Lemon and Ginger

£4.50£25.00

A warming sweet gently spicy blend of Southern Indian Ginger and Southern French Lemon Verbena. Perfect when one needs a non-caffeinated lift during the day or at night.

The Ginger comes from the same small farmer co-op in Kerala that make our very popular Family Tea. The Lemon Verbena, also known as Verveine, is grown on a 2 acre farm in Provence, France. Alexia Olagnon grows her verbena without the use of artificial fertilisers and pesticides and picks and processes all her tisanes manually.

Best brewed with just off the boil hot water using a large pinch of the leaves and ginger and infused for 1-3 minutes per cup.

ORIGIN
Aix en Provence, France.
Sahyadri Spice Co-Op, Peermade, Kerala, India.

SIZE OF FARMS
3 acres (average)

PLANTS AND PROCESSING
Blend of Zingiber officinale and Aloysia Citrodora. Harvested Summer 2024.

BREWING
100°C, A few leaves and ginger per 150ml. Brew for 1-3 minutes, many infusions are possible.

PLEASE NOTE
Caddy and 100g Refill options are only available online or via ‘Collect from Postcard Teas’ for shop collection, two working days after purchase.

SKU: LGT-01 Categories: ,

Description

Alexia Olagnon is a young farmer and medicinal plant picker in Provence. Located in a small village of 400 inhabitants, between Aix en Provence and Cannes, crossed by a beautiful river and where olive trees are the main crop, she runs alone for over ten years her farm called “Les jardins des lauves” exactly like a famous Paul Cézanne’s painting. This name refers to the “Lauves” in Provençal, meaning “lauzes”, which are large stone slabs. The place is so called because the bedrock is outcropping and not far away, which is why the ancients built dry-stone terraces to allow the land to be cultivated. Alexia irrigates using a traditional canal running there for over 500 years, bringing water from the river by gravity, and which she maintains collectively with the local people.

(Le jardin des Lauves by Cézanne, 1906).

For over ten years, on her farm of one hectare covered with medicinal plants, fig and pomegranate trees, and another hectare with olive trees (so 2 hectares in total), she’s been growing, picking and drying verbena, mint, lemon balm, thyme, rosemary, rose, lime and many other plants for the herbal trade.

She works alone in her gardens, which are laid out in these traditional terraces called “restanques” in French. These dry-stone terraces allow the plants to benefit from a micro-climate, but don’t allow mechanised cultivation. All her work is done by hand, whether she’s cultivating, picking in the wild or sorting he plants. Her main tools are the sickle knife for harvesting, the hoe for working the soil, and wooden sieves for sorting. After harvesting, the plants are taken to a wooden dryer and dried at low temperature under optimum conditions, preserving their aromas, colours and very high quality properties.

She’s always worked with organic farming, but gone even further. At Les Lauves, they protect and cherish biodiversity. The soil is alive, there are no weeds, the trees have their rightful place, as do all the living creatures that cohabit in this little ecosystem. Absolutely no treatment is used, even those authorised in organic farming.