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Incredible Edibles - Australia’s Edible Plant Specialists
Incredible Edibles - Australia’s Edible Plant Specialists
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Incredible Edibles - Australia’s Edible Plant Specialists
Incredible Edibles - Australia’s Edible Plant Specialists
What we grow
View full range
Bananas
Bay Trees
Berryfruit
Blueberries
Creeping Saltbush
Chilean Guava
Citrus
Coffee
Curry Leaf
Edible Ginger
Feijoas
Figs
Guava - Cherry
Guava - Indian
Kiwiberry
Kiwifruit
Mulberry
Olives
Passionfruit
Peanut
Pepino
Pine Nut
Pomegranates
Raspberries
Rosemary
Tamarillos
Wasabi
About
Expert Advice
View all tips
Magical Blueberries
All about Olives
Fruiting Calendar
Pruning your Fig
Getting the best from your Citrus plant
Expert Coffee tips
Get Inspired
View all tips
Poached Figs with Mascarpone
Passionfruit Honey
Blueberry Muffins
Berry Coulis
Blackberry Cocktail
Feijoa Crumble Cake
Where to buy
Get in touch
Folder: What we grow
Back
View full range
Bananas
Bay Trees
Berryfruit
Blueberries
Creeping Saltbush
Chilean Guava
Citrus
Coffee
Curry Leaf
Edible Ginger
Feijoas
Figs
Guava - Cherry
Guava - Indian
Kiwiberry
Kiwifruit
Mulberry
Olives
Passionfruit
Peanut
Pepino
Pine Nut
Pomegranates
Raspberries
Rosemary
Tamarillos
Wasabi
About
Folder: Expert Advice
Back
View all tips
Magical Blueberries
All about Olives
Fruiting Calendar
Pruning your Fig
Getting the best from your Citrus plant
Expert Coffee tips
Folder: Get Inspired
Back
View all tips
Poached Figs with Mascarpone
Passionfruit Honey
Blueberry Muffins
Berry Coulis
Blackberry Cocktail
Feijoa Crumble Cake
Where to buy
Get in touch
View full range Tea
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Tea

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An evergreen shrub with dark green glossy leaves will grow to a compact bush up to 2 meters if pruned regularly. The Tea plant has fragrant, single white flowers that appear in autumn.

Harvest - Spring harvest offers the finest and most tender leaves of the highest quality. The summer and autumn harvests produce a more abundant but less delicate crop.

  1. Harvest the first two leaves and the bud.

  2. Dry the leaves for 17 hours in the shade. The air must be able to circulate the leaves. Your leaves are ready when squeezed into a ball and stay in a ball. 

  3. Put the dried leaves through a meat mincer or finely chop and crush so the leaves are bruised, and the flavour is released. 

  4. Spread on a tray 25mm thick and leave for an hour; turn and leave for another hour. 

  5. Using an old fan heater with a steel mesh frame above, heat the frame, place your leaves on the frame and turn occasionally until dry; aim for the bought tea effect. 

  6. Store away from light, moisture and heat in an airtight container (not plastic). Loose tea should have a shelf life of two years.

Camellia sinensis

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An evergreen shrub with dark green glossy leaves will grow to a compact bush up to 2 meters if pruned regularly. The Tea plant has fragrant, single white flowers that appear in autumn.

Harvest - Spring harvest offers the finest and most tender leaves of the highest quality. The summer and autumn harvests produce a more abundant but less delicate crop.

  1. Harvest the first two leaves and the bud.

  2. Dry the leaves for 17 hours in the shade. The air must be able to circulate the leaves. Your leaves are ready when squeezed into a ball and stay in a ball. 

  3. Put the dried leaves through a meat mincer or finely chop and crush so the leaves are bruised, and the flavour is released. 

  4. Spread on a tray 25mm thick and leave for an hour; turn and leave for another hour. 

  5. Using an old fan heater with a steel mesh frame above, heat the frame, place your leaves on the frame and turn occasionally until dry; aim for the bought tea effect. 

  6. Store away from light, moisture and heat in an airtight container (not plastic). Loose tea should have a shelf life of two years.

Camellia sinensis

An evergreen shrub with dark green glossy leaves will grow to a compact bush up to 2 meters if pruned regularly. The Tea plant has fragrant, single white flowers that appear in autumn.

Harvest - Spring harvest offers the finest and most tender leaves of the highest quality. The summer and autumn harvests produce a more abundant but less delicate crop.

  1. Harvest the first two leaves and the bud.

  2. Dry the leaves for 17 hours in the shade. The air must be able to circulate the leaves. Your leaves are ready when squeezed into a ball and stay in a ball. 

  3. Put the dried leaves through a meat mincer or finely chop and crush so the leaves are bruised, and the flavour is released. 

  4. Spread on a tray 25mm thick and leave for an hour; turn and leave for another hour. 

  5. Using an old fan heater with a steel mesh frame above, heat the frame, place your leaves on the frame and turn occasionally until dry; aim for the bought tea effect. 

  6. Store away from light, moisture and heat in an airtight container (not plastic). Loose tea should have a shelf life of two years.

Camellia sinensis

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New South Wales ACT, South Australia
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