• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Food
    • Appetizers & Snacks
    • Breakfast
    • Cakes
    • Chocolate
    • Breads
    • Desserts
    • Gluten Free
    • Main Dishes
    • Vegetarian
  • Life
    • Home + Garden
    • DIY
    • Sports
    • #DroolWorthy
  • Travel
  • Recipe Index
  • Resources
    • How To Start a Food Blog
  • About
    • Contact
    • Disclaimer & Privacy Policy
  • Work With Me

The Kitchen Paper

4 July, 2013 By Mary

Iced Nectarine Green Tea


Iced Nectarine Green Tea

Happy 4th of July, everybody! We got up at the nice early hour of 6:50 in order to go on a long bike ride before the day heats up too much, which was definitely a smart choice. I can feel the heat coming, which is why we’re soon heading out to the river before a barbecue tonight. Can a holiday get much better than that? I think not. Except maybe if I could spend half the day reading (I’m hooked on a book I CANNOT PUT DOWN!).

Iced Nectarine Green Tea

This iced tea is not only the first drink (other than smoothies) recipe I’ve put here on the ol’ blog, but the first time I’ve ever made ice tea. Whaaat? Yeah, we just didn’t really drink the stuff growing up – so I’ve always kind of considered it a foreign substance. I didn’t realize it was so popular until I went to college in St. Louis and EVERYONE drank it. Who knew? Not me.

Iced Nectarine Green Tea

This drink is SUPER easy to make. Make the tea. Cool the tea. Boil some sugar with pureed nectarine. Combine, ice, serve, enjoy! If you’re into sweet tea, go for the 3/4 cup of sugar. If your’e more of an unsweetened-tea-type, go for 1/4 (or omit completely!). The nectarines give it a sweetness already, so it’s really good either way. I just happen to have a super sweet tooth and eat the stuff by the spoonful. Ew.

Iced Nectarine Green Tea
 
Print
Prep time
5 mins
Cook time
10 mins
Total time
15 mins
 
Recipe: by Mary
Ingredients
  • water
  • 4 green tea bags
  • ¼-3/4 cups sugar
  • 3 ripe nectarines, pitted and chopped
  • ice
  • mint sprigs for garnish
Instructions
  1. Place the green tea into a large (at least 4 cup) container and wet with ¼ cup of cold water.
  2. Bring 4 cups of water to a boil, then pour over the wet tea bags. Let steep for 1-2 minutes, then squeeze and remove the tea bags.
  3. In a small saucepan over medium heat, combine the sugar with 1 cup of water.
  4. While the sugar water heats, puree the nectarines with a blender (I used my hand blender). Once the sugar has dissolved completely, add the nectarine puree to the saucepan.
  5. Cook for 10 minutes, letting it gently bubble but not go too crazy. Stir occasionally. The mixture should be thick and syrupy.
  6. Let everything cool before combining, stirring well, and adding ice.
  7. Serve with mint sprigs and extra sliced nectarines.
3.2.1753

 

0

Filed Under: Drinks Tagged With: beverage, drink, fruit, green tea, iced tea, nectarine, tea

Previous Post: « No Churn Roasted Apricot Ice Cream
Next Post: Spicy Cilantro Almond Pesto »

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Nessa says

    4 July, 2013 at 1:16 pm

    This looks fabulous!

  2. Pamela @ Brooklyn Farm Girl says

    4 July, 2013 at 5:53 pm

    I have got to try this!

  3. Angela says

    9 July, 2013 at 8:49 pm

    Just pinned this to make soon! I developed an appreciation for iced tea after living in Texas 🙂

  4. RK says

    23 July, 2013 at 7:40 am

    What a wonderful drink! Could you share the name of the book??

    • Mary says

      23 July, 2013 at 10:41 am

      The book was “Last Child” by John Hart – totally not my typical genre, but I couldn’t put it down!

Trackbacks

  1. Stumbling Over Chaos :: Linkity for a summer in the city says:
    26 July, 2013 at 1:04 am

    […] Iced nectarine green tea. (via The Kitchn) […]

Primary Sidebar

About Me

I'm Mary! Thanks for stopping by — welcome to The Kitchen Paper! I develop recipes in Portland, OR when I'm not out exploring the PNW, practicing yoga, or building websites. Read More…

search

Footer

Stay Connected

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Links

  • About
  • Work With Me
  • Contact
  • How To Start a Food Blog
  • Disclaimer & Privacy Policy
  • Recipe Index

Copyright © 2025 — Theme from StudioPress