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Dosage of infusions

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Hello,

Returning from a holiday in France with a French herbal by

Dextreit, I started wondering why we don’t follow the dosages for

infusions advocated in many herbals: 25 to 30 gr of plants for ½ litre

of water. During my studies, finished, just a year ago, infusions have

always been prescribed as 2 tsp per cup. No peculiarity of the School of

Herbal Medicine, I suspect. So, does anybody actually prescribe the

25-30 gr dosage? Why don’t we follow the recommendations in books? Is it

from experience?

Waiting for your thoughts….

J-Christophe

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At 18:57 27/08/2003, you wrote:

>

>

>Returning from a holiday in France with a French herbal by

>Dextreit, I started wondering why we don’t follow the dosages for

>infusions advocated in many herbals: 25 to 30 gr of plants for ½ litre

>of water. During my studies, finished, just a year ago, infusions have

>always been prescribed as 2 tsp per cup. No peculiarity of the School of

>Herbal Medicine, I suspect. So, does anybody actually prescribe the

>25-30 gr dosage? Why don’t we follow the recommendations in books? Is it

>from experience?

>

>

Dear J Christophe,

It's probably experience. At that strength most herbal teas are undrinkable

if not emetic.

Personally I prefer dessertspoon measures, and I don't expect my patients

to weigh their teas out, in metric or otherwise.

Best regards,

Krystyna

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It may be that the recommendation has got confused with quantities used to make

decoctions. It's usually an oz to a pint and a half of boiling water boiled

down to a pint so you would end up with appx. 30g/0.5litres.

---------------------------------

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I thought I would actually try and see what it would taste like 25 gr of

to ½ litre of water…. It did not have an emetic effect, but then

I may not have drunk enough; after a couple of sips it all (bizarrely)

disappeared down the plug hole!!! So, yes… not the tastiest of remedies.

Still intrigued as to how such does got there in the first place.

Possibly tinctures as mentioned by , but could it also relate

to fresh plant matter?

J-Christophe

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Try 25gr of German chamomile, or better still, Roman chamomile, after which

you may understand why homeopathy became so popular.

All the best,

Krystyna

At 17:27 28/08/2003, you wrote:

>I thought I would actually try and see what it would taste like 25 gr of

> to ½ litre of water…. It did not have an emetic effect, but then

>I may not have drunk enough; after a couple of sips it all (bizarrely)

>disappeared down the plug hole!!! So, yes… not the tastiest of remedies.

>Still intrigued as to how such does got there in the first place.

>Possibly tinctures as mentioned by , but could it also relate

>to fresh plant matter?

>

>

>

>J-Christophe

>

>

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Jean-Christophe Brunet wrote:

> I thought I would actually try and see what it would taste like 25 gr of

> to 1/2 litre of water. It did not have an emetic effect, but then

> I may not have drunk enough; after a couple of sips it all (bizarrely)

> disappeared down the plug hole!!! So, yes - not the tastiest of remedies.

> Still intrigued as to how such does got there in the first place.

I think it goes back to some oz. confusion.

1 oz (by volume) is close to 1-2 tablespoons; 1 oz (by weight) ends up being

a cupful (or more), if you use fluffy herbs instead of heavy roots.

So use 1 oz dried herb (by volume) to 30 oz water and you have a nice tea

.... and I do tell my clients to make 1 liter of tea a day, using 2-3

tablespoons of dried herb, letting steep for 5-10 minutes.

The Chinese, of course, use kilograms of herb a day, boiling it forever -

but that's TCM, not western herbalism.

Oh yes, of course, in olden days they used mostly roots, barks, seeds, and

other bits that could take long-term storage in dubious conditions. Leaf

and flower could not take being in a burlap bag for years on end, so they

weren't used all that much - or if they were, as with the eclectics, they

were tinctured.

And when your dried herb is root, bark and seed 1 oz (weight) is rather

close to 1 oz (volume).

Henriette

--

Henriette Kress, AHG Helsinki, Finland

Henriette's herbal homepage: http://www.ibiblio.org/herbmed

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