Made from three species of rhododendron plants, this tisane boasts medicinal benefits for everything from chest congestion to skin ailments. |
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On crisp spring days I often make a tisane or a rose tea, take it into the garden and wrap myself in a big warm blanket. |
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Species whose fruits are used both in Europe and Asia include the briar rose or dog rose, which is made into tea or tisane, and the eglantine. |
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I debated whether to ring for a tisane but decided that I could bear another hour rather than disturb her hard earned rest. |
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I more than once encountered a mildly medicinal tisane in Chinese supermarkets. |
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The later medieval version in France had the name tisane, was sweetened with sugar and seasoned with licorice and sometimes also figs. |
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If you can support it, offer a fruity iced tisane as well, as a non-caffeinated alternative. |
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She does not drink water, only red wine from Domaine Tempier, Champagne, and a thermos of tisane before bed. |
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A brewed mixture made with any ingredients other than tea leaves will yield a tisane, known in America as herbal tea, which is technically not tea at all. |
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Although the tisane has not proven its health benefits on heart health and cancer prevention, it is still a plant-based drink and is better than soda! |
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Afterwards, we recovered with tisane at Cafe de Flore, now overpriced, over-bright and catering for a bourgeois clientele, somewhat different from 70 years ago or so. |
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A tisane made by infusing the herb in water can be used for coughs and bronchitis. |
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As soon as he had opened the door he worked his way back to his high-backed Queen Anne armchair, where he picked up his bone-china cup and took a sip of a rarefied tisane. |
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