An herbal infusion is the method most people already know as tea, but it helps to be more precise. Infusions are usually best for softer plant parts such as leaves and flowers. They are simple, but not thoughtless. Water temperature, vessel choice, steep time, and straining all affect the final result.
Quick Answer
Use an infusion when the herb is delicate enough for steeping rather than simmering. Pour hot water over the herb, cover it, let it steep long enough, then strain it cleanly. Leaves and flowers often belong here more than roots or bark do.
When an infusion makes sense
Infusions suit herbs that release well into hot water without needing long simmering. Mullein, peppermint, chamomile, lemon balm, and many other leaf-and-flower herbs fit this category. When the plant part is tough or woody, another method often works better.
The basic setup
- A clean mug, jar, or teapot
- Fresh hot water
- The herb you want to steep
- A lid or cover
- A filter or strainer that matches the herb
Why covering the infusion matters
Covering the vessel helps hold warmth and aromatic compounds while the herb steeps. It is an easy step to skip, but it often improves the final cup, especially with milder or more aromatic herbs.
Do not treat all herbs as identical
Even within infusion-friendly plants, some herbs need finer filtration, lighter scoops, or longer steeps than others. Mullein is a good example. It belongs to the infusion family, but it also asks for better straining than many kitchen herbs do.
How long should you steep?
There is no single number that fits every herb and every cup. The better principle is this: give the herb enough time to infuse fully, then adjust based on taste, strength, and comfort. One short steep and one overloaded steep are equally bad teachers.
Bottom line
Herbal infusions are simple because the method is clear, not because details do not matter. Use them for gentle plant parts, cover the cup, strain carefully, and let the herb show you whether the next adjustment should be in time, amount, or filtration.