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Lemon Verbena

Herbal infusion

About this tea

Lemon verbena (Aloysia citrodora), known in much of Latin America as cedrón, is a strikingly aromatic herbal tisane — not a true tea — native to South America and famous for the brightest, cleanest lemon aroma of any herb. Its essential oil is dominated by citral (a mix of geranial and neral), supported by limonene and verbascoside, a distinctive polyphenol with documented antioxidant activity. The infusion is pale gold and exceptionally clean, with notes of fresh lemon zest, light grass, and a touch of mint. Generally regarded as very safe in food and tea quantities, lemon verbena may have mild sedative effects and could interact with sedative medication — keep an eye on dose if combining with sleep or anxiety medication.

How to brew: 95°C, 5 min, 2 g per cup.

Caffeine

None

How to brew

95°C
5 min
2 g per cup

Flavor notes

citrusy, fresh, aromatic

Often associated with

Digestive comfort, Relaxation

Best time to enjoy

After a meal, Evening

Tags

DigestionCalmCaffeine-freeCitrus

Origin & Production

Argentina; Chile; Peru; Uruguay; cultivated in southern Europe and North Africa

Lemon verbena is native to western South America — Argentina, Chile, Peru, Uruguay, and Bolivia — where it grows as a deciduous shrub up to 3 meters tall, with narrow, pointed leaves that release an intense lemon aroma when brushed. Spanish colonists carried it to Europe in the 17th and 18th centuries, where it became a beloved garden plant in Spain, southern France, and Morocco. Today important commercial cultivation areas include Argentina, Chile, Morocco, and the south of France, with high-quality essential oil also distilled in Italy and Spain.

Production process

1

Cultivation

Lemon verbena is propagated from cuttings rather than seed for varietal consistency. The shrub prefers full sun, well-drained soil, and warm climates; in colder regions it is grown in pots and overwintered indoors.

2

Hand harvest

Leaves are picked in summer — most fragrant just before flowering — typically in the morning after the dew has evaporated, when citral concentration is at its peak.

3

Shade-drying

Fresh leaves are spread in thin layers in ventilated shade and dried slowly at temperatures below 35°C to preserve the volatile citral and limonene that define the herb's lemon character.

4

Leaf separation

Once fully dried, leaves are stripped from the woody stems, gently rubbed to break large pieces, and sieved to remove stem fragments. Premium grade keeps long, intact leaves with a strong scent.

5

Packaging

Dried leaves are packaged in airtight, light-protected containers — lemon verbena's bright aroma fades quickly when exposed to light, heat, or moisture, so good storage is essential.

Caffeine-freeSouth American nativeCitral-richAromatic leaf

History & Tradition

Lemon verbena travelled from the Andean foothills of South America to the imperial gardens of Spain, the kitchens of southern France, and the apothecaries of modern Europe over the course of just a few centuries.

1
Pre-Columbian

Indigenous use

Indigenous peoples of the Andean foothills of present-day Argentina, Chile, and Peru used lemon verbena leaves as a digestive and aromatic infusion long before European contact.

2
1700s

Introduction to Europe

Spanish botanists brought lemon verbena to Europe in the 18th century. It quickly became fashionable in the gardens of Spanish royalty — the species was named Aloysia in honour of María Luisa of Parma, queen consort of Charles IV of Spain.

3
1797

Formal description

The plant was formally described in European botanical literature under the genus Aloysia (later Aloysia citrodora), separating it from the European Verbena genus.

4
1800s

Provençal perfumery

Lemon verbena became a favourite of southern French perfumers and confiseurs, used for liqueurs, distillates, and the famous 'verveine' herbal water sold across the region.

5
2010s

Verbascoside research

Modern phytochemistry confirmed lemon verbena as one of the richest dietary sources of verbascoside, a polyphenol shown to have potent antioxidant activity in laboratory studies.

Health Benefits

Digestive comfort

Long used in South America and the Mediterranean as a sobremesa (after-meal) tisane, lemon verbena's citral and essential oils are traditionally associated with relief from heaviness and bloating after eating.

Calm relaxation

Lemon verbena infusion is traditionally taken in the evening for its mild calming effect. Small clinical studies suggest it may help reduce subjective stress and improve sleep quality after several weeks of use.

Verbascoside antioxidant

Lemon verbena is one of the richest plant sources of verbascoside, a phenylpropanoid glycoside with documented antioxidant and anti-inflammatory activity in laboratory models.

Exercise recovery

A small clinical trial published in the Journal of the International Society of Sports Nutrition reported that lemon verbena extract reduced markers of muscle damage and oxidative stress in athletes during intense training.

Safety & considerations

Lemon verbena is generally considered safe in food and tea amounts. Because it has mild sedative effects, those taking sleep, anxiety, or other sedative medication should check with a healthcare professional before regular daily use, and pregnant or breastfeeding women should limit consumption to occasional cups.

Grades & Varieties

Whole leaf — Argentine cedrón

Long, narrow leaves shade-dried in Mendoza, San Juan, or Córdoba. Produces an intensely lemony infusion with a clean, almost candied citrus note — the classic Argentine sobremesa tisane.

Best for

  • After-meal digestive infusion
  • Iced lemon verbena tea
  • Mate con cedrón blend

Cut & sifted — culinary grade

Finer cuts and broken leaf used in tea bags, herbal blends, and culinary infusions. Quick-extracting with a strong, bright lemon aroma, though slightly less complex than the whole leaf.

Best for

  • Daily tea bags
  • Sorbets, syrups, and desserts
  • Iced summer infusions

Provençal verveine

Selected long-leaf lemon verbena grown in the south of France, often sold under the name 'verveine'. Prized for its high citral content and used both as a tisane and in the famous Verveine du Velay liqueur.

Best for

  • Premium loose-leaf evening tisane
  • Liqueurs and gourmet blends
  • Floral-herbal pairings

Did you know?

Lemon verbena was so prized in 18th-century Spain that the species was named Aloysia in honour of María Luisa of Parma, queen consort of Charles IV — making it one of the few medicinal herbs named after a queen.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea