Ayurveda

Welpenela infusion: an old Sri Lankan tonic for the skin

A clay cup of steaming pale green-gold Welpenela herbal infusion beside a clay pot of balloon vine leaves, cinnamon sticks, a lime wedge, and a wooden spoon of coconut sugar on a warm wood counter.

A clay cup of steaming pale green-gold Welpenela herbal infusion beside a clay pot of balloon vine leaves, cinnamon sticks, a lime wedge, and a wooden spoon of coconut sugar on a warm wood counter.

There is a leafy green that grows along Sri Lankan fences and garden walls, climbing on thin tendrils with tiny papery balloons hanging off it. Village families have picked Welpenela for generations: sometimes cooked into a mallung, sometimes brewed into a warm tonic when the skin feels hot, itchy, or out of sorts. It tastes faintly green and earthy, a little bitter, softened with cinnamon and a touch of coconut sugar. This is the slow evening version of that tonic, made for the nights when your skin needs a little quiet care from the inside.

What you need

This makes one warm cup. Keep it simple. The leaf does the work, the cinnamon and lime make it pleasant to drink.

How to make it

  1. Bring the water to a gentle boil in a small pot, then drop in the cinnamon bark and ginger slices. Let them simmer for 2 minutes so the water turns fragrant.
  2. Lower the heat. Add the Welpenela leaf (or the contents of 2 capsules) and stir once.
  3. Cover and let it steep on the lowest heat for 5 to 7 minutes. The liquid should turn a pale green-gold and smell grassy under the cinnamon.
  4. Take the pot off the heat. Strain into your cup through a fine sieve so no leaf bits come through.
  5. Stir in the coconut sugar while the tonic is still warm, then finish with a squeeze of lime.
  6. Taste. If it feels too earthy, add a little more lime. If it feels thin, give it another minute of steeping next time.

Yields one warm cup. Best sipped slowly in the evening, after dinner, while your day winds down.

Why this infusion works

Welpenela, known to most of the world as balloon vine or "Love in a Puff," has a long history in Sri Lankan and Ayurvedic homes as a cooling herb for the skin and joints. The plant is taken both as food and as a tonic, and the leaves have always carried the reputation of calming heat and itch.

Modern research has caught up with the part grandmothers cared about most: the skin. Balloon vine extract has been studied for inflamed, irritated skin, and a clinical review found it useful in atopic dermatitis as a gentler, plant-based option (PubMed, 2020). Most of that work looks at it applied to the skin, so think of this warm cup as the traditional, supportive side of the ritual rather than a treatment.

The cinnamon and ginger are not just for flavor. Ceylon cinnamon adds a sweet warmth that balances the green bitterness of the leaf, and the ginger gives the cup a little heat that makes it easy to drink slowly. The lime brightens everything and keeps the tonic from tasting flat.

Three ways to change it up

  • Iced for hot afternoons. Brew it double-strength, strain, and pour over ice with extra lime. It becomes a green cooler for a 35-degree day.
  • Caffeine-free and unsweetened. Skip the coconut sugar entirely and let the cinnamon carry the sweetness. This is the cleanest version for an evening cup.
  • Batch for the week. Simmer four cups at once, strain, and keep it in a jar in the fridge for up to two days. Warm a cup each evening so the ritual takes 30 seconds, not 10 minutes.

When to drink it

This is an evening cup. Make it after dinner, three or four nights a week, when your skin feels warm or you simply want a calm, caffeine-free drink before bed. It pairs well with a light meal and a quiet hour, and it does not pair well with a heavy, late, fried dinner that your stomach is already arguing with.

One honest note: this is a supportive tonic, not a skin treatment. It will not clear a flare-up on its own. Sleep, water, a calm gut, and what you put on your skin matter more. A warm cup of Welpenela is the small daily habit that sits on top of all of that.

The bottom line

A Welpenela infusion is one of the simplest ways to bring an old Sri Lankan skin tonic into a modern evening. Leaf, cinnamon, lime, a warm cup. If you only have two things in the kitchen, the leaf and hot water are enough; everything else just makes it nicer to drink. For a clean, single-herb starting point, Ancient Nutra's Welpenela is what this cup was built around.

Sources

Written by the Ancient Nutra Wellness Team. The team researches, sources, and tests every ingredient before it earns a place in an Ancient Nutra blend. Questions? Email info@ancientnutra.com or message Ancient Nutra on Instagram.

Medical disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and is not medical advice. Statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. Ancient Nutra products are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Speak with a qualified healthcare provider before starting any new supplement, especially if you take prescription medication or have a medical condition.

Blog posts

View all
A warm mug of cinnamon-coconut milk drink with rolled Ceylon cinnamon quills and a small bowl of coconut sugar on a wooden counter

Cinnamon-Coconut Energy Drink for the 3 PM Slump

By the Ancient Nutra Wellness Team · June 17, 2026 · 5 minute read Key takeaways The cinnamon-coconut energy drink is a 5-minute, caffeine-free afternoon cup: warm coconut milk whisked with Ceylo...

Ayurvedic HerbsOverhead flat-lay of Ceylon cinnamon: rolled true-cinnamon quills, a wooden spoon of cinnamon powder, plain amber capsules in a dish, and a glass of pale tea on cream linen

Ceylon cinnamon, the sweet bark that supports blood sugar

Ceylon cinnamon is Sri Lanka's true cinnamon: milder, lower in coumarin than cassia, and studied for gently steadying blood sugar. Here is how to use it well.

AdaptogensA calm evening nightstand still life with an amber jar of capsules, a warm cup of herbal tea, dried reishi and roots, and a folded linen beside a softly lit bed.

5 reasons your sleep is not improving despite the supplements

Taking sleep supplements but still awake at 2am? Five mistakes quietly cancel them out, from late caffeine to wrong timing, plus a one-week fix for each.