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Apple Cider Vinegar Cure Research Blog
by RisingSun

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  • Herbal Vinegars   RN   by  RisingSun     19 y     7,786       7 Messages Shown       Blog: Apple Cider Vinegar Cure Research Blog
    BE YOUR OWN HERBAL EXPERT - PART 5
    ©2004, Susun S Weed


    Herbal medicine is the medicine of the people. It is simple, safe, effective, and free. Our ancestors used - and our neighbors around the world still use - plant medicines for healing and health maintenance. It's easy. You can do it too, and you don't need a degree or any special training. Ancient memories arise in you when you begin to use herbal medicine - memories which keep you safe and fill you with delight. These lessons are designed to nourish and activate your inner herbalist so you can be your own herbal expert.

    In our first session, we learned how to "listen" to the messages of plant's tastes. In session two, we learned about simples and how to make effective water-based herbal remedies. The third session helped us distinguish safe nourishing and tonifying herbs from the more dangerous stimulating and sedating herbs. Our fourth session focused on poisons in herbs and herbal tinctures, which we made and then collected into an Herbal Medicine Chest.

    In this, our fifth session, we will find out how to help ourselves and our families with herbal vinegars, one of the green blessings of the Wise Woman Way.


    WHY USE HERBAL VINEGARS?

    Herbal vinegars are an unstoppable combination: they marry the healing and nutritional properties of apple cider vinegar with the mineral and antioxidant richness of health-protective green herbs and wild roots. Herbal vinegars are tasty medicine, enriching and enlivening our food while building health from the inside out.

    Herbal vinegars are far better for the bones and the heart than soy beverages. They have a reputation for banishing grey hair and wrinkles. Sprayed in the armpits, herbal vinegars are highly effective deodorants. As a hair rinse (try rosemary or lavender vinegar) they add luster and eliminate split ends.

    Anything vinegar can do, including clean the kitchen, herbal vinegars can do better.

    VINEGARS SEEK MINERALS

    Minerals are important for the health and proper functioning of our bones, our heart and blood vessels, our nerves, our brain (especially memory), our immune system, and our hormonal glands. No wonder lack of minerals can lead to chronic problems and getting more can make a big difference in health in a few weeks. One of the best ways to get more minerals - besides drinking nourishing herbal infusions and eating well-cooked leafy greens - is to use herbal vinegars.

    VINEGAR & YOUR BONES

    It is not true that ingesting vinegar will erode your bones. Adding vinegar to your food actually helps build bones because it frees up minerals from the vegetables you eat and increases the ability of the stomach to digest minerals. Adding a splash of vinegar to cooked greens is a classic trick of old ladies who want to be spry and flexible when they're ancient old ladies. (Maybe your granny already taught you this?) In fact, a spoonful of vinegar on your broccoli or kale or dandelion greens increases the calcium you get by one-third. All by itself, apple cider vinegar is said to help build bones; when enriched with minerals from herbs, I think of it as better than calcium pills.

    VINEGAR & CANDIDA

    Some people worry that eating vinegar will upset the balance of gut flora and contribute to an overgrowth of candida yeast in the intestines. Some people have been told to avoid vinegar altogether. My experience has led me to believe that herbal vinegars help heal those with candida overgrowth, perhaps because they're so mineral rich. I've worked with women who have suffered for years and kept to a strict "anti-candida" diet with little improvement, and seen them get better fast when they add nourishing herbal vinegars (and fermented foods such as sauerkraut, miso, and yogurt) to their diets.

    MAKING HERBAL VINEGARS

    Fill any size jar with fresh-cut aromatic herbs: leaves, stalks, flowers, fruits, roots, and even nuts can be used. For best results and highest mineral content, be sure the jar is well filled and chop the herb finely.

    Pour room-temperature vinegar into the jar until it is full. Cover jar: A plastic screw-on lid, several layers of plastic or wax paper held on with a rubber band, or a cork are the best covers. Avoid metal lids - or protect them well with plastic - as vinegar will corrode them.

    Label the jar with the name of the herb and the date. Put it some place away from direct sunlight, though it doesn't have to be in the dark, and someplace that isn't too hot, but not too cold either. A kitchen cupboard is fine, but choose one that you open a lot so you remember to use your vinegar, which will be ready in six weeks.

    You can decant your vinegar into a beautiful serving container, or use it right from the jar you made it in.

    Which Vinegar?

    I use regular pasteurized apple cider vinegar from the supermarket as the menstrum for my herbal vinegars. I avoid white vinegar. Malt vinegar, rice vinegar, and wine vinegar can be used but they are more expensive and may overpower the flavor of the herbs.

    Apple cider vinegar has been used as a health-giving agent for centuries. Hippocrates, father of medicine, is said to have used only two remedies: honey and apple cider vinegar. Some of the many benefits of apple cider vinegar include: better digestion, reduction of cholesterol, improvements in blood pressure, prevention/care of osteoporosis, normalization of thyroid/metabolic functioning, possible reduction of cancer risk, and lessening of wrinkles and grey hair.


    Notes for Herbal Vinegar Makers

     Collect jars of different sizes for your vinegars. I especially like baby food jars, mustard jars, olive jars, peanut butter jars and individual juice jars. Look for plastic lids.
     The wider the mouth of the jar, the easier it will be to remove the plant material when you're done.
     Always fill jar to the top with plant material and vinegar; never fill a jar only part way.
     Really fill the jar. This will take far more herb or root than you would think. How much? With leaves and stems, make a comfortable mattress for a fairy: not too tight; not too loose. With roots, fill your jar to within a thumb's width of the top.
     After decanting your vinegar into a beautiful jar, add a spring of whole herb. Pretty.

    MY FAVORITE HERBAL VINEGAR

    Pick the needles of white pine on a sunny day. Make herbal vinegar with them. Inhale deeply the scent of the forest. I call this my "homemade balsamic vinegar."

    USING YOUR VINEGARS

    Herbal vinegars taste so good, you'll want to use them frequently. Regular use boosts the nutrient level of your diet with very little effort and virtually no expense.

     Pour a spoonful or more on beans and grains as a condiment.
     Use them in salad dressings.
     Add them to cooked greens.
     Season stir-fries with them.
     Look for soups that are vinegar friendly, like borscht.
     Substitute herbal vinegar for plain vinegar in any recipe.
     Put a big spoonful in a glass of water and drink it. Try it sweetened with blackstrap molasses for a real mineral jolt. Many older women swear this "coffee substitute" prevents and eases their arthritic pains.


    COMING UP

    In our next sessions we will learn more about herbal medicine making, with a focus on oils, explore the difference between fixing disease and promoting health, learn how to apply the three traditions of healing, and how to take charge of our own health care with the six steps of healing.

    EXPERIMENT NUMBER ONE

    Test vinegar's ability to absorb minerals. Put a fresh bone in a jar and completely cover it with vinegar. What happens? Does the bone become pliable and rubbery? How long does it take? Will eating vinegar dissolve your bones? Only if you take off your skin and sit in it for weeks!

    EXPERIMENT NUMBER TWO

    Make eggshell vinegar. Fill a jar one-quarter full of vinegar. Drop crushed eggshell into it. What happens? Does the vinegar foam? How long does it take? Eggshells are exceptionally rich in bone-building minerals. Can you taste the calcium in this vinegar? Add some eggshell to your other vinegars if you wish to increase their ability to keep your bones strong.

    EXPERIMENT NUMBER THREE

    Make four or more vinegars with the same plant, using different types of vinegar, including both pasteurized and unpasteurized apple cider vinegar. (For the others, use rice vinegar, malt vinegar, wine vinegar, or even white vinegar, but not umeboshi vinegar.)

    Taste your vinegars daily for a week, then weekly for five more weeks. You may, if you wish, decant some of your vinegars for use after six weeks. But you may also wish to keep observing them as they age (for years, if you wish). I have some vinegars which are more than thirty years old and still in good shape. Note which stay edible the longest, and what happens to those that become inedible.

    EXPERIMENT NUMBER FOUR

    Buy a quart or more of unpasteurized apple cider vinegar. Use two cups to make several small herbal vinegars: one with roots, one with leaves, and one with flowers. Boil the other two cups. Make one herbal vinegar with the boiling hot vinegar. Make another with the boiled vinegar after it has cooled. Continue as in experiment number three.

    FURTHER STUDY

    1. Redo experiment number two using different kinds of eggshells - white ones and brown ones, store-bought and farm-bought, from caged birds and free-range birds. Can you see any differences? Taste or smell any differences?
    2. Make vinegars at different times of the year and compare them.

    ADVANCED WORK

     Unpasteurized vinegar can form a "mother." In a jar filled with herb and vinegar, the vinegar mother usually grows across the top of the herb, and looking rather like a damp, thin pancake. Kombucha is a vinegar mother. Does your local health food store sell mothers? Kombucha? What is a vinegar mother? Is it harmful?
     What is an ionic form of a mineral?
     What is a mineral salt?
     How do our bodies take up and utilize minerals?


    Plants That Make Exceptionally Good-Tasting Herbal Vinegars

    Apple mint (Mentha sp.) leaves, stalks
    Bee balm (Monarda didyma) flowers, leaves, stalks
    Bergamot (Monarda sp.) flowers, leaves, stalks
    Burdock (Arctium lappa) roots
    Catnip (Nepeta cataria) leaves, stalks
    Chicory (Cichorium intybus) leaves, roots
    Chives and especially chive blossoms
    Dandelion (Taraxacum off.) flower buds, leaves, roots
    Dill (Anethum graveolens) herb, seeds
    Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare) herb, seeds
    Garlic (Allium sativum) bulbs, greens, flowers
    Garlic mustard (Alliaria officinalis) leaves and roots
    Goldenrod (Solidago sp.) flowers
    Ginger (Zingiber off.) and Wild ginger (Asarum canadensis) roots
    Lavender (Lavendula sp.) flowers, leaves
    Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) new growth leaves and roots
    Orange mint (Mentha sp.) leaves, stalks
    Orange peel, organic only
    Peppermint (Mentha piperata and etc.) leaves, stalks
    Perilla (Shiso) (Agastache) leaves, stalks
    Rosemary (Rosmarinus off.) leaves, stalks
    Spearmint (Mentha spicata) leaves, stalks
    Thyme (Thymus sp.) leaves, stalks
    White pine (Pinus strobus) needles
    Yarrow (Achilllea millifolium) flowers and leaves

    Weedy Herbal Calcium Supplement

    Use one or more of the following plants to make an herbal vinegar that can reverse and counter osteoporosis. Dose is 2-4 tablespoons daily.

    Amaranth (Amaranthus retroflexus) leaves
    Cabbage leaves
    Chickweed (Stellaria media) whole herb
    Comfrey (Symphytum officinalis) leaves
    Cronewort/Mugwort (Artemisia vulgaris) young leaves
    Dandelion (Taraxacum off.) leaves and root
    Kale leaves
    Lambsquarter (Chenopodium album) leaves
    Mallow (Malva neglecta) leaves
    Mint leaves of all sorts, especially sage, motherwort, lemon balm, lavender, peppermint
    Nettle (Urtica dioica) leaves
    Parsley (Petroselinum sativum) leaves
    Plantain (Plantago majus) leaves
    Raspberry (Rubus species) leaves
    Red clover (Trifolium pratense) blossoms
    Violet (Viola odorata) leaves
    Yellow dock (Rumex crispus and other species) roots

    Herbal Vinegars Where You Eat the Pickled Plants Too

    Burdock
    Chicory
    Dandelion
    Purslane
    Yellow Dock
    Rosehips
    Raspberries/blackberries



    Study with Susun Weed in the convenience of your home! Choose from three Correspondence Courses: Green Allies, Spirit & Practice of the Wise Woman Tradition, and Green Witch - includes audio/video tapes, books, assignments, special mailings, plus personal time. Learn more at http://www.susunweed.com or write to:

    Susun Weed
    PO Box 64
    Woodstock, NY 12498
    Fax: 1-845-246-8081


    Visit Susun Weed at: http://www.susunweed.com and http://www.ash-tree-publishing.com
    For permission to reprint this article, contact us at: susunweed@hvc.rr.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 http://www.susunweed.com
    http://botanical.com/site/column_susun/susun_herbalexp_5.html


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