Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica)
Mexican agua fresca made from dried hibiscus petals, lightly sweetened, served ice-cold. Tart, ruby-red, and packed with vitamin C.
Last reviewed by the RecipeCrave kitchen team
- Total time:
- 3 hr 15 min
- Servings:
- 8
- Per serving:
- 50 kcal
- Cost per serving:
- $0.30
- Difficulty:
- easy
Step-by-step
Bring 4 cups of water to a boil. Remove from heat.
Add hibiscus and cinnamon. Steep 10 minutes covered.
Strain into a pitcher. Press petals to extract all the liquid.
Stir in sugar while warm until dissolved. Add remaining 4 cups cold water and lime juice.
Chill 3 hours. Serve over ice with a lime wheel.
Cook's tip
Hibiscus stains everything — use a non-reactive pot (stainless steel, not aluminum) and protect your countertops.
Storage
Refrigerate 5 days.
Freezer: Freeze in ice cube trays for hibiscus-cubed iced tea later.
Nutrition per serving
- Calories
- 50
- Protein
- 0g
- Carbs
- 13g
- Fat
- 0g
- Fiber
- 0g
- Sugar
- 12g
- Sat Fat
- 0g
- Sodium
- 5mg
Estimates based on USDA FoodData Central. See our nutrition disclaimer.
What to drink with this
Wine, beer, and non-alcoholic options matched to this recipe's cuisine + main protein + spice level.
- winePort or Late-harvest Riesling
Sweet fortified or dessert wine
Why: Dessert wine should be at least as sweet as the dessert itself; otherwise the wine tastes thin.
- non-alcEspresso or strong coffee
Single shot or French press
Why: Bitter coffee balances residual sweetness; classic finish.
- non-alcMint tea
Fresh-leaf or bag
Why: Cleansing herbal finish for chocolate or fruit-based desserts.
Why this recipe works
Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica) sits firmly in the Mexico tradition. As a beverage built to complement food or stand on its own as an afternoon ritual, it leans on the staples that define the cuisine — corn tortillas, beans, fresh chiles, lime, cilantro, queso fresco — and finishes with the bright acid, smoky chiles, and layered fresh herbs that makes it instantly recognizable on the table. It also fits eaters following plant-based with no animal products, fully meat-free, and safe for gluten-sensitive eaters when standard ingredient brands are used patterns.
In its home kitchens, a dish like this shows up around taco nights, fiestas, and morning chilaquiles. The version here keeps that spirit intact while adjusting quantities, sourcing, and timing for a contemporary home cook who may be working with a standard supermarket pantry rather than a neighborhood market. Substitutions, where they appear in the ingredient list, are chosen so the dish still reads as Mexico on the plate rather than a vague approximation of it.
Behind the recipe is a layered cooking technique that builds flavor in stages. That choice isn't decorative — it's what gives the dish its final texture and depth. If you understand the technique, you can confidently scale, substitute, or adjust the recipe without breaking it. We explain the key moves inside the method block above; each step note tells you what should be happening and how to recognize when it has gone right.
Serve Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica) the way it is eaten at home in Mexico: simply, with the components that naturally accompany it rather than a long list of garnishes. Plan for 8 as written, and use the scaler to adjust up for guests or down for solo cooking. For drink pairings tuned to this cuisine and the specific protein in the dish, check the “What to drink with this” block above.
Origin & tradition
In its home tradition, a dish in the lineage of Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica) sits inside a broader Mexican cuisine known for a cuisine built on corn, beans, chili, and the deep pre-Hispanic technique of nixtamalization that turns dried corn into masa. It draws on the staple ingredients that define the cuisine — fresh and dried chiles (guajillo, ancho, pasilla), lime, cilantro, queso fresco, crema, corn tortillas, and slow-cooked frijoles — and finishes with the seasoning signature that makes the cuisine recognisable on the plate before the first bite. The version on this page keeps that lineage intact while adjusting the sourcing and the timing for a contemporary home kitchen. Where a market in the dish's home region might offer a specific cut, herb, or pepper, the ingredient list flags realistic supermarket substitutions chosen so the result still reads as Mexican, not a vague approximation.
Technique that drives this dish
Behind Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica) sits layered cooking: building flavour in stages by treating different ingredients with the heat each one needs. This technique is the right one for this style of dish because no single ingredient gets overcooked while others undercook — the dish lands with each element at its peak. If you understand the technique, you can confidently scale the recipe up for company, scale it down for solo cooking, or substitute ingredients without breaking the method. Pay particular attention to one signal as you cook: order of operations — start with what takes longest, finish with what needs the lightest touch. Every step note in the method block above tells you what should be happening at that point — read it before you act on it.
Difficulty notes for the home cook
This is an easy recipe — comfortable for a confident beginner. The most common mistake is rushing your mise en place: prep every ingredient before you turn on the heat. The cook itself is fast, and a hesitant cook is a behind-schedule cook.
Common mistakes (and how to dodge them)
- Crowding the pan — when you put too much in at once, the temperature crashes, water leaches out, and you steam your ingredients instead of browning them. Use a vessel with room to spare, and let each side colour properly before turning.
- Under-seasoning at the start — salt early so it has time to penetrate. A heavy hand at the finish only seasons the surface and leaves the inside flat.
- Walking away during the long simmer — even on the lowest setting, a covered pot can stick or boil over. Stir every 8-10 minutes and check the bottom for any darkening.
- Skipping the rest — proteins keep cooking after they leave the heat, and sliced-too-soon meat loses its juices on the cutting board. Five minutes of rest is usually enough.
Storage, freezer & make-ahead
For the fridge. Refrigerate 5 days.
For the freezer. Freeze in ice cube trays for hibiscus-cubed iced tea later.
For make-ahead. The seasoning base (any onion-spice paste, marinade, or sofrito) can be made up to 2 days ahead — its flavour generally improves after a rest. The final assembly is best done the day of, but partial prep saves real time on a weeknight.
Nutrition & dietary fit
A plant-led recipe like this typically lands higher on micronutrients (folate, magnesium, potassium) and fibre than a comparable meat-led plate, while running lower on saturated fat. If you are following the recipe as written, the macros take care of themselves. A gluten-free recipe is only as safe as the cross-contamination control in your kitchen. Use a clean cutting board, clean utensils, and check that any condiments (soy sauce, stock cubes, ready-made spice blends) are explicitly gluten-free certified. Going dairy-free does not have to mean losing richness. Coconut cream, cashew cream, and tahini all carry the same mouthfeel as dairy in many cuisines. For this dish, the dairy substitutions in the ingredient list have been chosen so the texture stays true. On the macros: this recipe runs about 50 calories per serving with 0g protein, 13g carbohydrate, and 0g fat. The 0g fibre figure is in the right zone for satiety, and the 5mg sodium target lands inside daily-intake guidance for a single meal.
Variations that keep the dish honest
- The version on this page reflects a contemporary home-cook approach to Mexican cooking. In its home cuisine, you would commonly see regional mole traditions, the corn-vs-flour tortilla divide, and the salsa preferences that change house to house — any of these are valid swaps and do not break the dish.
- If you cannot source dried hibiscus flowers, the recipe's ingredient list flags substitution options that maintain the spirit of the dish. The Ingredient Substitution Matcher tool on RecipeCrave offers ratio-accurate swaps for over 60 common ingredients with flavour-impact notes.
People also ask
Common questions about Iced Hibiscus Tea (Agua de Jamaica)
Same as zobo?
Yes — same hibiscus base. Nigerian zobo adds pineapple and ginger; Mexican agua de jamaica adds cinnamon and lime.
Reviews
Aisha K.
2 weeks ago
Loved it but added an extra scotch bonnet — we like it spicy. Recipe scales well, made a double batch.
✓ Would make again
Tola O.
3 days ago
Made this for Sunday lunch — the smoky bottom turned out perfect. Family demolished the pot in twenty minutes.
✓ Would make again
Marcus B.
1 week ago
First time cooking this and the timing notes saved me. Did not lift the lid once. The crust at the bottom was the best part.
✓ Would make again
Reviews shown are illustrative pre-launch. Real user reviews appear here as the community grows.
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