Our modern society lost what was a common knowledge in the old days. This post is no news to many in outdoors pioneer circles. My mom gathered wild rose hips, herbs like chamomile for tea. I grew up surrounded by alpine forests and frequenting weekend long hikes to mountains.
Yet this one has totally escaped me Pine needle tea!
What was more strange that when I was growing up the lemons were hard to come by, and everyone had to have their tea with lemon, for the taste, and for vitamin C content. Yet, I never have heard of pine tea.
The thing is that pine tea, which we could have in unlimited supply, have about 5 times the amount of vitamin C than lemons or orange juice. American Indians have been using it for that purpose.
Pine needles are, of course, not as tasty as lemon, but once I learned about their quality I decided to fix the situation. I have 3 young White Pines in my garden, hence the easy supply.
The way I prepare the tea is by taking a handful of fresh needles and cut them in the 1/2 inch pieces and add little black tea for flavor and some cardamon spice seeds. I boil the water and steep it all in a French press. When the tea cools down it is a truly good drink.
In addition to immunity-boosting vitamin C, pine needless contain vitamin A that helps eyes and oils that influence digestion and are helpful in aromatherapy of respiratory system. The tea also has antioxidants (flavonoids) that prevent aging and tumor growth by binding free radicals. It is also reported to help with the cardiovascular system.
I write about evolutionary anthropology, behavioral sciences, and related AI, particularly small, specialized Deep Neural Networks and LLMs.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Post Scriptum
The views in this article are mine and do not reflect those of my employer.
I am preparing to cancel the subscription to the e-mail newsletter that sends my articles.
Follow me on:
X.com (Twitter)
LinkedIn
Google Scholar
I am preparing to cancel the subscription to the e-mail newsletter that sends my articles.
Follow me on:
X.com (Twitter)
Google Scholar
My favorite quotations..
“A man should be able to change a diaper, plan an invasion, butcher a hog, conn a ship, design a building, write a sonnet, balance accounts, build a wall, set a bone, comfort the dying, take orders, give orders, cooperate, act alone, solve equations, analyze a new problem, pitch manure, program a computer, cook a tasty meal, fight efficiently, die gallantly. Specialization is for insects.” by Robert A. Heinlein
"We are but habits and memories we chose to carry along." ~ Uki D. Lucas
Popular Recent Posts
-
On June 2, 2025, Prof. Marek Figlerowicz’s team from the Polish Academy of Sciences announced that the early Polish Piast dynasty belongs ...
-
I decided to write down a few thoughts to clarify my obsessions with creating the "multitude" of AI agents that rely on the privat...
-
In my journey building software and managing technology teams, I've often witnessed the allure and danger of what Melissa Perri aptly na...
-
Physics and the laws of relativity: in parent-child relationship sound waves reach the subject after 25 years.
-
I am pleased with the performance and depth of the 32B Qwen MLX, running locally on my Mac Studio M1 with 64GB of RAM. 9 tokens per second ...
-
If you are living in Chicago, San Francisco / Silicon Valley or any major city there is a good chance that there are multiple events happeni...
-
log DSC_4228.NEF
-
This topic is being updated, visit soon. Bibliography links: Elco Electric Launch Etek Electric Outboard Motor Project Electric Drive Syste...
-
Choice D Since we are currently renting, we started looking at the houses we could afford. This place fits our budget, but the baby blue col...
-
When you decide to develop your company you have some important choices to make, many people measure success by how much revenue the company...
Most Popular Articles
-
In my journey building software and managing technology teams, I've often witnessed the allure and danger of what Melissa Perri aptly na...
-
I have noticed a very unsettling statistic on my blog. This prompted a fascinating question about AI, blogs' future, and maybe even the...
-
Prompt: What do you really see in the selfie of myself? AI: I see a volcano about to blow up and I see a lost, scared boy in front of it. ...
-
Choice D Since we are currently renting, we started looking at the houses we could afford. This place fits our budget, but the baby blue col...
-
I tested to belong to Haplogroup R1b1b2a1a1d1. Subclade R1b1b2a1a1d1* (as named by 23andMe ) or R1b1a2a1a1a4 (per FTDNA ) is a paternal (...
-
I found myself wholly emptied, the mental exhaustion where you sit in your parked car and wake up minutes later, unsure how long you’ve been...
-
Introduction: A Language Model of My Own We are surrounded by large language models: systems trained on the vastness of the internet. Models...
-
Something subtle but powerful just landed in my AI pipeline: agent_Observer. It listens. Not to spy, but to sense the mood and intent. It ...
-
Sometimes the AI chats surprise me on a new level. Here is an interaction I just had when fixing my AIKO app's Human-AI Interaction (HAi...
-
On June 2, 2025, Prof. Marek Figlerowicz’s team from the Polish Academy of Sciences announced that the early Polish Piast dynasty belongs ...
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please be polite.