Rosehip
Herbal infusion
About this tea
Rosehip (most commonly Rosa canina) is a vibrant, tart herbal tisane — not a true tea — made from the small, bright red 'pseudo-fruits' that form on wild and cultivated rose bushes after the petals fall. Famous as one of the most concentrated natural sources of vitamin C, rosehips also carry carotenoids, polyphenols, and the galactolipid GOPO, which is studied for its role in joint comfort. The infusion is fruity, slightly floral, and pleasantly tart, with notes of cranberry, apple, and rose. Rosehips are generally very safe; the only practical caution is to filter out the irritant inner seed hairs (cynorrhodon) before brewing, and to avoid mega-dosing concentrated vitamin C powders.
How to brew: 95°C, 10 min, 2 g per cup.
Caffeine
None
How to brew
Flavor notes
tart, fruity, refreshing
Often associated with
Refreshing, Sense of well-being
Best time to enjoy
Morning, Afternoon
Tags
Origin & Production
Rosehips are the fruit of wild and cultivated rose bushes, most commonly the dog rose (Rosa canina), which grows across Europe, North Africa, and western Asia. Chile is one of the world's largest producers thanks to extensive wild populations of Rosa rubiginosa naturalised in Patagonia, where the cool climate and clean air produce exceptionally vitamin-rich fruits. Other major suppliers include Bulgaria, Hungary, Romania, and Russia. The fruits ripen in autumn, turning from green to scarlet, and are best harvested after the first light frost when their sugars and aromas intensify.
Production process
Harvest
Rosehips are hand-picked in autumn when they have turned bright red but are still firm. In Patagonia and the Balkans, harvest traditionally happens after the first frost, which softens the fruit and concentrates its flavor.
Seed removal
The fruits are split or sliced and the inner seeds — surrounded by tiny irritant hairs — are removed. This step is essential: those hairs are the same fibres traditionally used as itching powder and must not enter the final tisane.
Drying
Deseeded fruit shells are dried at low temperatures (40–60°C) to preserve heat-sensitive vitamin C and carotenoids. Drying typically reduces moisture content to under 12%.
Cutting & grading
Dried shells are cut to uniform sizes — coarser cut for loose-leaf infusion, finer cut for tea bags — and graded by colour intensity and vitamin C content, with deep red shells being the most prized.
Packaging
The cut fruit shells are packaged in opaque, airtight containers to protect them from light and humidity, which can quickly degrade their vitamin C content.
History & Tradition
Rosehips have been gathered as food and medicine across the temperate world for thousands of years, from Neolithic foragers and Roman herbalists to wartime Britain and modern joint-health research.
Pliny the Elder
Pliny the Elder's Natural History describes more than 30 uses of wild rose and rosehip preparations, particularly for digestive complaints and bites from rabid dogs — the origin of the common name 'dog rose'.
European folk medicine
Rosehips were widely used across medieval Europe as a winter source of vitamin-rich preserves, syrups, and infusions, particularly in monastic apothecary gardens.
British WWII campaign
With citrus imports cut off by the war, the UK Ministry of Health organized a national rosehip collection campaign — schoolchildren gathered hundreds of tonnes of wild hips that were turned into the famous government-issued rosehip syrup to prevent vitamin C deficiency.
Patagonian production
Rosa rubiginosa, an invasive European species naturalised in southern Argentina and Chile, became a major commercial source of rosehips. Patagonian rosehip oil and powder gained international recognition in cosmetics and herbal medicine.
Joint-comfort research
A meta-analysis published in Osteoarthritis and Cartilage pooled three randomized trials and reported that standardized rosehip powder modestly reduced osteoarthritis pain scores compared with placebo, drawing attention to the galactolipid GOPO.
Health Benefits
Exceptional vitamin C
Rosehips are among the most concentrated natural sources of vitamin C — fresh hips can contain 20 times more vitamin C by weight than oranges, supporting immune function and collagen formation.
Joint comfort
Standardized rosehip powders rich in the galactolipid GOPO have been studied in randomized trials for mild osteoarthritis discomfort, with several reporting modest improvements in pain and stiffness scores.
Carotenoids & skin support
The bright red colour of rosehips comes from lycopene and beta-carotene — antioxidant pigments that the body converts to vitamin A, supporting skin renewal and eye health.
Polyphenol antioxidants
Rosehips supply flavonoids, ellagic acid, and tannins. In vitro studies show these polyphenols contribute meaningful antioxidant activity beyond their vitamin C content.
Safety & considerations
Rosehip tea is generally very safe. Two practical notes: the irritant inner seed hairs (often called cynorrhodon) must be removed during processing — always buy from reputable suppliers. And while drinking the tisane is gentle, concentrated vitamin C powders should not be mega-dosed without medical guidance.
Grades & Varieties
Whole dried shells
Hand-deseeded rosehip halves dried in their bright red shells. Produces a deeply tart, fruity infusion with the most complete flavor and the highest natural vitamin C content per cup.
Best for
- ✓Loose-leaf hot infusion
- ✓Vitamin C-rich winter brew
- ✓Blending with hibiscus
Cut & sifted
Smaller, uniform pieces of dried rosehip shell optimised for quicker extraction in tea bags and herbal blends. Slightly less complex than whole shells but more convenient for daily drinking.
Best for
- ✓Daily tea bags
- ✓Iced rosehip tea
- ✓Herbal blends with hibiscus or apple
Patagonian Rosa rubiginosa
Wild-harvested in southern Chile and Argentina from Rosa rubiginosa bushes. Particularly prized for its very high vitamin C concentration and the deep, almost wine-like color it produces in the cup.
Best for
- ✓Premium loose-leaf
- ✓Patagonian terroir lovers
- ✓Concentrated vitamin C infusion
Did you know?
During World War II, when citrus imports were cut off, British schoolchildren gathered hundreds of tonnes of wild rosehips for the government, which turned them into the famous 'National Rose Hip Syrup' to prevent vitamin C deficiency across the country.
Foods with this tea
What to Eat with Rosehip Tea
Rosehip's bright, tart fruitiness pairs beautifully with Nordic creamy desserts, sharp aged cheeses, apple crumbles, and warm scones with jam.
Nordic Rosehip Soup with Whipped Cream and Almond Crisps
A vibrant magenta-colored Swedish-style rosehip soup—tart, lightly sweet, and served warm or chilled with a generous swirl of whipped cream and toasted almonds.
Rosehip and Apple Crumble with Vanilla Cream
Tart apples baked under a buttery oat-and-almond crumble with rosehip tea-soaked currants—served warm with a pool of cold vanilla cream.
Drinks with this tea
Rosehip Hibiscus Vitamin C Boost
Rosehip and hibiscus brewed together with raw honey and lemon—a tart, ruby-red wellness drink delivering a serious vitamin C hit, naturally caffeine-free.
Iced Rosehip Strawberry Lemonade
Cold-brewed rosehip mixed with muddled fresh strawberries, lemon juice, and honey syrup—a vibrant pink summer drink that tastes like a rosy strawberry shortcake in a glass.
Rosehip Gin Sour
A blush-pink gin sour built on rosehip syrup, fresh lemon, and silky egg white—a tart, floral, picture-perfect cocktail with a sophisticated edge.