Tisanes may be better known in Europe, but in California they are all but unheard of. I was surprised to come across a recipe for tisane in a cookbook I was looking through, and in an effort to improve upon my own grey cells, I boiled up a batch.
Tisane
Adapted from the New Mayo Clinic Cookbook, Serves 2
2 cups water
1 heaping Tablespoon fresh ginger, peeled and roughly chopped
2 Tablespoons lime juice
2 Tablespoons fresh mint leaves, packed
2 Tablespoons honey
Slices of lime and sprigs of mint (to use as garnish)
Put the water, ginger, and lime into a small sauce pan and bring the mixture to a boil. Simmer for 5 minutes, then remove the pan from the heat and add the mint leaves and let the mixture steep for another 5 minutes. Strain into two teacups, add a Tablespoon of honey to each, garnish with a sprig of mint and a slice of lime.
I'm sure that Poirot would have approved of the honey sweetened beverage, with it's wholesome citrus bite and it's slow but strong ginger burn, a combination which I'm sure could obliterate any ailment. Personally, next time I would choose hot chocolate.
Technically, a tisane is any herbal infusion. The term is not used in the US much and instead they are called herbal teas. So a tisane can mean anything from a complicated blend of herbs to the very generic mint tea offered in a restaurant or on the shelves of grocery stores.
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