ginger pineapple tea​

Ginger Pineapple Tea You’ll Make on Repeat

Make this refreshing ginger pineapple tea with fresh pineapple, ginger, and turmeric. Bright, warming, and ready in 40 minutes. Serve it hot or iced — you’ll want it both ways.

Ginger pineapple tea is a simmered fruit-and-spice infusion made from fresh pineapple, ginger root, and turmeric. This recipe serves 4, delivers a golden, tangy brew with a gentle warming heat, and is perfect for a cozy afternoon drink or a cold-weather wellness ritual.

Here’s everything you need to make it perfectly.

I made this pineapple ginger tea 6 times before I stopped fussing with it. The detail nobody mentions? Press those cooked solids hard through the strainer — that last bit of liquid is the most concentrated, most flavorful part of the whole pot.

Why You’ll Love This Ginger Pineapple Tea

This tea hits a really specific sweet spot: fruity and tropical from the pineapple, spicy and grounding from the ginger, with turmeric giving it this gorgeous golden color.

It works hot or iced, which means it earns a spot in your rotation year-round. And it’s genuinely simple — no special equipment, no complicated steps, just a pot and a strainer.

The honey and lemon at the end round everything out so it doesn’t taste medicinal. It tastes like something you’d pay too much for at a juice bar. But you made it at home in 40 minutes.

ginger pineapple tea​

Cozy Ginger Pineapple Tea

Make this refreshing ginger pineapple tea with fresh pineapple, ginger, and turmeric. Bright, warming, and ready in 40 minutes. Serve it hot or iced — you’ll want it both ways.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Course Drinks
Cuisine International
Servings 4 servings

Equipment

  • Large pot
  • Strainer
  • Large pitcher or bowl
  • Spoon

Ingredients
  

Main Ingredients

  • 1 large pineapple peeled and cut into 1/2 inch pieces; fresh only, not canned
  • 2 inch piece fresh ginger root peeled and thinly sliced
  • 1 inch piece fresh turmeric root peeled and thinly sliced

Liquid

  • 4 cups water filtered preferred

Sweetener & Finish

  • ¼ cup honey stir in off the heat
  • 2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lemon juice fresh only, not bottled

For Iced Version

  • ice cubes as required

Instructions
 

  • Add pineapple pieces, sliced ginger, sliced turmeric, and water to a large pot.
  • Bring the mixture to a boil over medium-high heat.
  • Reduce heat to low and let it simmer for 30 minutes.
  • Strain the mixture into a large pitcher or bowl, pressing the solids firmly with a spoon to extract as much liquid as possible.
  • Add honey and stir until completely dissolved.
  • Stir in lemon juice.
  • Pour the tea into cups and serve hot.
  • For iced tea, allow the tea to cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until chilled.
  • Serve over ice cubes.

Notes

Press the cooked pineapple and ginger solids firmly through the strainer for the most concentrated flavor. Use ripe fresh pineapple for the best sweetness and balance. Add honey off the heat to preserve its flavor, and stir in lemon juice at the very end for brightness. For a spiced variation, add a cinnamon stick and a few cloves while simmering. Store leftovers in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
Keyword ginger pineapple tea, ginger tea, iced tea, pineapple tea, turmeric tea, wellness drink

What Ingredients Do You Need for Ginger Pineapple Tea?

ginger pineapple tea​ Ingredients
Ingredient GroupIngredientAmountNotes
Main IngredientsLarge pineapple, peeled and cut into 1/2 inch pieces1 largeFresh only, not canned
Main IngredientsFresh ginger root, peeled and thinly sliced2 inch pieceThin slices release more flavor
Main IngredientsFresh turmeric root, peeled and thinly sliced1 inch pieceOr substitute turmeric powder
LiquidWater4 cupsFiltered preferred
Sweetener & FinishHoney1/4 cupStir in off the heat
Sweetener & FinishFreshly squeezed lemon juice2 tablespoonsFresh only, not bottled
For Iced VersionIce cubesAs requiredUse after tea is fully chilled

Fresh ginger root is the backbone here — it’s sharper and brighter than dried, and it makes the whole kitchen smell incredible while it simmers.

The turmeric adds earthy depth and that signature golden color. Can’t find fresh turmeric? Powdered works, though the flavor is slightly more bitter. Use about 1/2 teaspoon in its place.

Raw honey stirred in after cooking keeps its natural enzymes intact. It also blends in more smoothly when the tea is still warm rather than piping hot.

How to Make Ginger Pineapple Tea Step by Step

How to Make pineapple ginger tea

Simmer the Tea

  1. Add pineapple pieces, sliced ginger, sliced turmeric, and water to a large pot.
  2. Bring the mixture to a boil over medium-high heat.
  3. Reduce heat to low and let it simmer for 30 minutes.
    Pro Tip: The key to a deeply flavored pineapple ginger tea is a full 30-minute simmer — don’t rush it or the ginger won’t fully mellow.

Strain and Finish

  1. After 30 minutes, strain the mixture into a large pitcher or bowl, pressing the solids firmly with a spoon to extract as much liquid as possible.
    Pro Tip: For best results, press the cooked fruit against the strainer with a spoon — this last squeeze holds the most concentrated flavor.
  2. Add honey and stir until it is completely dissolved.
  3. Stir in lemon juice.

Serve Hot or Iced

  1. Pour the tea into cups and serve hot.
  2. To make iced pineapple and ginger tea, allow the tea to cool to room temperature, then refrigerate until chilled.
  3. Serve over ice cubes.
pineapple ginger tea benefits

Expert Tips for Perfect Ginger Pineapple Tea

Pro Tips for Success

The most common mistake is adding honey while the tea is boiling — instead, let it cool slightly off the heat first. High heat breaks down honey’s delicate flavor compounds and can make it taste flat.

Slice your ginger thin. Real talk: thick chunks don’t release as much flavor during the simmer. Aim for coins about 1/8 inch thick, and don’t skip peeling — the skin can add bitterness.

Ginger pineapple tea works best when you use a ripe pineapple. You’ll know it’s ready when it smells sweet at the base and a center leaf pulls out easily. An underripe pineapple produces a noticeably more acidic, less rounded brew.

The lemon juice goes in last, after the honey is dissolved. Adding it earlier can make the tea taste sharper than you want. A quick stir after both are in and you’re done.

For best results, use filtered water. Tap water with heavy chlorine or mineral content can subtly compete with the clean tropical flavor you’re going for.

Delicious Variations

Iced Pineapple Ginger Tea: Follow the full recipe, then cool to room temperature before refrigerating. Serve over ice for a refreshing cold drink that’s just as satisfying as the hot version — perfect for summer afternoons.

Spiced Version: Add a cinnamon stick and 3-4 whole cloves to the pot along with the pineapple and ginger. It gives the tea a warming, chai-adjacent depth that’s really good in cooler months.

Low-Sugar Version: Swap the honey for a small amount of stevia or monk fruit sweetener, stirring it in at the end. The fruity, spiced flavor still comes through beautifully without the added sugar.

Troubleshooting Common Problems

Problem: Tea tastes too bitter or sharp.

Solution: This usually means the ginger was too thick or the simmer went over 30 minutes. Pull it off heat right at 30 minutes and strain immediately — extended cooking time extracts harsh compounds from both ginger and turmeric.

Problem: Tea isn’t sweet enough even after adding honey.

Solution: Make sure the tea is warm (not cold) when you add the honey — it dissolves more evenly. You can also add a touch more honey one teaspoon at a time until it hits the right balance for your taste.

Problem: Iced tea tastes watery after adding ice.

Solution: Brew the tea at full strength as written, then chill it in the fridge before serving over ice. Don’t dilute it during chilling — the ice does that on its own when you serve it.

How to Store and Reheat Ginger Pineapple Tea

Storage MethodDurationBest Practice
Room TemperatureUp to 4 hoursKeep covered; don’t leave out longer in warm kitchens
RefrigeratorUp to 5 daysStore in an airtight pitcher or jar; stir before serving
FreezerUp to 3 monthsFreeze in ice cube trays, then transfer to a bag for easy portions

To reheat, warm the tea gently in a saucepan over low heat until steaming — don’t boil it again or you’ll lose that fresh, bright lemon note. It should smell fragrant and look golden when it’s ready.

Leftover pineapple and ginger tea is great as a base for cocktails and mocktails. Pour it over ice with sparkling water for a quick spritz, or use it to poach fruit for a simple dessert. Honestly, the leftover tea might be better than the fresh batch once the flavors have had time to meld overnight.

FAQs About Ginger Pineapple Tea

What are the benefits of pineapple ginger tea?

Pineapple contains bromelain, a naturally occurring enzyme associated with digestive support. Fresh ginger has been studied for its anti-inflammatory and nausea-reducing properties. Turmeric contains curcumin, a compound with well-documented antioxidant activity.
This recipe combines all three ingredients into one drink. That said, this is a food recipe, not a supplement — individual results vary, and the benefits depend on factors like how much you drink and your overall diet.

Can I make pineapple ginger tea ahead of time?

Yes. The tea keeps well in the refrigerator for up to 5 days in a sealed container. It actually gets slightly more mellow in flavor after a day in the fridge as the ginger heat settles. Stir before serving, especially if you’ve added honey, since it can settle at the bottom.

Can I use dried or powdered ginger instead of fresh?

You can, but the flavor profile changes noticeably. Dried ginger is sharper and more concentrated — use about 1/2 teaspoon of ground ginger in place of the 2-inch fresh piece. Fresh ginger gives a brighter, more aromatic heat that works better with the tropical sweetness of the pineapple.

Is ginger pineapple tea safe during pregnancy?

Ginger in moderate food amounts is generally considered safe during pregnancy and is often recommended for nausea relief. However, the combination of turmeric and honey in concentrated form may not be appropriate for everyone. Always check with your healthcare provider before making any specific drink part of your routine during pregnancy.

Can I use canned pineapple instead of fresh?

Fresh pineapple gives a significantly brighter, more complex flavor because it still contains live enzymes and natural acidity that canned pineapple loses during processing. Canned works in a pinch — use about 2 cups of chunks drained of their juice, and expect a slightly softer, sweeter result. The turmeric-ginger base still comes through well either way.

Save This Recipe and Tell Me What You Think

Seriously — once you make this, it’s going to be on rotation. Hot in the morning, iced in the afternoon, and honestly great as a mocktail base on the weekend.

If you love drinks like this, you’ll also want to try this creamy homemade horchata — it’s another made-from-scratch drink that genuinely beats anything store-bought.

Pin this recipe so you can find it later, and drop a comment below letting me know how yours turned out. Did you go hot or iced first? I mean it — I read every single one.

Cozy ginger pineapple tea made with fresh pineapple, ginger, and turmeric — golden, warming, and ready in 40 minutes. Serve hot or pour over ice. Save this for later!

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