Pine Nut Tea: Soothing Tunisian Drink Recipe

Traditional Sweet Tea with Floating Pine Nuts & Fresh Mint

Pine nut tea

Sweet pine nut tea is a comforting and aromatic drink found across parts of the Middle East, especially in Levantine cuisine. Warm tea infused with sugar and topped with floating pine nuts creates a drink that feels both delicate and rich at the same time.

The pine nuts soften gently as they sit in the hot tea, adding a buttery texture and subtle nuttiness that turns a simple cup of tea into something memorable. Served in tall glasses and often enjoyed slowly after meals, this tea is warming, lightly sweet, and deeply comforting.

Simple ingredients come together to create a drink that feels elegant while remaining incredibly easy to prepare.

What Is It?

Pine nut tea is a sweet tea traditionally made using strong green or black tea brewed with sugar and served with raw pine nuts floating on top.

As the pine nuts warm in the tea, they become soft and slightly creamy, adding texture and richness to each sip. The tea itself is usually stronger than standard everyday tea to balance the sweetness and nuttiness.

Fresh mint is sometimes added for brightness and aroma.

Pine nut tea ingredients

A Little History

Sweetened tea has long been central to hospitality traditions across the Middle East and North Africa. Pine nuts, considered luxurious and prized ingredients throughout the region, became a natural addition to warm beverages served during gatherings and celebrations.

In countries such as Lebanon and Syria, pine nut tea is commonly associated with cafés, family visits, and colder evenings. The floating pine nuts are both decorative and practical, softening gradually in the tea before being eaten at the end of the drink.

The combination reflects the region’s love for balancing warmth, sweetness, texture, and aroma in even the simplest dishes and drinks.

What You Need

Loose green tea or strong black tea

Sugar

Boiling water

Raw pine nuts

Fresh mint (optional)

The Process

The tea is brewed slightly stronger than usual so the flavor remains balanced once sugar is added. Loose tea leaves are steeped directly in boiling water before being strained into glasses.

Raw pine nuts are added at the very end. They naturally float to the surface, slowly warming and softening in the tea while releasing subtle nutty flavor into the drink.

Unlike toasted pine nuts, raw pine nuts stay delicate and buttery inside the hot tea.

Pinenut tea process

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Add the loose tea leaves and sugar to a teapot.
  2. Pour boiling water over the tea and allow it to steep for 3–5 minutes depending on how strong you prefer the flavor.
  3. Strain the tea into tall serving glasses.
  4. Add a spoonful of raw pine nuts into each glass.
  5. Garnish with fresh mint if desired.


Serve hot.

Serving

Pine nut tea is best served immediately while hot. It is commonly enjoyed after meals, alongside pastries, or during relaxed evening gatherings.

The softened pine nuts are traditionally eaten at the end of the tea using a spoon or directly from the glass.

Storing

Because the drink is freshly brewed, it is best made just before serving rather than stored for long periods.

Pine nut tea

Tunisian Pine Nut Tea (Thé aux Pignons)

Pine nut tea is a Tunisian specialty: hot, sweetened tea (usually green or black) served in tall glasses with a handful of pine nuts floating on top. It’s decadent, aromatic, and uniquely Tunisian — a drink that feels like a treat in itself.
Share Recipe
No ratings yet
Print Pin Rate
Course: Drinks
Cuisine: Tunesian
Keyword: thé aux pignons, Tunisian drinks, Tunisian pine nut tea, Tunisian tea with pine nuts
Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 10 minutes
Servings: 2 servings
Calories: 80kcal

Ingredients

  • 4 tsp loose green tea or strong black tea, like gunpowder or Chinese tea
  • 3 –4 tbsp sugar adjust to taste
  • 2 cups boiling water
  • 2 –3 tbsp pine nuts per serving, untoasted
  • Fresh mint optional, for garnish
Start Cooking

Instructions

  • Brew the tea: In a teapot, add loose tea leaves and sugar. Pour boiling water over and steep for 3–5 minutes, depending on desired strength.
  • Strain: Pour the tea through a strainer into tall glasses.
  • Add pine nuts: Drop a spoonful of raw pine nuts into each glass — they will float on top of the tea.
  • Serve: Enjoy hot, with the pine nuts eaten at the end as a sweet, nutty finish.

Notes

In Tunisia, green tea is more traditional in the north, while black tea is also popular in the south.
Pine nuts aren’t toasted — they soak up the tea’s flavor and are eaten with a spoon after drinking.
Sometimes mint or orange blossom water is added for extra fragrance.

Nutrition

Calories: 80kcal | Carbohydrates: 9g | Protein: 1.5g | Fat: 4g


Product We Use

to make our cooking experience better


Cookware
Tefal A705S9 Duetto 9-Piece Cookware Set
Stainless steel table Fryer
Tefal Oleoclean Pro Inox & Design fryer
Ninja MAX Dual Zone Digital Air Fryer
Ninja MAX Dual Zone Digital Air Fryer

More Recipes

Cajun chicken with sweet potatoes and greens
Cajun Chicken Recipe — Spicy 30-Minute Dinner
Sichuan-Style Crispy Chili Beef
Sichuan-Style Crispy Chili Beef
Harissa in a jar
Harissa: Authentic Tunisian Chili Paste Recipe
Carrot cake overnight oats jar
Carrot Oat Cake — Healthy High-Protein Recipe
Pine nut tea
Pine Nut Tea: Soothing Tunisian Drink Recipe
Lablebi with a poached egg
Lablébi: Tunisian Chickpea Breakfast Soup Recipe