FindMeTeaFind a tea

Immunity Blend

Herbal infusion

About this tea

The Immunity Blend is a caffeine-free, warmly spiced herbal recipe traditionally taken at the first sign of seasonal sniffles or as a winter wellness ritual. The base combines echinacea (Echinacea purpurea aerial parts) — long associated with cold-symptom support — with fresh or dried ginger (Zingiber officinale) for warmth and gingerol's anti-inflammatory profile, and lemon (peel or juice) for vitamin C and bright aroma. Optional additions include rosehip (Rosa canina), one of the highest natural sources of vitamin C, and elderberry (Sambucus nigra), studied for its anthocyanins and traditional use in upper-respiratory comfort.

How to brew: 98°C, 10 min, 3 g per cup.

Caffeine

None

How to brew

98°C
10 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

spiced, citrusy, warming

Often associated with

Warmth, Digestive comfort

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-morning, After a meal

Tags

WarmCitrusDigestionCaffeine-freeSpiced

Origin & Production

North America (echinacea), tropical Asia (ginger), Mediterranean (lemon), Europe (rosehip, elderberry)

The Immunity Blend is a modern multi-cultural recipe. Echinacea is native to the prairies of central and eastern North America, where Indigenous Plains nations (Lakota, Cheyenne, Dakota) used it widely; today it is cultivated commercially in Germany, the United States, and Eastern Europe. Ginger has been grown in tropical Asia for over 5,000 years; today India, Nigeria, and China are the leading producers. Lemons (Citrus × limon) are a Mediterranean staple cultivated since the Middle Ages. Rosehip is foraged or cultivated across temperate Europe, and elderberry is widely harvested wild across Europe and North America.

Production process

1

Recipe (per ~3 g serving)

Classic ratio: 30% echinacea (aerial parts, cut), 30% dried ginger root (cut/sifted), 20% dried lemon peel (or 1 fresh lemon slice + juice added per cup), 10% rosehip (cracked), 10% elderberry (optional). For a milder, more digestible blend, drop the elderberry and increase lemon peel to 20%.

2

Source quality dried herbs

Buy echinacea, ginger, rosehip, and elderberry as cut-and-sifted food-grade material from a reputable herb supplier. For lemon, use organic dried peel (no wax) or a fresh organic lemon. Avoid pre-mixed teabag dust which oxidizes quickly.

3

Weigh and combine

Weigh each herb according to the ratio. Combine in a clean dry bowl and toss gently. Crack any whole rosehips with the side of a knife to expose the seed — this dramatically improves vitamin C extraction.

4

Store airtight

Transfer to a glass jar with a tight seal; keep in a cool, dark cupboard. The ginger and rosehip stay potent for 9–12 months; elderberry and lemon peel are best within 6 months.

5

Brew (decoction-style)

Because ginger root and rosehip are dense, brew slightly longer than a typical herbal: 1 heaped teaspoon (~3 g) per cup, water at 95–100 °C, steep covered 8–12 minutes. For a stronger preparation, simmer gently for 5 minutes. Strain, add fresh lemon juice and (optionally) a teaspoon of honey to taste.

Recipe blendCaffeine-freeShort-term useCold-season wellness

History & Tradition

The Immunity Blend is a 20th-century reinvention of much older traditions: Plains-nation echinacea medicine, Asian ginger remedies for chills, and European hot-lemon drinks for colds.

1
Pre-1500s

Indigenous use of echinacea

Indigenous Plains nations of North America — including the Lakota, Cheyenne, Dakota, and Pawnee — used Echinacea species for sore throat, snake bite, toothache, and infection. It was one of the most widely-used medicinal plants of the prairies.

2
~1000s

Ginger across the Silk Road

Ginger spread from Maritime Southeast Asia along trade routes; in Traditional Chinese Medicine it was prescribed to 'expel cold,' and in medieval Europe it became a popular winter spice for warming drinks.

3
1700s

European hot lemon

Hot lemon-and-honey drinks for sore throats and chills became a standard remedy across Europe as citrus became more widely available, especially after the British Navy adopted lemon and lime against scurvy.

4
1930s

Echinacea reaches European phytotherapy

German physician Gerhard Madaus brings Echinacea purpurea seeds from North America to Germany, where it becomes the basis of widely used herbal cold-and-flu preparations still sold across Europe today.

5
2014

Cochrane review on echinacea

A Cochrane systematic review (Karsch-Völk et al.) of 24 trials concluded that echinacea products may have a weak effect on the prevention and treatment of the common cold, with substantial variability between products. Best evidence supports short-term use at the first sign of symptoms.

Health Benefits

Traditional immune support

Echinacea purpurea is approved by the European Medicines Agency (EMA/HMPC) as a traditional herbal medicine to relieve the early symptoms of the common cold. Best results come from starting within 24 hours of first symptoms and limiting use to under 10 days.

Warming & circulation

Gingerols and shogaols in ginger have well-documented anti-inflammatory and vasodilatory effects, producing a sensation of warmth and supporting circulation during cold weather. Ginger is also EMA-monographed for symptomatic relief of motion sickness and mild digestive complaints.

Vitamin C from rosehip & lemon

Rosehip contains 400–1,500 mg of vitamin C per 100 g of fresh fruit (one of the highest plant sources), and lemon adds further ascorbic acid. Vitamin C contributes to the normal function of the immune system (EU-authorized health claim).

Polyphenols & anthocyanins

Elderberry is rich in anthocyanins; some randomized trials (e.g. Tiralongo et al., 2016) suggest reduced duration of cold symptoms with standardized extracts. Effects in a home-brewed tea are likely smaller, but the antioxidant load remains meaningful.

Safety & considerations

Limit echinacea to short-term use (up to 10 days; do not exceed continuous use as labeled). Avoid echinacea if you have an autoimmune condition (e.g. multiple sclerosis, lupus, rheumatoid arthritis) or take immunosuppressants — it stimulates immune activity. Echinacea is in the Asteraceae family; people allergic to ragweed, daisies, or marigolds may react. Raw elderberries are toxic; only use cooked/dried berries from a reputable supplier. Ginger may interact with anticoagulant medication at high doses. Consult a clinician if pregnant, breastfeeding, or on prescription medication.

Grades & Varieties

Classic recipe (echinacea + ginger + lemon)

The simplest, most accessible version: 40% echinacea, 40% dried ginger, 20% dried lemon peel. Warmly spiced and citrusy. Suitable for short-term use at the first sign of cold symptoms.

Best for

  • First signs of a cold
  • Cold winter mornings
  • Short courses of 5–7 days

Full 'winter wellness' (with rosehip + elderberry)

The fuller recipe: 30% echinacea, 30% ginger, 20% lemon peel, 10% rosehip, 10% elderberry. Fruitier and tarter, with deeper polyphenol content. The most nutrient-dense version of the blend.

Best for

  • Peak cold-and-flu season
  • Convalescence and recovery
  • Antioxidant-rich daily cup (short term)

Echinacea-free (autoimmune-safe variant)

For people with autoimmune conditions or on immunosuppressants who should avoid echinacea: 40% ginger, 30% lemon peel, 20% rosehip, 10% elderberry (optional). Still warming and vitamin-C rich, without immune-stimulant activity.

Best for

  • Autoimmune conditions
  • Long-term winter ritual
  • Safer daily use

Did you know?

Echinacea purpurea only became a European herbal staple thanks to a single shipment: in the 1930s, German physician Gerhard Madaus traveled to the United States, brought back seeds of the prairie plant traditionally used by Plains nations, and began cultivating it in Germany — within a decade, Echinacea-based cold remedies were on European pharmacy shelves, and they remain among the most-sold OTC herbal products in Germany today.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea