Salabat Tea (Pressure Cooker)

Salabat Tea (Pressure Cooker)

Adapted from an internet recipe.
This is a Filipino ginger drink, often consumed when a person has a fever, sore throat, and when it is cold outside (not a chance of that happening here in Thailand except for the far north). This can be made on the stop top as well. Why a pressure cooker for this? Flavor! Keep the flavor in the tea and not evaporating off like on a stove top. Another reason is savings on energy consumption. Follow your pressure cooker safety guidelines at all times for your model of pressure cooker.
5 from 1 vote
Prep Time 2 minutes
Cook Time 1 minute
Total Time 3 minutes
Course Drink
Cuisine Filipino
Servings 3 cups of tea

Equipment

  • Pressure Cooker

Ingredients
  

  • 3 cups water
  • 4 1 inch pieces fresh ginger, thinly slice each piece
  • 2 tablespoons brown sugar

Instructions
 

  • Add the ingredients to your pressure cooker. Place the lid on and lock, add the weight (jiggler) to the lid, and place on high heat.
  • When the jiggler starts to move and venting pressure (indicating full pressure), start your timer for 1 minute and reduce heat to low or medium low, just enough heat to keep the jiggler moving and venting pressure.
  • When 1 minute has passed, turn off the heat and move the pressure cooker to an unused burner to cool and release pressure naturally.
  • When you have indication that zero pressure remains inside the cooker, pull off the weight, then open the lid.
  • Allow the tea to cool a bit then remove the ginger slices, pour into mugs, and enjoy (and hopefully feel better).

Notes

Variant: 1. For a slightly stronger flavor, cook on high pressure for 1½ - 2 minutes.
Adapted to a pressure cooker recipe by Lee Thayer, Thailand, and kitchen tested by Ryan Guo, Thailand.
  1. 5 stars
    A bit late to leaving a review here, but the recipe turned out well. I used four, 1-inch pieces of ginger as listed but was worried about it being excessively sweet. Back in the States, my family only added sugar after, but it worked out well as listed above. Flavour came out just like my family makes it back home.

    My Filipino wife and her relatives thought the flavour could be a bit stronger. I put the batch through a second 1-minute pressure cook (with natural release), and they said that was perfect. In the future, I may up the time to 1.5-2 minutes with natural release.

    Thanks for putting up another great recipe.

    • Lee

      The Real Person!

      Author Lee acts as a real person and verified as not a bot.
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      The Real Person!

      Author Lee acts as a real person and verified as not a bot.
      Passed all tests against spam bots. Anti-Spam by CleanTalk.

      Hi Ryan, thanks for the great review and suggestion on the time, sounds like it came out perfect. I have added a variant with that information.

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