Herbal Tea Blending NOTES
Herbal Tea Blending NOTES
Herbal Tea Blending NOTES
Mel Mutterspaugh
WHY USE HERBAL TEAS?
They’re a great way to get important nutrients, medicinal constituents into your body
Easy to prepare
Inexpensive
They can be tasty & enjoyable. Some people don’t enjoy tinctures, or popping capsule or pills
It creates a ritual, or time for personal space in a busy life. “Teas work best when taken in the quiet of the evening,
with a prayer.”
We can bathe in them!
Water soluble constituents include: carbohydrates, enzymes, mucilage, pectins, saponins, & polysaccharides
PREPARATIONS
Standard infusions. Hot tea, use a tea pot, tea ball, bombilla, French press, muslin bag, wire mesh strainer, a clean
organic cotton sock, bandana, or whatever else you can find to strain the herbs.
Best for delicate plant parts such as flowers, leaves, seeds & stems. Consider it also for the roots that have
delicate essential oils that could evaporate if boiled. Think ginger, osha, valerian root.
Boil water, and pour it over the herbs. Let steep as little as 5 minutes, up to 24 hours, depending on desire for
therapeutic benefits, and the plants you’re working with.
When drinking tea for social situations or simple pleasure, use 1 heaping teaspoon of herb to 8 oz of hot water.
For a more therapeutic quality consider 1 ounce of dried flower to 64 oz of hot water, or 2 ounces of dried roots
or bark. Allow seeds to steep for 30 minutes to 1 hour, 2 hours for flowers, (yes, that rhymes!) 4 hours for
leaves, and overnight for roots and barks.
Seeds should be bruised with a mortar and pestle to help release their flavor and beneficial properties, before
steeping
Consider grinding larger roots, barks, and berries with a mortar and pestle, or an herb grinder
When a recipe calls for dried herbs, and you only have fresh, use 3 times the amount called for in the recipe.
Decocting herbs
Best method of extracting the constituents of dense, or woody barks, roots, and seeds
Bring of cold water to a boil. Add 1 ounce of herb per quart of water. Reduce the heat, cover, and simmer for 20
minutes to 1 hour.
Be sure to keep the heat as low as possible while still maintaining a simmer, and keep the cover on so the
beneficial essential oils do not evaporate.
After being simmered, you can let the herbs steep overnight, or strain them right away.
Decoctions are very potent! The serving size can be much less than an infusion. Consider ¼-1/2 cup of tea with
decoctions.
Infusion-decoctions
What do we do when we want to create a formula that contains both dense roots or barks, with delicate flowers
and leaves? We do a hybrid method!
Bring the water to a boil. Add the herbs that need decocted and simmer for 20 minutes. Remove it from the
heat, and add the delicate herbs to the blend. Cover and steep for another 10-20 minutes.
Strain before serving. Wow, you now have a hybrid infusion decoction!
DOSAGES
For acute illnesses, one cup of tea every 2 hours, except when sleeping
Chronic conditions, 1 cup of tea 3-4 times per day
Consider pulse dosing with teas: 10 days on, 3 days off or 6 days on 1 day off
When using teas for healing, drink them for at least a week, and reevaluate your situation to determine if
you should continue or not
Consider the body type and size of the person being treated
Women may need less than men
Large people may need more than small people
For the elderly, reduce the dose by ¼ for those over 65, and by ½ for those over 70
When dosing children, consider the formula of dividing the child’s weight by 150. The ending fraction is the
fraction of the adult dose the child may have. For a 75-pound child, 75/150=.5 the child can have ½ the adult
dose
Infants can receive the benefits of tea through the mother’s breast milk about 15-30 minutes after the
mother drinks the tea
Formulating herbal tea is both a science and an art. Have fun, be creative, and make effective medicine!
Flavors, make it as palatable and pleasurable as possible. It will help with compliance
Feelings you’re trying to evoke
Condition you are trying to treat
Are you trying to treat anything, or is this for simple pleasure?
Supplements or prescriptions the client is currently on, and an adverse reaction possible with the herbs you’re
considering
What organs are you trying to help? Are there herbs that have an affinity for that organ? What supporting
organs could you use herbs for in the formula? For example, treating the skin? Consider herbs for the liver, and
the large intestine
Energetics of the person
Colder people can benefit from warming herbs like cinnamon or ginger, whereas hotter people may need a
cooling herb like spearmint or peppermint
Energetics of the symptom or disease
Treat heat and inflammation with cooling herbs, and cold conditions with warming herbs
Attempt to create formulas that address the entire being and the symptoms needing treated. For instance, a old
person with poor circulation could benefit from cinnamon, and hawthorn in their tea. Or, a hot person with
excessive flatulence would benefit from a cooling carminative like peppermint
As always, remember to see the whole being, not just the health issue. Can you coach them on lifestyle choices?
Often times a change in emotional health, diet, & exercise can be just as therapeutic as herbal therapeutics
You do not have to follow any strict rules. My greatest words of advice are to have fun experiment, taste it, feel
it, and do it all over again!
MATERIA MEDICA
Thanks for joining me for the class! I hope you are now inspired to go make incredible teas to help heal people and the
planet!
Feel free to reach out to me with any more questions. I can be reached at [email protected] Or 503-564-9135