Recipes

hibiscus tea with bay leaves and cinnamon, and then we’ll talk

Written by Techetude

Hibiscus Tea with Bay Leaves & Cinnamon

What It Tastes Like

  • Hibiscus → tart, cranberry-like
  • Cinnamon → warm and slightly sweet
  • Bay leaf → herbal, earthy, subtle spice

Together they create a deep red tea with a balanced sweet-tangy flavor.


Ingredients (2 Cups)

  • 2 cups water
  • 1–2 tbsp dried hibiscus flowers
  • 1 cinnamon stick
  • 1 bay leaf
  • Honey or sugar (optional)
  • Lemon slice (optional)

Step-by-Step Instructions

STEP 1 — Heat Water

Bring 2 cups of water to a gentle boil.


STEP 2 — Add Spices

Add:

  • cinnamon stick
  • bay leaf

Simmer:

  • 5 minutes

This helps extract flavor from the harder spices first.


STEP 3 — Add Hibiscus

Turn heat lower and add hibiscus flowers.

Simmer gently:

  • 3–5 minutes

The water will turn deep ruby red.


STEP 4 — Steep

Turn off heat.

Cover and let steep:

  • 5 minutes

STEP 5 — Strain & Serve

Strain into mugs.

Optional additions:

  • honey
  • lemon
  • orange slice

Serve:

  • hot
    or
  • chilled over ice

Important Flavor Tips

Too Sour?

Add:

  • honey
  • less hibiscus
  • more cinnamon

Too Weak?

Use:

  • more hibiscus
  • longer steep time

Too Bitter?

Bay leaf or hibiscus steeped too long can become bitter.


Optional Variations

Ginger Version

Add fresh ginger slices.

Good for:

  • warmth
  • stronger spice

Iced Summer Version

Chill and serve over ice with mint.


Creamy Version

Add small splash of oat milk or coconut milk.


Common Questions

Q: Can I drink it daily?

Generally yes in moderate amounts.

Hibiscus tea may lower blood pressure in some people.


Q: Does it contain caffeine?

No.

It’s naturally caffeine-free.


Q: What do bay leaves add?

A subtle herbal depth and warming aroma.


Q: Can I use powdered cinnamon?

Yes, but sticks give cleaner flavor.

About the author

Techetude

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