Hip Tea
- Regular price
- $26.95 CAD
- Unit price
- per
HIP TEA
It’s hip to drink herbal tea
Hip Tea is a vibrant, ruby-coloured infusion celebrating the berry medicine of the northern boreal forest, balanced with classic European and global herbs. Yukon wild-foraged rosehips and rose petals (Rosa acicularis) and cranberries (Vaccinium vitis-idaea) form the heart of this blend bringing tart flavour, antioxidant richness, and traditional nourishment used throughout northern herbal traditions.
Rosehips are revered in boreal medicine for their exceptionally high vitamin C content, bioflavonoids, and gentle immune-supportive properties. Cranberries contribute a bright acidity and have long been valued for urinary and kidney health. Hibiscus (Hibiscus sabdariffa) deepens the colour and adds a refreshing tartness, while hawthorn berries (Crataegus monogyna) bring grounding heart support, traditionally associated with circulatory and emotional nourishment.
Sweet apple (Malus domestica) softens the acidity, and chamomile flowers (Matricaria chamomilla) round the blend with gentle calming and digestive support.
This is a lively, fruity tea that is deeply nourishing yet utterly enjoyable.
Flavour Profile
Tart • Fruity • Bright • Lightly Floral
Brewing
Pour boiling water over 1 tsp (2 Tbsp per pot).
Steep 5–10 minutes.
Caffeine Free
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Aroma Borealis Herb Shop has become a community staple that was born in 1998 from Herbalist Beverley Gray’s love and passion for wild medicinal plants. Aroma Borealis operates in the wilderness city of Whitehorse, Yukon and creates and sells all-natural bodycare, aromatherapy and herbal skin care products in addition to herbal teas, all of which have been inspired by the plants of the northern Boreal forest and the people who live here.
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Fringing the northern part of the planet, the Yukon is vast, rich in plant and animal life, its ecology has been and is essential to the dietary, medicinal, and spiritual health of Yukon indigenous people for thousands of years. We acknowledge and are grateful to work on Yukon First Nations lands and on the traditional territories of the Carcross/Tagish First Nation, Kwanlin Dün First Nation and the Ta'an Kwäch'än Council.