Grandma’s iced rhubarb tea pours a soft pink and tastes like a cross between fruit tea and lemonade, with a clean tart finish that keeps you coming back for another glass. The rhubarb gives it that bright, old-fashioned flavor, while the black tea adds just enough backbone so it doesn’t drink like flavored water. Served cold over ice, it’s the kind of pitcher drink that disappears fast because it feels light, fresh, and a little special without any extra fuss.
The part that makes this recipe work is cooking the rhubarb long enough to give up its color and tang, then steeping the tea off the heat so it stays smooth instead of bitter. Sugar goes into the hot liquid, not the chilled tea, because that’s the easiest way to get it fully dissolved without gritty sediment at the bottom of the pitcher. Lemon juice brightens the rhubarb and keeps the flavor from tasting flat after chilling.
Below, I’ve included the details that matter most: how to strain the rhubarb cleanly, what kind of tea gives the best balance, and a few smart variations if you want to adjust the sweetness or make it a little more herbal.
The rhubarb flavor came through beautifully, and straining it made the tea so smooth. I chilled it overnight and the pink color was gorgeous over ice.
Save this iced rhubarb tea for the next time you want a pink, tart, minty pitcher drink that tastes even better after chilling.
The Step That Keeps Rhubarb Tea Bright Instead of Flat
Rhubarb can turn muddy if you overwork it or keep cooking it after it has already given up its color and flavor. For this tea, the goal is extraction, not reduction. Once the stalks are soft and the liquid is a strong pink, you’ve already done the important part.
The other mistake is steeping the tea bags in a rolling boil. That pulls out bitterness and can make the whole batch taste harsh instead of clean. Take the pot off the heat first, then steep the tea for just a few minutes. That gives you the tea flavor without letting it take over the rhubarb.
What Each Ingredient Is Actually Doing in This Pitcher

- Fresh rhubarb — This is the whole point of the drink. Fresh stalks give the tea its tart edge and pale pink color; frozen rhubarb works in a pinch, but the color can be a little softer.
- Black or green tea bags — Black tea gives a fuller, more classic iced tea flavor. Green tea keeps things lighter and a touch grassier. Either one works, but don’t steep it too long or the drink will turn bitter.
- Sugar — The sweetener rounds out rhubarb’s sharpness. You can reduce it a bit if your rhubarb is especially young and tender, but don’t skip it entirely unless you want a very brisk, very tart drink.
- Lemon juice — Lemon wakes up the rhubarb and makes the pink color taste as bright as it looks. Bottled juice will work, but fresh lemon gives a cleaner finish.
- Fresh mint leaves — Mint is optional, but it makes the tea taste colder and fresher. Bruise the leaves lightly before adding them so they release their aroma without going bitter.
Building the Color and Balance in the Pot
Cooking the Rhubarb Down
Put the chopped rhubarb and water in a large pot and bring it to a boil, then lower the heat and simmer until the rhubarb is completely soft and starting to fall apart. You want the liquid to take on color from the stalks, and the fruit should look pale and spent by the end. If the pot boils aggressively the whole time, the liquid can taste a little harsh, so keep it at a steady simmer once it comes up to temperature.
Steeping the Tea Without Bitterness
Take the pot off the heat before adding the tea bags. Steep for about 5 minutes, just until the tea tastes rounded and lightly tannic. Longer than that, especially with black tea, can push the drink into bitter territory and hide the rhubarb. Remove the bags promptly so the flavor stays clean.
Straining, Sweetening, and Chilling
Pour the mixture through a fine mesh strainer and press gently to extract the liquid, but don’t mash the solids into the strainer so hard that pulp slips through. Stir the sugar into the hot liquid until it disappears completely, then add the lemon juice. Let it cool before refrigerating it; if you chill it while it’s still steaming, you’ll get condensation and a diluted flavor. Once it’s cold, serve it over ice with mint and lemon slices for the best balance.
Three Ways to Adjust This Rhubarb Tea Without Losing the Point
Make it less sweet
Cut the sugar back by 1/4 cup at a time if you want the rhubarb to stay sharper and more tea-like. The drink will taste more tart and less rounded, so I’d only do this if your rhubarb is very young or you plan to serve it with something sweet.
Use green tea instead of black tea
Green tea keeps the drink lighter and a little more delicate, which works well if you want the rhubarb to be the main flavor. Steep it carefully, though, because green tea gets grassy and astringent fast if it sits too long in hot liquid.
Make it dairy-free and naturally vegetarian as written
This recipe is already dairy-free and vegetarian, which makes it easy to serve for a crowd. If you want a completely different sweetness profile, swap part of the sugar for honey, but add it once the liquid is hot, not boiling, so its flavor stays floral instead of cooked.
Turn it into a sparkling spritz
Mix the chilled tea with plain sparkling water right before serving for a lighter, fizzy version. Don’t carbonate the whole batch ahead of time or it will go flat, and keep the tea-to-sparkling water ratio around 2:1 so the rhubarb flavor still comes through.
Storage and Reheating
- Refrigerator: Store in a covered pitcher for up to 4 days. The flavor stays good, though the mint will mellow after the first day.
- Freezer: It freezes well as a concentrate if you leave out the ice and mint garnish. Freeze in a sealed container, then thaw overnight in the refrigerator.
- Reheating: This tea is meant to be served cold, so don’t reheat the finished drink. If you froze it, thaw it fully and stir well before serving so the sugar and fruit flavor are evenly distributed.
Answers to the Questions Worth Asking

Grandma's Iced Rhubarb Tea
Ingredients
Equipment
Method
- Combine the chopped fresh rhubarb and water in a large pot and bring to a boil over high heat. When bubbles are steady across the surface, reduce to keep it at a gentle simmer.
- Reduce heat and simmer for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the rhubarb is very soft. You should see the pieces break down and tint the liquid pink.
- Remove the pot from heat, add the tea bags, and steep for 5 minutes. Keep the pot off the burner so the tea stays smooth without over-brewing.
- Strain the mixture through a fine mesh strainer, pressing firmly to extract all liquid. Stop when only thick solids remain in the strainer.
- Stir the sugar into the hot strained liquid until fully dissolved. The syrupy shine should disappear and the tea should look uniform.
- Add the juice of 2 lemons and stir well. The color will look brighter and slightly more opaque after mixing.
- Cool to room temperature, then refrigerate for at least 2 hours until well chilled. The pitcher should feel cold to the touch and the tea should look fully settled.
- Serve over ice with fresh mint leaves and lemon slices. For a pitcher presentation, add a few mint leaves and lemon slices so condensation forms on the glass.


