Posted in Herbs And Homemade Medicine
I promised a post on making herbal tinctures, and here it is! Everybody's doing it. The more folks learn about natural health, and taking seriously the stewardship of their health, the more folks are learning about herbal medicine. Making your own herbal medicine is combining health stewardship and financial stewardship. Even Martha (who surely doesn't view stewardship from a biblical worldview) is doing it. (As much as Mr. Visionary 'respects' Martha Stewart, if he sees this, I'll have to break out my ginger tincture to help settle his stomach. "You put a link to who???") (Edited to add: this was a subtle, tongue-in-cheek way of saying we do not care for Martha Stewart.) Most of the time, when I need herbal medicine for my family, I choose alcohol tinctures for several reasons. First, they make the chemical constituents of the herbs easier for our bodies to assimilate. (Just like you wouldn't eat nails if you wanted to increase your iron levels. It just doesn't work.) It is the same with herbs. Not all the good stuff in the herbs can be extracted through digestion. Second, alcohol is the strongest solvent that can extract a major portion of the plant constituents without harming its properties. Also, they are easy to make (read that: not labor intensive), keep forever (about five years when stored properly), and they don't take up tons of space (compare a cough syrup bottle for the tincture to a bag of cotton candy for the bulk dry herb). Step One: Gather supplies. We use 100 proof alcohol (v*dka is said to have very little taste) because it has the exact 50/50 ratio of water to alcohol that you need for your menstruum. (Some of the plant constituents need water to extract and some need alcohol, and the ratio matters.) The proportions of herb, alcohol and water we use will make a standardized extract that will have a specific amount of that herb's healing ingredients. This makes following dosage guidelines more accurate, and you know that when you make the same tincture the next time, it will have the same strength. Step Two: Measure ingredients. For soft herbs like Elderberries (they are a little harder than raisins) you will need to blend the herb and v*dka at the same time without powdering the herb first. (You will need 1/4 pound of dried herb for 16 ounces of alcohol to make a standardized tincture.) Here are some very good directions for making a tincture with instructions for figuring out your measurements. Step Three: Blend Well. Blend the herb and alcohol until thoroughly combined. It will be thick and the berries should be as completely dissolved as your blender can get them. (Just a side note: this can also be done with a simple mortar and pestle...you don't have to have a spectacular blender, it just saves time.) When you use hard dried herbs (like this echinacea) it works best to powder the herb in the blender before you add the alcohol (at least that is what we've found).
Step Four: Macerate (or soak). Now, pour the mixture into a jar with tight-fitting lid and stick it in a cabinet or pantry (somewhere in the dark). Even though it has to sit for two weeks (at least) you will want it some place easily accessible (and easy to remember) because it needs to be shaken every day. Shake it every day to get it well mixed (the herb will settle to the bottom of the jar). While it needs at least two weeks, the longer it sits, the better it will be. Some (especially Asian herbalists) believe it is better to leave them to macerate for 6 weeks or longer. I have read that after six months, the alcohol will no longer extract constituents from the herb. ![]() Step Five: Strain the liquid (two weeks later). You need something to help you strain all that smushed-up herb back out of the mixture. We use a metal mesh strainer lined with cheesecloth (wet the cheesecloth first). Pour the mixture into the cheesecloth lined strainer, and let as much liquid as you can strain through on its own. Do small amounts at a time. Then, gather up the cheesecloth and gently sqeeze the remaining liquid out of the herb mixure. Be careful not to squeeze too hard or you will burst the cheesecloth and have to start all over. However, get as much liquid as you can squeezed out, as this is the richest part of your tincture, and you don't want to waste any. Step Six: Bottle and store your tincture. Now your tincture is complete, and you can bottle it for future use. It will keep best if stored in dark jars (blue or amber). Make sure you label your jars! 'Blueberry juice' recipe: equal parts elderberry tincture and maple syrup. Store in the refrigerator.
There are tons of sites online that give more information about making herbal medicine, and I have learned some there. Some sites I use when researching herbs are: this one for learning about the usage of certain herbs, this one for learning how to make different forms of herbal products, and this one for buying herbs and essential oils in bulk.
Several books that have taught me a lot are: Mommy Diagnostics by Shonda Parker Herbal Antibiotics by Stephen Harrod Buhner The Complete Woman's Herbal by Anne McIntyre.
Have fun making your own medicine. (Although I hope you won't be needing it!) |
Posted in Herbs And Homemade Medicine
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Posted in Herbs And Homemade Medicine
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Posted in Herbs And Homemade Medicine
Medicine is not supposed to taste great. I know this. At least I know that it usually doesn't. Even as a child, I knew that whatever that pink stuff was, it did not taste like any bubblegum I ever had. (Let's not discuss the time little brother and I ate "chocolate bar" Ex-Lax. Little kids don't care much about taste. It looked like chocolate, and finders are keepers, you know.) We really are spoiled to live in a time when so many pharmaceuticals are available as tablets and capsules. In the old days when folks made their own medicine, or at least got it from a local doctor, everything tasted bad. "A spoonful of sugar" was not just a cute saying, but a very necessary anti-retching maneuver. Some of us who have become discontent with the current pharmaceutical-happy culture in which we are immersed have gone back to the "old days". We study and learn to discern and diagnose those conditions that can safely (and likely more safely) be treated at home. We are making our own herbal medicines, and learning how to use them effectively. The good news is, we are healthier. The bad news is, everything tastes yucky again. Case in point, I am struggling with pregnancy-induced anemia. When expecting, a woman's blood plasma volume increases fifty percent, while the hemoglobin level only increases thirty percent. Hence, even though I faithfully eat my green vegetables, (I swear) my iron level has significantly dropped. My first measure in any condition is dietary intervention. I envisioned black-strap molasses in cookies, baked beans, and barbecue sauce. I was prepared to live on spinach-and-orange salads with that raspberry dressing I love. I could add more iron-rich foods to my diet, and even vitamin C to make sure it was absorbed properly. I was looking forward to this. Food is always more fun than medicine. Alas, since the dietary-intervention-route was not quite getting the job done, it became time to bring in the big guns. Herbs. This also looked pretty simple. I made red raspberry, nettles, and alfalfa tea, (throwing in a little peppermint to But even the tea wasn't quite strong enough. Bigger guns were required. That's right-tinctures. And not just any tincture, either. The single-most-effective herb to increase iron levels (Yellow Dock) just so happens to be the single-most-bitter-tasting herb as well. Blech and more blech. Although the most effective as far as potency, a tincture is the single most repugnant form of any herb as far as palatability. Great. Remembering the spoon-full-of-sugar method is the only way I have gotten through this treatment. (My regards to Mary Poppins.) Admittedly not the "most delightful way", it has worked wonders. My iron is up, and I am feeling much better. "Now no chastening for the present seemeth to be joyous, but grievous: nevertheless afterward it yieldeth the peaceable fruit of righteousness unto them which are exercised thereby" Hebrews 12:11. Sometimes the really good stuff does taste bad. |
Posted in Herbs And Homemade Medicine
I think we made it. It is already the time of year when we can stop utilizing the woodstove. It has been more than a week since it has been on; winter is (finally) taking it's leave. The Lord has allowed us to pass through this winter essentially unscathed. Last winter our family was sick, then sick some more. We went to a church where the pastor preached, "Crawl in, don't call in." So folks did: they came to church in all stages of illness, shaking hands with all my children. Add to that our less-than-ideal immunity and we were constantly sick. During the most intense part of this season, I laid ill on the couch and mentally put a stake in the ground: "I will find a way to build our immune systems. I cannot let this happen to my family again." With this fresh determination, I began doing my homework in earnest. I read books, researched websites, and learned how to make my own herbal tinctures. I studied the immune system, the digestive system, and the lymph system inside out. My studies led me to the intricasies of the digestive system (fun) and how much it controls immunity. I previously had an understanding of antibiotics, and knew of their chronic overuse. But what I discovered was probiotics, the natural "good bacteria" created by God. The plan of attack I developed was two-fold. My part was to work through the summer making lacto-fermented vegetables, and experimenting with kefir, yogurt, and other fermented dairy products. I began feeding these things to my family on a daily basis. I also began praying in earnest, which is also my part. God's part will be to answer in the way He deems best. One thing I understand well is that my health and my family's health is not in my hands. Only my obedience is. "Some trust in chariots (boosting immune sytems), and some in horses (homemade tinctures): but we will remember the name of the Lord our God." Proverbs 20:7, parenthesis added. I am not afraid of sickness (although I don't look forward to it). But if it happens, I want to know that I have been obedient to the amount of knowledge the Lord has given me. I need to have been a good steward of my health. My desire is to rest in knowing that it is from His hand for His glory alone, and not because of my foolishness. The only thing worse than having a family of eight flat-on-their-backs with illness, is to know that you are the one who could have worked to avoid it, but didn't. Ask me how I know. By the way, I think I have discovered where the word "barf-a-rama" originated-it was at my house last winter.
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