Sage or Marygold Tea

A Plain Cookery Book for the Working ... · Francatelli, Charles Elmé · 1852
Source
A Plain Cookery Book for the Working Classes
Status
success · extracted 14 days ago
Not a recipe
No
Ingredients (6)
for serving
Instructions (6)
  1. Put a dozen sage leaves into a tea-pot.
  2. Pour boiling water upon them.
  3. Allow the tea to stand for five or ten minutes.
  4. Drink with sugar and milk, in the same way and instead of the cheaper kinds of teas.
Alternative preparation
  1. Teas made from sage leaves, dried mint, marygolds, and more particularly the leaf of the black currant tree, form a very pleasant as well as wholesome kind of beverage.
  2. If used in equal proportions, would be found to answer very well as a most satisfactory substitute for bad and expensive tea.
Original Text
No. 212. Sage or Marygold Tea. Put a dozen sage leaves into a tea-pot, pour boiling water upon them, and, after allowing the tea to stand for five or ten minutes, it may be drunk with sugar and milk, in the same way and instead of the cheaper kinds of teas, which are sold for foreign teas, but which are too often composed of some kind of leaf more or less resembling the real plant, without any of its genuine fragrance, and are, from their spurious and almost poisonous nature, calculated to produce evil to all who consume them, besides the drawback of their being expensive articles. Teas made from sage leaves, dried mint, marygolds,[93] and more particularly the leaf of the black currant tree, form a very pleasant as well as wholesome kind of beverage; and, if used in equal proportions, would be found to answer very well as a most satisfactory substitute for bad and expensive tea.
Notes