Be Your Own Herbal
Expert - Part 2
Make an Infusion
By Susun
Weed, the
Wise Woman Way.
In your first lesson, you
learned how to "listen" to the messages of plant's tastes. And
you discovered that using plants in water bases (teas,
infusions, vinegars, soups) - and as simples - allows you to
experiment with and explore herbal medicine safely.
In this lesson, we
will learn how to make effective water-based herbal remedies
and talk more about using simples.
TEA FOR
YOU?
Teas are a favorite way to
consume herbs. Made by brewing a small amount of herbs
(typically a teaspoonful to a cup of water) for a short time
(generally 1-2 minutes), teas are flavorful, colorful
drinks.
Herbs rich in coloring
compounds - such as hibiscus, rose hips, calendula, and black
tea - make enticing and tasty teas. They may also contain
polyphenols, phytochemicals known to help prevent cancer. Since
coloring compounds and polyphenols are fairly stable, dried
herbs are considered best for teas rich in these.
Herbs rich in volatile oils -
such as ginger, chamomile, cinnamon, catnip, mint, lemon balm,
lemon grass, lavender, bergamot, and fennel, anise, and cumin
seeds - make lovely teas, which are effective in easing spasms,
stimulating digestion, eliminating pain, and inducing sleep.
Since much of the volatile oils are lost when herbs are dried,
fresh herbs are considered best for teas rich in these, but
dried herbs can be used with good results.
I enjoy a cup of hot tea with
honey. But teas fail to deliver the mineral richness locked
into many common herbs. A cup of nettle tea, for instance,
contains only 5-10 mg of calcium, while a cup of nettle
infusion contains up to 500 mg of calcium. For optimum
nutrition, I drink nourishing herbal infusions every
day.
INFUSION FOR
ME!
An infusion is a large amount
of herb brewed for a long time. Typically, one ounce by weight
(about a cup by volume) of dried herb is placed in a quart jar,
which is then filled to the top with boiling water, tightly
lidded and allowed to steep for 4-10 hours. After straining, a
cup or more is consumed, and the remainder chilled to slow
spoilage. Drinking 2-4 cups a day is usual. Since the minerals
and other phytochemicals in nourishing herbs are made more
accessible by drying, dried herbs are considered best for
infusions. (See experiment 2.)
I make my infusions at night
before I go to bed and they are ready in the morning. I put my
herb in my jar and my water in the pot, and the pot on the
fire, then brush my teeth (or sweep the floor) until the kettle
whistles. I pour the boiling water up to the rim of the jar,
screw on a tight lid, turn off the stove and the light, and go
to bed. In the morning, I strain the plant material out,
squeezing it well, and drink the liquid. I prefer it iced,
unless the morning is frosty. I drink the quart of infusion
within 36 hours or until it spoils. Then I use it to water my
houseplants, or pour it over my hair after washing as a final
rinse, which can be left on.
My favorite herbs for infusion
are nettle, oatstraw, red clover, and comfrey leaf, but only
one at a time. The tannins in red clover and comfrey make me
pucker my lips, so I add a little mint, or bergamot, when I
infuse them, just enough to flavor the brew slightly. A little
salt in your infusion may make it taste better than honey
will.
SIMPLE
MESSAGES
When we use simples (one plant
at a time), we allow ourselves an intimacy that deepens and
strengthens our connections to plants and their green magic.
There are lots of interesting plants, and lots of herbalists
who maintain that herbal medicine means formulae and
combinations of herbs. But I consider herbs as lovers,
preferring to have only one in bed with me at a
time.
When I use one plant at a time
it is much easier for me to discern the effect of that plant.
When I use one plant at a time and someone has a bad reaction
to the remedy, it is obvious what the source of the distress
is, and usually easy to remedy. When I use one plant at a time,
I make it easy for my body to communicate with me and tell me
what plants it needs for optimum health.
I even go so far as to ally
with one plant at a time, usually for at least a year. By
narrowing my focus, I actually find that I learn
more.
COMING
UP
In our next lesson we will
learn more about the difference between nourishing, tonifying,
stimulating/sedating, and potentially-poisonous plants; how to
prepare them; and how to use them. In the following
installments we will explore the difference between fixing
disease and promoting health, how to apply the three traditions
of healing, and how to take charge of your own health care with
the six steps of healing.
EXPERIMENT NUMBER
ONE
Make and drink a quart of
nourishing herbal infusion made with stinging nettle, oatstraw,
red clover, raspberry leaf, or comfrey leaf. If you wish,
flavor it with mint. On the same day, make a tea from the same
herb, using dried herb. Compare and contrast the colors,
flavors, and sensations.
EXPERIMENT NUMBER
TWO
Make an infusion of stinging
nettle, oatstraw, red clover, raspberry leaf, or comfrey leaf,
using one ounce of dried herb as usual. At the same time, make
a quart of "brew" using the same herb, but fresh, not dried. To
make it fair, use 4 ounces of fresh herb. After one hour of
steeping, look at both jars, taste and compare/contrast. Repeat
three more times at hourly intervals.
Minerals are released slowly
into water. They darken the color of the water and give it a
dense, rich taste. Oil-soluble vitamins float to the top and
make a thin glaze of swirls.
EXPERIMENT NUMBER
THREE
Buy, or grow, a tasty,
aromatic herb, like ginger, peppermint, or rosemary. For this
experiment you will need one tablespoon of fresh herb, and one
teaspoon of the same herb dried. Place the fresh herb in a cup
or mug and the dried herb in another. Fill both to the top with
boiling water. After one minute, taste, smell, compare the
teas. Wait another minute and compare again. Then wait five
minutes and try each one again.
EXPERIMENT NUMBER
FOUR
Make a tea with aromatic seeds
- anise, caraway, coriander, cumin, fennel, or fenugreek. Use a
teaspoon of seeds in a cup of water. At the same time, brew
some using a tablespoon of seeds per cup. After a minute,
taste, smell, contrast. Repeat in five minutes, then in thirty
minutes, then after an hour, then after four hours. Teas and
infusions of dried seeds are almost the same.
FURTHER
STUDY
1. Drink 2-4 cups
of nourishing herbal infusion for a month and see if your
health changes in any way. Best if you don't drink coffee or
tea during this month.
2. Choose a green
ally to focus on this year.
3. Read Healing
Power of Minerals by Paul Bergner.
4. Read about
stinging nettle and oatstraw in my book Healing
Wise.
5. Write out the
botanical names of the herbs you used in making your teas and
your infusions.
ADVANCED
WORK
* Learn
more about essential oils in plants. Grow several plants rich
in essential oils.
* Learn
more about tannins. Make an oakbark infusion.
If you want to be your own
herbal expert and lean more about herbal medicine then you may
want to start a correspondence course!
See
susunweed.com
for information on courses
available.
Legal Disclaimer: This content is
not intended to replace conventional medical treatment. Any
suggestions made and all herbs listed are not intended to
diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease, condition or
symptom. Personal directions and use should be provided by a
clinical herbalist or other qualified healthcare practitioner
with a specific formula for you. All material contained herein
is provided for general information purposes only and should
not be considered medical advice or consultation. Contact a
reputable healthcare practitioner if you are in need of medical
care. Exercise self-empowerment by seeking a second
opinion.
Susun Weed
PO Box 64
Woodstock, NY 12498
Fax: 1-845-246-8081
Visit Susun Weed at The Wise
Woman Center and Ash Tree Publishing ashtreepublishing.com
Vibrant, passionate, and
involved, Susun Weed has garnered an international reputation
for her groundbreaking lectures, teachings, and writings on
health and nutrition. She challenges conventional medical
approaches with humor, insight, and her vast encyclopedic
knowledge of herbal medicine. Unabashedly pro-woman, her
animated and enthusiastic lectures are engaging and often
profoundly provocative.
Susun is one of America's
best-known authorities on herbal medicine and natural
approaches to women's health. Her four best-selling books are
recommended by expert herbalists and well-known physicians and
are used and cherished by millions of women around the world.
Learn more at susunweed.com
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