Hibiscus Varieties

Hibiscus tea is made from the calyces of Hibiscus sabdariffa (roselle), not from ornamental garden hibiscus. The basic plant is consistent worldwide, but cultural forms, local names, and companion flavourings differ significantly across West Africa, the Caribbean, Mexico, Southeast Asia, Egypt, and the Middle East. This entry maps those differences and explains why bissap, karkadé, sorrel, and agua de jamaica are recognisably related but distinct.


In-Depth Explanation

The core plant: Hibiscus sabdariffa (roselle)

Hibiscus sabdariffa is an annual or perennial shrub native to West Africa and widely cultivated throughout the tropics. The part used for beverages is the calyx — the fleshy, deep-red outer covering of the seedpod that remains after the flower drops. These calyces are tart (from citric and malic acid), deep red (from anthocyanins), and produce a distinctive cranberry-like flavour when brewed. The leaves, seeds, and young shoots are also edible in various food cultures.

Regional names and preparations:

RegionLocal namePreparation styleNotes
West Africa (Senegal, Guinea, Mali)BissapHibiscus + water + mint + sugar, cold or room tempNational drink of Senegal; intense flavour
Nigeria and GhanaZoboHibiscus + ginger + pineapple/citrus + clovesOften spiced; can be alcoholic (zobo wine)
Egypt and SudanKarkadé (كركديه)Hot or iced; sometimes with sugar; sacred Nile Valley traditionOne of the most ancient hibiscus drink traditions
Jamaica/CaribbeanSorrelHibiscus + ginger + cinnamon + cloves + rum (traditional)Christmas drink; complex spiced character
MexicoAgua de JamaicaCold water extract + sugarUbiquitous in tacos shops and family restaurants
ThailandNam gra-jiabIced, with sugar; also used in herbal steam bathsPart of traditional Thai herbal culture
Iran and Middle EastChay-e torsh (chay-e-surkhak)Hot or cold; sour tea traditionLess sweet than Mexican/West African versions
Germany/EuropeHibiskusteeCommercial standardised product; often blendedPrimarily marketed for antioxidant and blood pressure properties

Species diversity:

Beyond H. sabdariffa, other hibiscus species contribute to regional tea cultures:

  • H. acetosella (red-leaf hibiscus, “false roselle”): Leaves and calyces used in parts of Africa; more ornamental but edible.
  • H. mutabilis: Used in Southeast Asian traditional medicine.
  • H. tiliaceus (sea hibiscus): Bark used for tea in Pacific Island culture; different from roselle.

Variety differences within H. sabdariffa:

Cultivars of roselle differ in calyx size, colour intensity, acidity, and yield:

  • Sudan Red / Khartoum Red: Large calyces; very deep colour; very sour; premium commodity grade
  • Thai varieties: Bred for high calyx yield; moderate acidity; standard for Southeast Asian production
  • Mexican (Oaxacan) varieties: Aromatic; slightly different anthocyanin profile

The acidity level varies significantly between varieties and origins, affecting both the flavour and the intensity of the deep-red colour.

Health properties:

Hibiscus sabdariffa has one of the stronger evidence bases for blood pressure reduction among herbal teas. Several randomised controlled trials have found that regular consumption (2–3 cups daily of standardised preparations) reduces systolic blood pressure by 5–10 mmHg in hypertensive individuals — clinically meaningful reductions. The compounds responsible are primarily the anthocyanins (hibiscin, delphinidin-3-glucoside) and potentially ACE-inhibitory peptides in the calyx.


History

Hibiscus sabdariffa cultivation in West Africa predates written records; botanical evidence suggests African origin and longstanding integration into food and ritual culture. Egyptian records of karkadé use date to ancient times. Trade routes spread H. sabdariffa cultivation to India, Southeast Asia, and eventually to the Americas via the transatlantic slave trade — explaining why Jamaica’s sorrel tradition, Senegal’s bissap, and Egypt’s karkadé all use the same plant. Mexico’s agua de Jamaica likely entered via Veracruz through African and Spanish colonial trade.


Brewing Guide

Hibiscus calyces brew well hot or cold — cold-brewing reduces acidity while preserving the vivid colour.

ParameterHot brewCold brew
Water temperature90–100°CCold/room temperature
Amount2–5g dried calyces per 250ml5–8g per 1 litre
Steep time5–10 minutes8–12 hours (fridge)
SweetenerOptionalOptional

Common Misconceptions

“Garden hibiscus and roselle are the same.” Common garden hibiscus (H. rosa-sinensis) is primarily ornamental and cannot be used interchangeably with roselle (H. sabdariffa) for tea production; the calyces are too small and flavour is inferior.

“Hibiscus tea is always the same product.” The base is consistent (H. sabdariffa), but the preparation — hot or cold, dry-extract vs. fresh, sweet or unsweetened, plain or spiced with ginger/cloves/cinnamon — varies dramatically by cultural tradition.


Taste Profile & How to Identify

Aroma: Tart, cranberry, slightly floral, deep red fruit.

Flavour: Strongly tart-sour, fruity, cranberry-adjacent; minimal bitterness; intensely refreshing.

Colour: Vivid deep red-purple.

Mouthfeel: Light body; high acidity.


Related Terms


See Also


Research

  • McKay, D.L., et al. (2010). Hibiscus sabdariffa L. tea (herbal tea) lowers blood pressure in pre- and mildly hypertensive adults. Journal of Nutrition, 140(2), 298–303.
    Summary: Randomised controlled trial demonstrating significant systolic blood pressure reduction with three cups daily of hibiscus tea over six weeks.
  • Ojeda, D., et al. (2010). Inhibition of ACE activity by the anthocyanins delphinidin and cyanidin-3-glucosides in hibiscus sabdariffa aqueous extracts. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 127(1), 7–10.
    Summary: Identifies ACE-inhibitory mechanism as a likely contributor to hibiscus tea’s antihypertensive effects, alongside anthocyanin antioxidant activity.

Last updated: 2026-04