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How to Make Lavender Iced Tea Recipe

My husband and I say it isn't officially summer until the bees are buzzing around our lavender bushes. They attract the biggest bumblebees we’ve ever seen and it kinda nice to take a break from reading on the front porch and watch them enjoy the fruit (well, pollen actually) of our gardening labor.

Cutting back the lavender flowers encourages our plants to grow larger, which attracts more happy bees. It also encourages me to find ways to use the lavender buds. Waste not. Want not, right?
And that, my friends is how I made my recipe for lavender iced tea. The lavender adds a light savory touch to an already fantastic cold drink for a hot and humid summer’s day.

Let’s make it!

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How to Make Lavender Flavored Iced Tea



howtomakeicedteafromteabags
Steeping!
I'm using black tea in this example. That is why the tea is a darker color.





You will need:


5 tea bags of unflavored black, green, or white tea

1 Teaspoon of dried culinary lavender buds - If you do not have lavender bushes and a dehydrator (I have a Nesco dehydrator that I can’t recommend enough!) to dry the buds for this recipe, you can buy dried culinary lavender buds from Amazon. Make sure you use culinary lavender because it is not treated with additives to deepen the color and smell that taste awful.


Approximately 1 teakettle full of heated water + enough room temperature water to fill your iced tea pitcher

 Mesh tea ball

Optional: 1/2 to 1 cup of sugar or honey

Disclosure: I’m always thinking about kind and frugal folks like you - that's why I some ideas I'm sharing are from companies I like and personally use.If you get the goodie, I might get a few coins thrown my way that keeps me supplied with enough tea and tacos to keep bringing YOU smart budgeting ideas every week! Thank you for supporting Lazy Budget Chef!


Make it:


1. Put 5 tea bags and the tea ball filled with dried lavender buds in an empty pitcher.


2. Heat one tea kettle full of water and pour it over the tea bags in a room temperature pitcher to reduce the chance of the extreme heat reacting to a cold pitcher and cracking it – science yo!

3. Fill the rest of the iced tea pitcher with room temperature water and allow the tea bags to steep for 4-15 minutes depending upon how strong you like your iced tea.

Be aware that the longer you let your tea steep it has a good chance of becoming bitter.

I let my lavender iced tea steep for four minutes because I’m using green tea bags and plan to drink it unsweetened.

4. Remove the tea bags and ball from the iced tea. Tip: If you have a compost bin, compost bins LOVE spent tea bags!

5. Optional: Stir in 1/2 cup to 1 cup of sugar or honey.The amount of sugar you use depends upon how sweet you like your tea. Most of the time, I skip the sugar altogether. When I add sugar, I start by adding a 1/2 cup of sugar and add more if I get complaints from guests that my sweet tea t isn’t sweet enough.


7. Pour a cup and drink it up!

Looking for more lavender recipe ideas? Check out the following options - and more! - below!

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Comments

Gardening Helen said…
I love cooking with lavender! Thanks for sharing at the What's for Dinner party. Have a great week.
April J Harris said…
What a lovely, relaxing tea for a summer afternoon. Thank you for sharing and for being a part of the Hearth and Soul Link Party. Take care and have a lovely weekend!
Joanne said…
I love a delicious glass of flavored iced tea in the summer; I've never tried it with lavender. Thanks for sharing with us at Encouraging Hearts and Home.
This sounds delicious and the perfect drink to enjoy while reading a good book on the patio. I've got dried lavender buds from last year's harvest to make it. Thanks for the recipe!