Written by Felicia Cocotzin Ruiz
Photographed by Nicky Hedayatzadeh and Juliet Blankespoor
During the Sonoran Desert’s summer monsoon season. The time of year when finding a shaded parking spot feels competitive—I seek out and make an array of cold beverages to stay hydrated. Living in Phoenix, commonly known as the Valley of the Sun, we regularly reach temperatures well over 115°F, putting into motion our summer plans. Not vacation plans, but summer plans. Friends and family members share new ideas with one another on tips for staying cool. We fill in new Phoenicians (who are primarily moving here from California) with tips we’ve learned along the way.
Tips such as driving with a cooler in the car for the sole purpose of transporting ice cream, fish, or other delicate foodstuff. Running errands, placing a beach towel on the seat of your car so you don’t get a first-degree burn, and never leaving the house without a beverage to stay well-hydrated are all parts of our summer plans.
We bring water and other drinks everywhere we go, especially after hearing of visitors ending up in the hospital from heat-related illnesses or, worse, heat stroke. Many of us freeze plastic water bottles to hand out to the unsheltered people who are surviving in this heat, seeking out shade for their bodies instead of cars. Dehydration sneaks up on you and it happens when you lose more fluid than you take in, which can impact how your body functions. Just being slightly dehydrated can lead to fatigue and headaches.
Iced Hibiscus Mint Tea
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Iced hibiscus mint tea. Photo by Juliet Blankespoor
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Iced jamaica, or iced hibiscus (Hibiscus sabdariffa) tea, transports me to being four years old, camping on Rocky Point Beach in a 1960’s orange Volkswagen bus with my parents and older brother (what I would do to have that VW bus now!). Rocky Point in the seventies was a not-so-touristy Mexican beach located on the Sea of Cortez, just three hours south of Phoenix. My family would caravan down there with a few of our close friends to camp and go sea fishing for an inexpensive family vacation. Looking back, it was really going from one hot desert to another, but at least Rocky Point had a beach. Those warm days collecting seashells, clamming with my brother, eating fresh tortillas, and drinking sweet red flower water like a little hummingbird are especially fond memories.
As a child, having your parents buy you brightly colored red hibiscus tea from a wooden stall was a real treat because it was often made with a heavy hand of piloncillo syrup, a Mexican raw sugar syrup with earthy notes of smoke and rum. It was Mexican Kool-Aid. This concoction was even more exciting if the vendor included a small chunk of the raw piloncillo at the bottom of your glass to fish out with your hand like a cheap prize in a cereal box.
It was not until my mid-twenties, when I started learning to make herbal preparations, that I realized how astringent a hibiscus infusion actually tastes without the addition of sugar. It’s a different drink altogether, and does not evoke memories of the beach! Making my mouth go dry, it tasted like raw cranberries and unripe persimmons. A spoonful of piloncillo definitely makes the hibiscus go down!
Roselle Hibiscus
Roselle hibiscus (Hibiscus sabdariffa). Photo by Juliet Blankespoor
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During this time, I was really beginning to dive deep into food and herbs as medicine, including those used in Ayurveda. And from what I was learning, hibiscus is said to have a cooling effect on the body. This information resonated with me because in Mexican folk herbalism, which I was more familiar with, hibiscus flowers have long been used to treat everything from high blood pressure to a weakened immune system. Traditionally, hibiscus tea is served hot, usually brewed with a cinnamon stick (Cinnamomum verum) and ginger (Zingiber officinale) if you have a cold, or served iced and sweet to cool a fiery body. When I enjoy iced hibiscus tea now, I feel like a little girl and a Mexican grandmother at the same time. Red Mexican Kool-Aid and medicina walking hand-in-hand.
The following is an excerpt from my book, Earth Medicines: Ancestral Wisdom, Healing Recipes, and Wellness Rituals from a Curandera, taken from the “Fire” chapter. It’s an easy recipe for iced hibiscus tea using fresh mint (Mentha spp.) and dried rose petals (Rosa spp.), harnessing the power of the Sun. I call it Isis Sun Tea. It’s not a “traditional” Mexican recipe as it includes rose petals. So, if you find yourself without rose petals in your herbal pantry, simply omit them until next time. The rose petals are a nod to the Egyptian goddess, Isis, who is said to have love magical healing and flowers such as roses. The mint, however, is very common in Mexican folk herbalism to cool a warm body and is often paired with hibiscus flowers.
Separating-Hibiscus Crowns From Their Ovaries
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Separating-hibiscus crowns from their ovaries. Photo by Juliet Blankespoor
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Hibiscus sabdariffa, originally from Africa, is prepare all over the world, especially in warm climates such as Egypt, India, and Mexico. Some cultures drink it for celebrations and others drink it simply to cool off. In my recipe, I suggest sweetening your tea with honey, but if you want to try piloncillo, as I mention above, please do! It’s usually sold in Mexican grocery stores and international markets, and also goes by the name panela as it’s called in Colombia, or jaggery, which is very similar to piloncillo and consumed all over the Indian Subcontinent, Southeast Asia, and Africa. Piloncillo is most often sold wrap in plastic and looks like a giant cone of Sacre incense. If you choose to make the tea with piloncillo instead of honey, just be prepare to dissolve it following the manufacterer’s directions.
When I prepare Isis Sun Tea, I like to make a big batch in a gallon glass jar to have on hand for guests and to freeze in ice cube trays to flavor my waters for those hot drives in the car. It’s super refreshing and looks like a fancy mocktail.
Precautions and Contraindications
Roselle has a high safety profile, as it is widely consume as a food and daily beverage. However, like acidic citrus, it can aggravate heartburn, and may be too cooling for folks who run cold. Hibiscus has been shown to increase the urinary excretion of acetaminophen. As a precaution, wait three hours after taking acetaminophen before ingesting hibiscus.1 Hibiscus reduces the absorption of chloroquine (antimalarial, amebicide, and immunosuppressive pharmaceutical).2 As a diuretic and hypotensive herb, hibiscus could potentially compound the effects of pharmaceuticals with similar actions; however, no studies have examined this compounding action.