fermenting with or adding later, I'd say by all means use fresh.

> > > So to add the leaves fresh for flavoring, or dried in partial

> > > replacement of the tea?

> > > Audrey

--V

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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Hi, V

Thank you for your input. I was mainly concerned about making a

regular hot tea to drink, or for bottling, but was curious about

making the kombucha cultured with it.

Audrey

<snippet>

> Audrey you can do it either way, but remember that there are always

> concerns about

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Hi V,

Yes, that is one reason I was asking which way to do it, fresh or

dried. Would you know for this one?

Audrey

<snippet>>

> One more thing on this subject, which is, fresh leaves are almost

always

> preferred over dried for medicinal value. Some things do need to be

dried

> to potentize them in certain ways,

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Fresh, Audrey. Regular Western herbs and kitchen herbs are almost all best

used fresh if using the leaves/flowers. It's usually only some roots and

more rare substances like medicinal mushrooms etc in Chinese herbal

medicine that have specific protocols for drying and preparation. For

leaves/flowers, drying is generally just a way to preserve them for later

use, if someone has access to fresh that is best. --V

>Hi V,

>Yes, that is one reason I was asking which way to do it, fresh or

>dried. Would you know for this one?

>Audrey

~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

--A.J. Muste

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Hi V,

Thanks for all your help. I just wanted to be sure and ask. Do I

take from the top of bottom of the plant and if drying for the

winter how much can I take off?

Audrey

>

<snippet>

> Fresh, Audrey. Regular Western herbs and kitchen herbs are almost

all best

> used fresh if using the leaves/flowers. It's usually only some

roots and

> more rare substances like medicinal mushrooms etc in Chinese

herbal

> medicine that have specific protocols for drying and

preparation. For

> leaves/flowers, drying is generally just a way to preserve them

for later

> use, if someone has access to fresh that is best. --V

>

> >Hi V,

> >Yes, that is one reason I was asking which way to do it, fresh or

> >dried. Would you know for this one?

> >Audrey

>

>

> ~~~ There is no way to peace; peace is the way ~~~~

> --A.J. Muste

>

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