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Homemade Medicine

These healthy herbal tinctures are easy to make at home.

By Jennifer Rabin

 

Herbal medicine has long been considered “the people’s medicine” for its

accessibility, safety and the ease with which remedies can be made. Commonly

throughout history, if someone wanted a particular medicine, they needed only

grow it in their garden or find a place where it grew naturally and could be

gathered. Thoughtfulness was required about when to harvest the plant, and often

the medicine used was a tincture, the recipe for which had been passed down for

generations. These practices were environmentally and financially sustainable

and remain a cornerstone of herbal medicine.

 

Those who want an alternative to conventional medicine often buy herbal products

from their alternative health-care providers or the health-food store. The irony

of this is that what was once medicine for the people now costs about $10 an

ounce.

 

Considering that someone who takes their tinctures religiously might go through

8 ounces in a month, that’s a hefty tab to pay for something that can be

harvested in one’s back yard.

 

Making your own tinctures is a cost-effective, creative and empowering way to

take control of your health care. It is perfect for the gardener who wants to

use what they grow for healing, the nature lover who yearns to identify and

sustainably wildcraft indigenous herbs, the crafter with the desire to turn the

dried herbs from the farmer’s market into medicine, or the chronically ill

patient who needs a regular supply of remedies.

 

Richo Cech, owner of Horizon Herbs in Williams, Oregon, and author of Making

Plant Medicine (Horizon Herbs, 2000), notes there’s an added healing benefit to

self-made remedies. “If you make your own tincture, you have a better connection

with the medicine because it’s from your own bioregion, similar to the benefits

of using raw local honey,” Cech says.

 

“And you know exactly what’s in the tincture, which leads to more trust, which

leads to faith, which makes it more effective.”

 

Don’t Let Math Stop You

Often, people are intimidated by the mathematics involved in making herbal

medicines, which include careful measuring of both the herb and the menstruum

(or solvent) to make sure they are in the proper ratio. Bert Norgorden, founder

of The Plant Works in Albuquerque, New Mexico, who has been making tinctures

since 1988, says it’s best to make tinctures according to ratios and weight, but

if math is the difference between someone making their own tincture and giving

up, there is an easier way.

 

Tincture Resources

Burch Bottle & Packaging

(800) 903-2830

www.burchbottle.com

 

Horizon Herbs

(541) 846-6704

www.horizonherbs.com

 

Mountain Rose Herbs

(800) 879-3337

www.mountainroseherbs.com

 

Nichols Garden Nursery

(800) 422-3985

www.nicholsgardennursery.com

 

Sunburst Bottle Company

(916) 929-4500

www.sunburstbottle.com

 

 

The majority of herbs have a solvency between 40 and 60 percent, Norgorden says.

In other words, most of their medicinal constituents can be extracted using a

solution with that percentage of alcohol. “You can go out and get some 80 proof

vodka, then go get your herb, put it in a jar, pour enough alcohol in to cover

it and you’ll have a serviceable macerate,” he adds.

With anything less than 80 proof (or 40 percent alcohol), Norgorden explains,

you run the risk that the tincture will not be adequately preserved.

 

Norgorden notes that this method is not appropriate for tincturing myrrh, saw

palmetto or usnea, which require more heroic measures, so these herbs are

probably not the best ones to work with as a beginner.

 

If you want to get the strongest tinctures possible and are willing to break out

your calculator, you might consider working with ethanol, also known as grain

alcohol or Everclear. Its 95 percent alcohol content (195 proof) makes it ideal

for mixing with distilled water to achieve a menstruum with the exact

alcohol-to-water ratio used by medicine makers. These are the ratios that have

been determined to extract the maximum amount of medicinal qualities from an

herb and can be found, along with the recipes for a panoply of tinctures, in

books like Cech’s Making Plant Medicine and James Green’s The Herbal Medicine

Maker’s Handbook (Crossing Press, 2000).

 

The How-To’s

Regardless of how particular you decide to be with your measurements when

getting started, try following the procedure (excerpted with permission from

Making Plant Medicine) for how to make an easy tincture:

 

1. Chop the fresh herb or grind the dried herb.

 

2. Place the herb in a glass jar labeled with the current date and name of the

herb.

 

3. Add sufficient menstruum (vodka or a specifically mixed ratio of ethanol to

water, which will vary according to the plant) to cover the herbs.

 

4. Screw on the lid, put the jar in a dark place at room temperature and shake

at least once daily (shaking ensures a strong extraction).

 

5. After two to three weeks, pour the contents of the jar through several layers

of cheesecloth or unbleached muslin and express the liquid.

 

6. Allow the liquid to settle in a clean jar overnight.

 

7. Decant the clear liquid through a filter paper.

 

8. Store in correctly labeled, amber glass bottles, out of the light.

 

Fresh Versus Dried Herbs

Fresh herbs and dried herbs generally require slightly different handling.

Because fresh herbs contain more water than their dried counterparts, they tend

to require higher amounts of alcohol in the extraction process.

For example, peppermint, spearmint and lemon balm are best extracted fresh with

pure ethanol, whereas these same herbs, when dried, require only 75 percent

alcohol.

Chamomile likes 75 percent alcohol for a fresh tincture and 50 percent when

tincturing the dried flower. It is also important to break down as much of the

cell structure as possible as a means of increasing the surface area of

extraction.

 

This can be accomplished by chopping the plant material or by putting the herb

into a blender.

 

To tincture the fresh aerial (above-ground) parts of such herbs as mullein, sage

and skullcap, Cech says to finely mince the leaves and flowers on a cutting

board before putting them in a jar and covering them with menstruum.

 

Fresh roots, such as echinacea and goldenseal, are best sliced diagonally into

thin sections with a knife — or pruning shears if the herbs are very woody —

then put into a blender with adequate menstruum. You can use the blender method

for any fresh herb.

 

“The best overall advice I can give,” Cech says, “is to use a blender if you

have a mechanical press and to use the chop-and-cover method if you will be

squeezing the tincture by hand.”

 

Norgorden delights at mentioning a gadget he recently discovered called a potato

ricer. It can be used as a makeshift herb press and can be found at kitchen

supply stores for less than $15.

 

When tincturing dried herbs, both Cech and Norgorden recommend dedicating a

coffee grinder strictly for grinding herbs, lest you make tinctures with a faint

coffee taste. You also can rub dried aerial parts through a screen until they’re

reduced to a coarse powder. Some dried roots can be cut manually or run through

the coffee grinder, while others are particularly unyielding.

 

“There are roots and barks that are grindable in common kitchen things and some

that are not,” Norgorden warns. “Why is stone root called stone root? Because

it’s hard as a rock.” He says certain roots like osha can be put into a blender

as long as they are cut beforehand with pruning shears into marble-sized pieces.

 

Beginner’s Herbs

It is best to start with herbs that are easily obtainable and have many

medicinal uses. Lemon balm, an antiviral and mood-elevating herb, can be

tinctured fresh, right out of the garden using a ratio of 1 part herb to 2 parts

pure ethanol. If you want to tincture the dried herb, use a ratio of 1 part herb

to 5 parts menstruum containing 75 percent alcohol. These same ratios, both

fresh and dry, are considered standard herb-to-menstruum ratios and hold true

for peppermint, spearmint, lavender and many other herbs.

 

If you don’t want to consult a book for the specific recipes, you can assume the

standard herb-to-menstruum ratios (1:2 for fresh and 1:5 for dried) and follow

the procedure for making an easy tincture with vodka. Ultimately, making your

own tinctures is about self-healing and a connection to nature. Nature is

notoriously imprecise, so you don’t need to worry too much about the minute

details.

 

 

--

 

Jennifer Rabin is a clinical herbalist and freelance writer. She lives, writes,

practices and teaches herbal medicine in Portland, Oregon.

 

Medicine Maker's Vocabulary

Macerate: To soak herbs in menstruum for the purpose of extraction.

 

Maceration: The plant/menstruum mixture before it is pressed and becomes a

tincture.

 

Marc: The plant material left after the medicinal constituents have been

extracted out of it and the menstruum pressed from it.

 

Menstruum: The solvent used for extracting the medicinal constituents out of

herbs. This is very often a mixture of ethanol and distilled water, but glycerin

and apple cider vinegar also are used.

 

http://www.herbsforhealth.com/index.php?page=article & story=22

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