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Using Your Fresh Herbs In Infusions, Herbal Teas, or
Decoctions As An Herbal Medicine By Mary Hanna
Recently it has been shown
that high herbal tea and quality teas have many health benefits, especially
Black and Green Tea. With all the news on Black and Green Tea lately, you may
be considering adding it to your daily diet regime. If that is so, only use
the best quality and freshest tea available for the maximum health benefits.
Also consider the health benefits of herbal teas using fresh herbs. Think of
these as herbal medicine. Millions of people all of the world have been drinking tea and infusions for centuries specifically for herbal medicine. In America, it has been considered a cheap convenient drink for soothing the soul and stimulating the senses. Yet there is a far more important reason that people drink tea more than any other beverage: the tea leaf has potent health-enhancing powers. The Japanese have known this for thousands of years and the modern West is just catching up to the remarkable health benefits of drinking tea. To make a tea or infusion you
must steep the fresh herb in boiling water. Many think of teas and infusions
as the same, but there is a slight difference. When making teas or herbal
teas you are brewing it and you don’t leave it steeping for very long. An
easy way to brew it is to place the tea bag or fresh herbs into a measuring
cup with 8 ounces of water. Microwave for two minutes and you have a cup of
tea. Fresh herbs make a marvellous cup of tea and are considered essential in
herbal medicine. Infusions on the other hand
stay in the boiling water longer, anywhere from 10 – 20 minutes. Obviously
the longer the fresh herbs steep the stronger the brew will become and it
will become a more potent herbal medicine. Infusions should be used
immediately after brewing to reap the most out of this herbal medicine,
especially when using fresh herbs. Rule of thumb is to use 1-2 teaspoons of
dried, crushed, or powdered herbs. If you want to get the most out of this
herbal medicine use fresh herbs and double the amount to steep. After the
steeping time your infusion will be at room temperature. It is okay to warm
it back up if you prefer it hot. Infusions can be therapeutic
as well as being considered herbal medicine. While your infusion is steeping
bend over the container and breathe in the steam. This will act as a
decongestion when you are suffering from colds or allergies. Close your eyes,
try to envision this herbal medicine as attacking the germs in your system.
Visualizing the fresh herb infusions attacking the malady will help to fight
illnesses quite well, according to some published studies. It is like the
grounding technique used in yoga. Here again, fresh herbs make the best
infusions in herbal medicine. There is a problem with
infusions as they tend to be quite bitter. And of course, if you can’t drink
the infusion then it will not be an advantageous herbal medicine. To make it
taste better try adding honey or sugar. If you still can’t get it down, try a
different infusion. There are many different fresh herbs to try when brewing
your herbal medicine. Decoctions are a different
story, as they don’t use strictly fresh herbs. Here you would use the dried
roots, flowers seeds and barks for their medicinal purposes, not fresh herbs.
To get the most from your mixture heat will be used since it is more
difficult to extract their active chemicals. Start by boiling the roots and
allow them a good head start. Next add the bark, the seeds, the flowers and
any spices in that order. Allow a few minutes of simmering after each
addition. Then simmer the herbal medicine slowly for 10 to 20 minutes. Now you have another use for
your fresh herbs. This gives you yet another excuse to plant a beautiful herb
garden Copyright by Mary
Hanna Visit Mary Hanna’s websites
at: Gardening Herb Cruise Travel and Cruise
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