Crafting Herbal Teas at Logan County Master Gardeners’ Russel Allen Garden Day

[March 21, 2025]    Many local gardeners look forward to mid-March when the Logan County Master Gardeners host the Russel Allen Garden Day, an educational day of workshops and speakers, at the Oasis Senior Center.

This year, Amy Wertheim of Wertheim Enterprises, Inc. in Atlanta, presented a hands-on workshop at the event held on March 15. She directed participants in the best ways to concoct herbal tea blends and brought a variety of herbs for participants to try creating their own herbal tea recipes.

Wertheim is an eighth generation Logan County resident who started gardening in 2010 to compete at the county and state fair. Later she took a class in Chicago for creating salves and lotions, which she began selling. During the pandemic she began participating in an online farmer’s market. Meanwhile, she had discovered an herbal tea from Georgia that became her favorite, but it was expensive to purchase with shipping costs. She decided to try blending her own teas with the herbs that she was already growing and drying for use in her salves and lotions.

Wertheim dries herbs on racks in a climate controlled environment of 20% humidity or less, then stores whole herbs in tubs until she is ready to process them. Making tea requires quite a large quantity of herbs. She has grown 68 different herbs to add to her tea blends. She calculated that in three and a half years she has made 9,500 bags of tea. Wertheim prefers to air dry her herbs rather than using an oven or dehydrator because air drying preserves the oils and flavors of the herbs. She dries the whole leaf and preserves the whole leaf. She recommends not crushing the leaves until immediately before dunking the tea bag into hot water.

All varieties of tea (white, green, black, oolong, matcha, pu-erh) come from the same plant, they are just processed differently. Although Werthiem would like to grow her own tea plants, they will not grow in Illinois’s climate. Wertheim uses white tea in her herbal tea blends. All tea has caffeine; however, white tea contains the least amount of caffeine of the various varieties. The only tea without caffeine is strictly herbal.

When crafting herbal tea blends, Wertheim encourages considering the three notes of the tea: 1) smell, 2) flavor, and 3) after-flavor. The third note, the after-flavor that lingers on the tongue, is the most difficult to develop and achieve.

Some of her favorite herbs for using to create herbal teas include anise hyssop, basil, chamomile, hops, calendula, and lemon balm. She even recommends experimenting with culinary herbs that are better known for cooking and seasoning, such as rosemary and parsley.

Wertheim led participants in step-by-step instructions for crafting the perfect herbal blend tea. She told the group that the order of layering ingredients makes a difference.

[to top of second column]

She recommends spooning a scant tablespoon of white tea into the tea bag first as a foundation then adding whole leaf herbs of your preference. Close the tea bag and then crush with your hands to release the oils, flavor, and fragrance immediately before steeping. Steep the tea bag in hot water for several minutes and enjoy.

Werthiem provided the ingredients for participants to make her recipe for Pumpkin Caramel Delight, which is the first tea she crafted for sale, and her recipe for Top of the Morning Tea, which she makes for herself in the mornings.

After brewing and sampling these teas, participants were invited to create their own herbal tea recipes with the many dried herbs Wertheim brought to the workshop. Participants were given hand-outs to record the ingredients and quantity of herbs for their unique creations with space to make notes about flavor and aroma. Wertheim warned never to name the tea before tasting it because you never know how it may turn out. At the end of the workshop, participants were able to take home their hand-crafted, custom-blended herbal teas to enjoy in the cozy comfort of their homes.

[Stephanie Hall]

 

Back to top