Recipe Background
Iced Raspberry Tea combines black tea and raspberry syrup for a refreshing, cooling sip.
The first time I crafted this iced raspberry tea, I had just finished unpacking boxes on my first moving day to Chicago. The new city felt overwhelming, and the summer heat was relentless. My tiny apartment kitchen offered little respite, so I looked for something simple yet refreshing to tackle both nerves and climate. As luck would have it, I found some black tea sachets lurking at the back of a cupboard, a remnant from a care package my mom had sent me during college. Brewed with a few cups of water, it seemed like the perfect base for an experiment.
Raspberries caught my eye at the neighborhood's bustling farmers' market. Their vibrant hue reminded me of picking berries with my grandfather, whose firm belief was that nothing could quench thirst like homemade fruit drinks. To sweeten the drink, I heated a bit of sugar with the raspberries until they boiled down to syrup. Stirring in the syrup slowly allowed me to find that sweet spot just shy of too sweet. Pro tip: let the syrup cool sufficiently to truly meld the flavors. Finally, a handful of mint leaves and a heap of ice made the concoction my go-to summer refresher. Serving it up not just soothed my transition but also became a warm welcome gesture for neighbors who soon turned into friends.
From those simple ingredients, I rediscovered how the smallest comforts can fill a new space with familiarity and warmth. That summer, the iced raspberry tea was more than a drink; it was a bridge from my past to my present, each sip a reminder of home.
Ingredients
For the tea:
- 4 cups water divided
- 3 black tea sachets
- 3 tablespoons white sugar
- 1 cup raspberries
Optional, for serving:
- raspberries to taste
- mint leaves to taste
- ice to taste
Directions
- In a saucepan or small pot, bring 2 cups of the water to a boil.
- In a heatproof pitcher, add the tea sachets and the hot water and allow the tea to steep for 5 minutes.
- Remove the tea sachets and allow the tea to cool.
- Heat the remaining water, the sugar, and 1 cup of the raspberries in a skillet over medium-high heat.
- Allow the raspberry mixture to come to a boil and simmer for 10 minutes.
- Use a wooden spoon or potato masher to mash the raspberries.
- Remove the raspberry syrup from the heat and use a mesh strainer to filter out the raspberry pieces and seeds.
- Allow the raspberry syrup to cool for 10 minutes.
- Once both the tea and raspberry syrup are cool, combine them in the pitcher, adding the syrup a little at a time until it reaches your desired level of sweetness.
- Garnish with the extra raspberries and the mint and serve over the ice.
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