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How To Make Gut-Healing Tea!+More | ¡Cómo hacer té para curar la tripa! + ¡Más!
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How To Make Gut-Healing Tea!+More
Most digestive herbs taste pleasant (excluding strong bitters) and extract well in hot water. The simple ritual of brewing and sipping a gut-healing tea invokes good, healing, self-care vibes, too.
Mucilaginous and Demulcent Herbs!
This soothes the GI tract when it’s dry, inflamed, irritated, or damaged, and helps create a temporary mucus-like lining.
Strongly mucilaginous (mucus-like) herbs include marshmallow root, slippery elm bark, and aloe inner gel. Demulcent yet only slightly mucilaginous herbs include licorice root, plantain leaf, and meadowsweet flower.
Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis)!
Hands down, marshmallow is our favorite mucilaginous herb. The root powder provides the most mucilaginous slime, but the snot-like consistency can be off-putting and may also trigger gas and bloating in some people with dysbiosis (including SIBO and FODMAP sensitivities).
Also enjoy or opt for marshmallow leaf and flower, which are even better tolerated by people with dysbiosis and easier to harvest in abundance from the garden.
Mucilage extracts best as a long infusion (several hours or overnight), but the leaves release the goods in less time.
Some herbalists prefer a cold infusion for a purer mucilage extraction, but hot infusions do just fine and will extract more from other herbs in your gut-healing tea blend.
Vulnerary Herbs!
The term “vulnerary” means wound-healing, promoting the speed and quality of tissue repair. Many of the herbs we classically consider topical wound healers, including Calendula, plantain, gotu kola, and licorice, are also excellent GI vulneraries in a gut-supportive tea blend.
Plantain Leaf (Plantago spp.)!
Almost any gut-healing tea blend we whip up contains at least 5 to 20 percent plantain leaf. Though plantain is best known as a fresh poultice for stings and bites, in the GI tract it provides vulnerary, gently astringent, demulcent, and even antimicrobial (perhaps biofilm busting) activities with a bland flavor that lends itself well to tea blends.
Gentle Astringent Herbs!
These herbs often have modest antimicrobial activity as well, but they may irritate the GI lining and aggravate constipation if used in excessive amounts. They include rose petals, cinnamon, raspberry leaf, and plantain leaf.
Rose Petals (Rosa spp.)!
A sprinkle of rose petals brightens any tea blend and puts a smile on your face as you brew it, and it also offers gentle astringency.
Interestingly, roses have mild antimicrobial action against pathogens yet encourage beneficial gut flora.
Aromatic Herbs!
First and foremost, aromatic herbs lend flavor to your gut-healing tea blend, but they also have additional benefits. Most aromatic herbs are also carminative, which encourages digestive function and eases gas, bloating, and spasms.
Many have some level of antimicrobial activity ranging from mild (for the Agastache genus and mints) to more potent (for bee balm, oregano, cinnamon, cloves, and other spices).
Korean Licorice Mint (Agastache rugosa) & Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare)!
We have no idea why Korean licorice mint and its nearly identical and interchangeable cousin anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) aren’t more popular and widely available in commerce.
They’re so wonderfully delicious, beautiful, and easy to grow and harvest in abundance. Seek out seeds or seedlings from specialty herb growers, or find dried anise hyssop from herb farms.
The Agastache species gently stimulate digestive function, ease bloat and spasms, and support the immune system while providing sweet anise-fennel-honey-minty flavor.
Fennel seeds are more widely available and can also be used, acting more prominently on gas and spasms with similar flavor. If you don’t like licorice-y flavors, try mint, holy basil, cinnamon, ginger, or cardamom instead.
Now, let’s put together a delicious gut-healing tea with these herbs and actions using plants you could easily grow in your garden!
Gut-Healing Tummy Tea!
Perfect for ulcers, reflux, gastritis, heartburn, and leaky gut issues.
Ingredients:
2 parts dried marshmallow root, 1 part dried marshmallow leaf or flower, 1 part dried plantain leaf, 1 part dried fennel seed or Korean licorice mint leaf, sprinkle of dried rose petals, optional additions (per cup): pinch of licorice root, 1 to 2 cinnamon sticks, 1 to 2 cardamom pods, 1 star anise pod, 3 to 5 whole cloves.
Instructions:
Combine all of the herbs and store in an airtight container. To brew: In a 32-ounce container (such as a French press pot or tea-infuser travel mug), cover 2 or more heaping tablespoons with hot water.
Let steep for several hours or overnight. Feel free to move to the fridge once it cools. Strain and drink over 1 to 2 days.
You can steep it for a shorter period of time – 15 minutes or so – but the mucilaginous herbs and the spices will be more potent with a long steep. Enjoy.
#healthyfoodbeautyfitness #guthealingtea #howtohealyourgut
Most digestive herbs taste pleasant (excluding strong bitters) and extract well in hot water. The simple ritual of brewing and sipping a gut-healing tea invokes good, healing, self-care vibes, too.
Mucilaginous and Demulcent Herbs!
This soothes the GI tract when it’s dry, inflamed, irritated, or damaged, and helps create a temporary mucus-like lining.
Strongly mucilaginous (mucus-like) herbs include marshmallow root, slippery elm bark, and aloe inner gel. Demulcent yet only slightly mucilaginous herbs include licorice root, plantain leaf, and meadowsweet flower.
Marshmallow (Althaea officinalis)!
Hands down, marshmallow is our favorite mucilaginous herb. The root powder provides the most mucilaginous slime, but the snot-like consistency can be off-putting and may also trigger gas and bloating in some people with dysbiosis (including SIBO and FODMAP sensitivities).
Also enjoy or opt for marshmallow leaf and flower, which are even better tolerated by people with dysbiosis and easier to harvest in abundance from the garden.
Mucilage extracts best as a long infusion (several hours or overnight), but the leaves release the goods in less time.
Some herbalists prefer a cold infusion for a purer mucilage extraction, but hot infusions do just fine and will extract more from other herbs in your gut-healing tea blend.
Vulnerary Herbs!
The term “vulnerary” means wound-healing, promoting the speed and quality of tissue repair. Many of the herbs we classically consider topical wound healers, including Calendula, plantain, gotu kola, and licorice, are also excellent GI vulneraries in a gut-supportive tea blend.
Plantain Leaf (Plantago spp.)!
Almost any gut-healing tea blend we whip up contains at least 5 to 20 percent plantain leaf. Though plantain is best known as a fresh poultice for stings and bites, in the GI tract it provides vulnerary, gently astringent, demulcent, and even antimicrobial (perhaps biofilm busting) activities with a bland flavor that lends itself well to tea blends.
Gentle Astringent Herbs!
These herbs often have modest antimicrobial activity as well, but they may irritate the GI lining and aggravate constipation if used in excessive amounts. They include rose petals, cinnamon, raspberry leaf, and plantain leaf.
Rose Petals (Rosa spp.)!
A sprinkle of rose petals brightens any tea blend and puts a smile on your face as you brew it, and it also offers gentle astringency.
Interestingly, roses have mild antimicrobial action against pathogens yet encourage beneficial gut flora.
Aromatic Herbs!
First and foremost, aromatic herbs lend flavor to your gut-healing tea blend, but they also have additional benefits. Most aromatic herbs are also carminative, which encourages digestive function and eases gas, bloating, and spasms.
Many have some level of antimicrobial activity ranging from mild (for the Agastache genus and mints) to more potent (for bee balm, oregano, cinnamon, cloves, and other spices).
Korean Licorice Mint (Agastache rugosa) & Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare)!
We have no idea why Korean licorice mint and its nearly identical and interchangeable cousin anise hyssop (Agastache foeniculum) aren’t more popular and widely available in commerce.
They’re so wonderfully delicious, beautiful, and easy to grow and harvest in abundance. Seek out seeds or seedlings from specialty herb growers, or find dried anise hyssop from herb farms.
The Agastache species gently stimulate digestive function, ease bloat and spasms, and support the immune system while providing sweet anise-fennel-honey-minty flavor.
Fennel seeds are more widely available and can also be used, acting more prominently on gas and spasms with similar flavor. If you don’t like licorice-y flavors, try mint, holy basil, cinnamon, ginger, or cardamom instead.
Now, let’s put together a delicious gut-healing tea with these herbs and actions using plants you could easily grow in your garden!
Gut-Healing Tummy Tea!
Perfect for ulcers, reflux, gastritis, heartburn, and leaky gut issues.
Ingredients:
2 parts dried marshmallow root, 1 part dried marshmallow leaf or flower, 1 part dried plantain leaf, 1 part dried fennel seed or Korean licorice mint leaf, sprinkle of dried rose petals, optional additions (per cup): pinch of licorice root, 1 to 2 cinnamon sticks, 1 to 2 cardamom pods, 1 star anise pod, 3 to 5 whole cloves.
Instructions:
Combine all of the herbs and store in an airtight container. To brew: In a 32-ounce container (such as a French press pot or tea-infuser travel mug), cover 2 or more heaping tablespoons with hot water.
Let steep for several hours or overnight. Feel free to move to the fridge once it cools. Strain and drink over 1 to 2 days.
You can steep it for a shorter period of time – 15 minutes or so – but the mucilaginous herbs and the spices will be more potent with a long steep. Enjoy.
#healthyfoodbeautyfitness #guthealingtea #howtohealyourgut