Albanian Ritual · Vjosa Valley

The land is not for sale. The ritual is yours.

Wild mountain tea from named slopes, gliko from Përmet’s copper pots, single-grove olive oil, honey from the same hills. The Albanian pantry, sourced from the place itself — no warehouse pretending, no miracle claims.

Start with the teaOpen the pantry
Named harvest placesSmall batchesNo miracle claims

The centerpiece

Not-for-Sale Mountain Tea

Wild-harvested çaj mali (Sideritis) from high meadows above the Vjosa — whole stems, flowers on.

Simmer, don’t steep: stems in cold water, bring to the boil, three quiet minutes, honey if the day earned it.

The tea, in full

Why “Not-for-Sale”?

Because the mountains aren’t. Çaj mali — ironwort, Sideritis — grows wild above 1,000 metres and has been the first thing offered to a guest in Albanian houses for as long as anyone remembers. We sell the harvest and the craft around it; the source stays common ground.

And because we won’t dress a good plant in fake medicine. It’s a beautiful, caffeine-free evening tea with a long tradition. That is enough. The honest version →

From the valley

Taste it where it grows

The tea slopes, the gliko kitchens, and the olive groves are all around Përmet and Këlcyrë on the wild Vjosa. If the pantry makes you curious, Vjosa Tours runs the slow-food trail and homestay nights where all of this is served in its own kitchen.