Loose dried chamomile flowers in ceramic bowl

Apothecary Archive · New Zealand

Measured Rituals for Loose-Leaf Infusions

Documented ratios, water temperatures, and steep durations for botanical teas — presented with the precision of a field journal and the clarity of a modern interface.

Section I

The Craft of Controlled Extraction

Herbal infusion is a balance of chemistry and observation. Each leaf, root, and petal responds differently to heat, volume, and time.

Assorted dried botanical specimens arranged on linen

Specimen reference · dried botanicals

Why Precision Matters

Delicate floral notes extract quickly at lower temperatures. Dense roots require extended contact with hotter water. Our guides record these variables so each cup reflects intentional preparation rather than guesswork.

Every recipe on this platform includes weight-to-volume ratios, target temperature ranges, and recommended steep windows — formatted for easy reference at the kettle.

View Steeping Matrix

Section II

Water, Weight, and Duration

Three variables define every successful infusion. Adjust one, and the character of the cup shifts entirely.

Variable 01

80–95°C

Water Temperature

Soft leaves scorch above 85°C. Woody materials benefit from rolling boils. Match heat to material density for balanced extraction.

Variable 02

1.5–3g

Dry Weight Ratio

Standard reference: grams of dried herb per 250 ml of water. Ratios scale linearly for larger vessels and shared pots.

Variable 03

3–10 min

Steep Duration

Short steeps preserve volatile aromatics. Extended contact draws deeper tannins and root compounds into the liquor.

Interactive Tool

Dynamic Steeping Scaler

Select an ingredient category below to calculate recommended water temperature, dry weight ratio, and steeping duration for your next infusion.

Temperature
Ratio
Duration
Steaming cup of amber herbal infusion on wooden surface

Infusion result · amber liquor

Section III

From Cabinet to Cup

A structured workflow for preparing loose-leaf herbal tea at home, step by step.

Weigh Your Botanicals

Use a kitchen scale to measure dried herbs to the nearest 0.1 g. Consistent weight produces repeatable flavor profiles across sessions.

Heat Water to Target

Bring filtered water to the temperature listed in your recipe. Allow a brief rest after boiling if a lower range is specified.

Steep and Decant

Pour water over herbs, cover the vessel, and steep for the indicated duration. Strain fully before serving to avoid over-extraction.

Glass teapot with visible loose leaf herbs steeping

Preparation stage · glass vessel

Section IV

Botanical Reference Library

Explore individual herbs with origin notes, flavor descriptors, and recommended brewing parameters.

Close view of dried peppermint and lemon balm leaves

Leaf archive · peppermint & balm

The Herb Dictionary

Our botanical cabinet catalogues loose-leaf ingredients as pressed specimens. Each entry records native environment, optimal water temperature, and characteristic flavor notes such as earthy, floral, or pungent.

Hover over any card in the full directory to reveal detailed preparation data without leaving the page.

Enter Botanical Cabinet

Section V

Selected Loose-Leaf Blends

Three curated botanical products available for purchase, each with documented steeping instructions included.

Shop the Collection

Each blend is weighed, sealed, and accompanied by a printed ratio card. No additives — only dried plant material sourced from verified suppliers.

View All Products
Variety of dried flowers and leaves in small bowls

Product range · assorted botanicals