Wait, what?! Carrot tea?! Oh, yes.
I’ve been sitting on this recipe for a while, but it’s been such a busy couple of weeks that I haven’t had time to actually sit down and write it up until now. You may think I’ve gone nuts during that hiatus and that my carrot obsession has crossed a line – carrot breakfast pudding and carrot lokshen kugel were fair enough, I guess, but carrot tea? Really?
Yes, really! I urge you to reserve judgment until you try the recipe. It’s really quite lovely.
You can make your carrot tea savory or sweet, hot or cold. I recommend the savory version hot and the sweet version iced. If you have kids, see if they like the iced version – it has a lot less sugar than juice or soda but tastes like a new kind of lemonade, if lemonade wasn’t tart.
I love to drink the savory version when I’m feeling like my system needs a bit of extra help – there is something very healing about it, and the celtic sea salt provides mineral support.
So, am I crazy? Let’s find out!
A couple notes about the recipe:
-This recipe will make two 10-oz cups
-Try to use carrots that are fresh, so their peels aren’t too bitter. A little bitterness is actually quite nice, just as in black tea or coffee, but you don’t want the carrots to be very old or your tea won’t be that appealing. If they aren’t very fresh, you can always peel the carrots but I prefer not to since a lot of the nutrients are in the peel.
Carrot Tea
- Two large carrots (12 ounces total), washed and unpeeled
- 5 cups water
- A knob of ginger (about ½ an ounce), unpeeled
- Celtic sea salt (for the savory version)
- Maple syrup (for the sweet version)
Directions:
Place the carrots in a saucepan with the water and bring to a boil. Boil rapidly, uncovered, for 20 minutes. Add the ginger, cover, and boil 10 minutes more. (If you want a stronger ginger flavor, cut the ginger into a couple pieces before you do this.)
For the savory version: add a couple generous pinches of celtic sea salt to your mug of tea and stir to dissolve.
For the sweet (iced) version: skip the salt and instead add a drizzle of maple syrup, to taste. Let cool on the counter to room temperature, and then pour into an airtight glass jar and place in the fridge until chilled.
Rowena says
I am a domestic helper here in hong kong. I have a japanese employer and ahe always wants me to boil carrots for 15 minutes. These cattots will store in the refrigirator so that everytime she cook she will juat get some of it and include in her dish.
I always drink the soup after boiling the carrots. And it taste good.. because i was thinking that the nutriemts are all in the soup after boiling it for 15 minutes. 🤣
Alana says
Yes! Carrot broth is so tasty and definitely full of nutrients!
suzanne says
I have been desiring carrot tea. I drank some and was hooked. It is quite expensive but i will incorporate your recipe with mine. Try it without salt or sugar but add honeybush tea, burdock and cinnamon. It is delicious!!!
Alana says
Suzanne, sounds great! :-)
sie says
I just added carrots into my astralagus codonopsis tea. I add red dates and gogi for sweetener
Alana says
Sie – awesome! How did it turn out?
John Stolarczyk says
Hi Alana
Carrot Museum calling! just came across you lovely Carrot Tea recipe,
Have included it in the World Carrot Museum – here: http://www.carrotmuseum.co.uk/recipes.html#tea
I hope this is ok. If not do let me know.
John
Alana says
Hi John,
Ooh – a carrot museum! That sounds right up my alley :-) I wonder if you’d also be interested in my 5-Spice Carrot Breakfast Pudding: https://thesmilingonion.com/5-spice-turmeric-carrot-breakfast-pudding/
I am honored that my carrot tea will have a place in the museum – I’d just ask you to add the line “Courtesy of TheSmilingOnion.com” so that my website link is included. (Currently, you list the website name without the link.)
Looking forward to browsing the museum, as I am definitely a carrot fan!
-Alana