Tea Name: | Pine needle tea |
Tea Type: | Herbal tea |
Tea Image: | Sollip-cha.jpg |
Tea Origin: | East Asia |
Tea Quick: | Tea made from pine needles |
Tea Time: | 3‒20 minutes |
P. densiflora needle tea P. tabuliformis needle tea | |
Hangul: | 솔잎차 |
Hanja: | 솔잎茶 |
Rr: | sollip-cha |
Mr: | sollip-ch'a |
Koreanipa: | pronounced as /ko/ |
P. koraiensis needle tea | |
Hangul: | 잣잎차 |
Hanja: | 잣잎茶 |
Rr: | jannip-cha |
Mr: | channip-ch'a |
Koreanipa: | pronounced as /ko/ |
Hangul1: | 백엽다 |
Hanja1: | 柏葉茶 |
Rr1: | baegyeop-da |
Mr1: | paegyŏp-ta |
Koreanipa1: | pronounced as /ko/ |
Pine needle tea or pine leaf tea is a herbal tea made from pine needles, or the leaves of pine trees (trees of the genus Pinus). In Korea, the tea made from the leaves of Korean red pine (P. densiflora) or Manchurian red pine (P. tabuliformis) is known as solip-cha (Korean: 솔잎차),[1] [2] [3] while the tea made from the leaves of Korean pine (P. koraiensis) is known as jannip-cha (Korean: 잣잎차) or baek yeop-Cha (Korean: 백엽 차).[4] [5] In North America, pine needle tea may be made from the leaves of Eastern white pine (P. strobus) and Loblolly, Virginia Pine, Long Leaf Pine.
Solip-cha is a herbal tea made mostly from the leaves and needles of Korean red pine or Manchurian red pine.[6] Pine needles are usually harvested around December; preferably before midday; from 10 to 20 year-old trees located mid-mountain and facing southeast, that have grown in sunny places. Two types of sollip-cha can be made:
The first method uses fresh or dried pine needles. The harvested leaves are soaked in water for a day and then cleaned, rinsed, trimmed of the sharp tips, and halved or cut into three pieces. They can be used right away or dried in a shaded area before being used. For of water, of dried pine needles or of fresh pine needles are infused over low heat. As the tea has the properties of an astringent, honey or sugar is added to improve taste.
The second method consists of using fermented pine needles. The harvested leaves are trimmed of their sharp tips and washed, then placed in a sugar solution made with water and of sugar, which is then fermented in a sunny place for a week (in summer) or more (in other seasons). Well-fermented sollip-cha is filtered with cloth and consumed as cold tea.
The leaves that grow eastward are harvested for making the tea. of fresh pine needles are washed, drained, and boiled in water.[7] When it comes to a boil, it is brewed on a low heat, and drunk without the leaves.
Aneda - used by the St. Lawrence Iroquoians to cure scurvy, sometimes described as "pine needle tea", though more commonly thought to have been Thuja occidentalis