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Growing a Tea Garden: 5 Herbs to Harvest for the Perfect Evening Cup

Growing a Tea Garden: 5 Herbs to Harvest · The Garden Scroll
Herb Garden · Tea Ritual

Growing a Tea Garden: 5 Herbs to Harvest for the Perfect Evening Cup

From garden to cup — your own daily evening ritual

🌿 Zone 9 Garden · 8 min read · Amazon Picks Included

The hour after dinner, when the garden turns golden, is when I pick my evening herbs. There is something deeply satisfying about harvesting your own tea — snipping a few stems, bruising the leaves between your fingers to release the scent, and knowing exactly what is in your cup. Here are the five herbs I wouldn’t want an evening tea garden without.

1

Lemon Balm

Melissa officinalis

Lemon balm is the easiest herb I grow and the one I reach for most. Its soft citrus scent calms anxiety, and it brews into a pale, golden, gently floral cup. Cut it generously — it responds by bushing out beautifully all season long.

How to brew: 4–5 fresh leaves per cup, steep 5 minutes in just-boiled water.

Growing Notes · Zone 9

Full sun to partial shade. Perennial in Zone 9 — it will come back every year and self-seed freely. Give it a defined bed so it doesn’t wander.

2

Chamomile

Matricaria chamomilla

German chamomile — the small, daisy-like annual — is the classic for a reason. Its apple-honey flavor is unmistakable, and the harvest ritual is meditative: pinching the tiny flower heads one by one into a bowl on a warm morning.

How to brew: 1 tablespoon fresh flowers (or 1 teaspoon dried) per cup, steep 5–7 minutes. Add honey.

Growing Notes · Zone 9

Sow directly in fall in Zone 9 — it loves cool weather and blooms abundantly in early spring. It will self-seed reliably once established.

Nothing beats a cup of tea made from herbs you grew yourself. It is the slowest, most rewarding kind of abundance.

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3

Holy Basil / Tulsi

Ocimum tenuiflorum

Tulsi is an Ayurvedic adaptogen revered for stress relief and mental clarity — and it is strikingly beautiful in the garden. Deep purple stems, spires of tiny flowers that the bees absolutely adore. Mine blooms from midsummer through first frost.

How to brew: 6–8 fresh leaves, steep 5 minutes. Add honey and a squeeze of lemon for an especially restorative evening drink.

Why Tulsi Is Worth Growing

Unlike most basils, tulsi’s flavor improves with age and drying. Harvest generously all season — the more you cut, the more it gives.

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4

Spearmint

Mentha spicata

Spearmint is gentler and sweeter than peppermint, and it pairs beautifully with chamomile or lemon balm. Mine lives in a large terracotta pot on the patio — because mint belongs in a container. Always.

How to brew: 4–6 fresh leaves per cup. Or combine with chamomile for a classic, calming blend.

Container Rule · Always

Spearmint spreads underground with extraordinary enthusiasm. Always grow in a pot — a large one — unless you want a mint lawn.

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5

Lavender

Lavandula angustifolia

Lavender tea is an art of restraint: just one small sprig per cup, steeped briefly. Too much and it turns soapy; just right and it is floral, calming, and deeply lovely. I grow ‘Hidcote’ for tea — its essential oil concentration is excellent.

How to brew: 1 small fresh stem or 1 teaspoon dried buds, steep 4 minutes. Pair with local raw honey.

Lavender Harvest Tip

Harvest lavender just as the lower flowers on each spike begin to open — that’s when the oils are at their peak. Cut long stems and hang in small bundles to dry.

Evening Blend Formula
Garden Calm Tea

3 lemon balm leaves + 1 tbsp chamomile flowers + 1 spearmint leaf · Steep 6 minutes · Stir with raw honey · Sit outside while it cools

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Slow Living · Garden Wisdom · Seasonal Life

#teagarden · #herbgarden · #chamomile · #lemonbalm · #growyourown · #Zone9garden

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