Wellness Mama shares herbal tea recipes for health benefits

Katie Wells of Wellness Mama has published a collection of herbal tea recipes aimed at supporting digestion, sleep, and immune health without caffeine. The post highlights simple, nutrient-rich blends using common herbs like chamomile and mint. These teas offer affordable ways to incorporate wellness into daily routines.

Herbal teas provide a caffeine-free alternative to boost hydration and nutrition, according to Katie Wells, founder of Wellness Mama and author of health books. In a recent post dated December 23, 2025, Wells shares 16 recipes tailored for various needs, from soothing digestion to aiding pregnancy.

One recipe, Iced Dandelion Lime Tea, combines dandelions, raspberry leaf, and stevia for a refreshing nutrient boost, noting dandelions' high vitamin content. Chamomile tea is praised for its calming effects and gentle nature, suitable for sleep and even colicky babies. Mint tea helps with nausea and indigestion, often used in early pregnancy, while acting as an activator to enhance other herbs.

Raspberry leaf stands out as Wells' daily favorite, beneficial for hormone balance, skin health, and uterine strength during pregnancy, with a taste akin to black tea. For sleep, the Sleep Easy Blend mixes chamomile, mint, and catnip, steeped for five minutes in hot water. Lavender tea, blended with mint and optional stevia, promotes relaxation without overpowering flavors.

Other blends include a caffeine-free chai using raspberry leaf and coconut milk, herbal coffee from chicory and dandelion for coffee lovers, and a stomach soother with mint, fennel, and ginger to ease gas and nausea. Pregnancy-specific options like Pregnan-Tea incorporate nettle for vitamin K and report easier labors among users. Postpartum Nursing Mama Tea supports milk supply and digestion.

Seasonal recipes feature Herbal Wassail for holidays, Iced Lavender Peach Tea for summer, Elderberry Tea for cold season, and Cumin, Coriander, and Fennel Tea for constipation relief. Calendula Tea soothes the gut internally. Wells encourages buying herbs in bulk for cost savings and shares reader comments on favorites like rooibos for its antioxidants.

As a certified nutrition consultant and mother of six, Wells draws from personal research to promote these accessible remedies, emphasizing their versatility for hot or iced preparation.

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Rustic jar of homemade herbes de Provence spice blend surrounded by fresh herbs, illustrating Wellness Mama's recipe.
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Wellness Mama shares homemade herbes de Provence spice blend recipe

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Wellness Mama founder Katie Wells has published a recipe for a homemade herbes de Provence seasoning blend, describing the mix as a traditional combination of herbs associated with France’s Provence region and offering variations that include optional lavender, fennel and orange zest.

Katie Wells, founder of Wellness Mama, shares a simple herbal face steam method to open pores, moisturize skin, and reduce blemishes. The technique uses common pantry herbs and avoids commercial plastic steamers. It draws on traditional plant benefits backed by studies.

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Katie Wells, founder of Wellness Mama, advocates for green juice as a concentrated source of nutrients rather than a meal replacement. In a recent post, she outlines the benefits of its ingredients and provides a simple recipe emphasizing low-sugar vegetables. The approach aims to enhance hydration and vegetable intake amid widespread dietary shortfalls.

The Bay Area has welcomed a variety of new cafes this year, featuring influences from Asian, Latin American, Yemeni, and other global cuisines. These spots offer everything from jasmine milk teas to Yemeni lattes and Turkish coffee. The openings reflect a growing cafe culture amid the region's transition into spring.

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Polyphenols, natural plant compounds acting as antioxidants, help reduce inflammation and support health, according to experts cited in a Vogue article. Registered dietitians recommend incorporating berries, dark chocolate, coffee, artichokes, apples, nuts, seeds, and herbs. These foods provide varying amounts of polyphenols, with benefits linked to disease prevention.

Researchers from King's College London report that long-term consumption of foods rich in polyphenols, such as tea, coffee and berries, is associated with improved markers of heart health. In a study of more than 3,100 adults followed for over a decade, higher adherence to polyphenol-rich dietary patterns was linked to healthier blood pressure and cholesterol levels and lower predicted cardiovascular disease risk.

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Wellness Mama founder Katie Wells has published a recipe for bite-sized coconut-oil “pulling chews” flavored with essential oils, pitching them as a simpler way to do oil pulling—an Ayurvedic-inspired practice that involves swishing oil and then spitting it out. Dental groups and medical experts, however, say research on oil pulling’s oral-health benefits is limited and it should not replace brushing, flossing, fluoride toothpaste and routine dental care.

 

 

 

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