*That's crazy, powered form Ashwagandha is the exact herb I am seeking to make a tincture from right now - which is what prompted me to watch this video. Wild.* Nichole you're cute
Wow! Thank you for sharing knowledge. I am surprised that there is a university graduating profesional in this particular field!!! I am from Panamá 🇵🇦 and wondering if you offer online practical courses? Anyway thanks again. You are awesome!!!
They are making the tinctures wrong, each herbs, flowers, barks, roots, leaves, stems, have a different percentage of alcohol. Some require 20%,30%, 40% 50%60% so on!
The Alcohol does not pull out all the constituents from the plant, some plant material can only be pulled out with water so they either mix pure ethanol with water or use Vinegar which has over 50% water
@@Healthyhappynewbeginnings Same... I just wing it, which I know is horrible to do but my Boneset tincture just completely took away some terrible body aches and chills that came on. I was soooo sick I thought for sure it was the big C. It was pretty amazing, I could feel the boneset gently easing my symptoms throughout the day, by evening I felt normal again. I was trying to find other reasons for such a quick recovery but it was for sure the boneset tincture.
Simply use rectified spirit 90% add 40% distilled water now it's 50% alcohol ready now Now 50% v/v alcohol to make 100ml tincher use atleast 60-80 ml alcohol in mixture. She used 30% mixture (300gm) with 70% (1000ml) alcohol but alcohol v/v is 45%
Very nicely explained mam, god bless we make in India as Aswagandharishta and aswagandhaasava ready to use with dilruin of water for disease in ayurveda
@@toniashump5345 specifically 1 (400 dry herb) :5 (2000ml is the amount of menstrum) The menstrum in this case is alcohol 45% and 55% H2O. Tinctures using both water and alcohol helps to extract polar and non-polar constituents. The amount of water depends on the plant material used (fresh, dried, root, leaves) etc.
In India, we are given ashwagandha powder or tablets to maintain good health... thank you for sharing such detailed video. Could you please guide me with ratio for Hamamelis Virginica? I use it for my daughter's chronic summer nose bleeds but can't find the mother tincture easily in USA.
1-2 weeks? The tutorials I've seen say 5-8 weeks. Is the longer time because they're using fresh green plant material instead of dried? I plan to use both at different times, so I'd really like to know the turnaround time.
It's a 1 to 5 ratio. 1 part plant material, 5 parts alcohol. 1ml of ethanol is .78 grams, or you could just use a scale and weigh the liquid. I have used linen pillow cases to strain, just keep twisting and you'll recover a pretty good portion of the retained alcohol.
I notice you only keep the mixture for a week before straining it. Nearly everywhere else says things like 4-6 weeks. Is a week enough? it would be great if a week was enough steeping for the process.
@@abcreations6734 Grain alcohol is very strong alcohol that has to be diluted to be safe for human consumption. Sometimes people don't dilute it enough to have a faster result, which will lack the water-soluble compounds of the plant, making the tincture almost pharmaceutical in strength. This can result in various bad reactions from those who take it. If you use grain alcohol, you have to dilute it to the point that it is reaching 38% vol.(100 proof vodka strength).- This way your menstruum may be "weaker" and it takes 6-8weeks to get a tincture, but you will end up a more rounded product that contains the majority of the medicinal compounds of the plant. Time is never wasted. People just impatient. Also, I normally use fresh plant material, not dried, for the same reason. Plants medicinal compounds work synergistically, and that is what you want to save, not to make a pharmaceutical drug that has lost this benefit.
@@itsmypukapuka4710 100 proof vodka would be 50% alcohol. You can be dismissive, or wrong, but not both. I'd advise anyone reading this person's advice to carefully consider taking it to heart, a very basic mistake like this makes the credibility of their entire statement very dubious.
Looks like their information is coming from medical studies rather than one of the great herbals books and /or herbalists of time Herbalists w books & sites with much knowledge Dr John Christopher Dr Matthew Woods Book The Complete Herbal by Nicholas Culpepper Don’t use paper filters small pieces of paper can get into the tincture
If I wanted to make a stronger tincture (if possible) can I strain the tincture and then take that same tincture and add herbs to it again to add more herbal benefits. If the answer is no, why not?
@Forest Farming, You didn’t explain the measurement well. You forgot to say what you measured on the alcohol. What is the ratio? I was so frustrated it’s like why go through all that but skip the important stuff?!?!
I'm looking for ways to revive *_the scent/fragrance_* of dried herbs, more specifically, of dried Catnip (nepeta cataria) that's lost much of its original aroma over time. After spending considerable time with online searches, I managed to find a grand total of 2(!) potential ways: Rehydration. Both had similar goals, ie, "to restore some of the *flavours* found in fresh herbs", so it didn't say anything on account of aroma (which is what I'm essentially looking for). Method 1: Put the dried herbs in a small bowl with enough water to cover them, leave for 10 minutes and strain. Method 2 (Leaves): Rehydrate in a solution of one part glycerin to two parts water, soak for 2 to 3 days, strain. Though this one didn't mention whether it was for consumption or, eg, decoration purposes. I've also read about making a tincture, using vodka (similar to making vanilla extract from pods), but again, intended for consumption purposes; besides, I don't think cats appreciate the alcohol smell, if I were to make something like a sprayable scent. So *please,* can anyone point me in the right direction? My kitty will be ever so grateful (especially after being introduced to the delights of *true* catnip aroma, but now has to do without for the time being). Problem is, good, potent catnip is extremely hard to come by here, in Holland. I bought a _"Yeowww"_ banana, *which was epic,* but alas, all 3 subsequent purchases were massive let-downs (utterly dried out, no smell whatsoever)😣, and since I don't have my own laboratory (or anyone else's) to distil my own catnip essence, I *_really_* need a good alternative to achieve my goal...
You can add the tincture dose to a shot glass and then add a little water ( a few ml or more if you need too ) to dilute. If your dose is 1 ml and you add 2 ml then a 45% by volume alcohol tincture goes down to 15%, not much higher than some wines and far less burning sensation. I've gotten used to 63% alcohol content, it doesn't take long to get used to it and enters the blood stream easier from what I'm aware off.
I'm trying to understand how can be just 1021 ml water in that formula. If the ratio is 1:5 at 45% ETOH the amount of water should be 1265 ml and 1035 g of alcohol (=1327 ml; 1 ml alcohol is 0,78g). Can somebody explain if I'm wrong? Thank you.
They said earlier in the video that they take the moisture content in the herb into account. There may be water content in the root we cannot account for by watching the video.
really is best to find a herbalist that is experienced do not try to do this without training. Even they are not leaving the ashwaganda long enough! professional herbal books indicate 3 weeks and watering down the alcohol like that really does affect potency. - Certified Herbalist
Yes, and using the fresh plants actually makes the tincture more potent over dried herbs. You'd have to get them in the alcohol/vegetable glycerin immediately though before wilting/browning. Since it's more potent, person would require less, a couple drops over a dropperful. But since you'd be making it fresh, make sure to clean them really good and triple check for tiny hidden bugs.
@@bigray2859 no that's actually the opposite of the truth. Most herbs are more potent when dry. Typically of you use fresh you use more in the recipe. Fresh herbs contain more water and you need a higher proof for fresh so you can have more alcohol in the solution. You want it to wilt so some of the water will be evaporated and you want to chop them using.
@@HerHealthyHome I do chop them up and use 100 proof alcohol, let them sit for months, shaking daily, they're plenty potent. I haven't experienced dried being more potent, but I appreciate what you've said because it makes sense too, and just because I personally haven't experienced it doesn't mean it isn't true.
Dried herbs are typically more potent because fresh herbs have a high water content and drying herbs weakens the cell structure of the plant. You can use fresh herbs but personally I prefer dried. I also never use this folk style of maceration to make a tincture. I prefer to use a soxhlet and/or percolation.
I’ve met Chinese who said they would soak ginseng root in vodka all the time without taking it out.When that is done they add more vodka and start the process. Again
I tried making a 1:4 ratio eleuthero root tincture using 200 g dried root (chopped) to 800 ml alcohol. Well,I am on my way to binnys now to buy more alcohol as my herbs are about half way only submerged.
You did not say how much alcohol. And I'm not an idiot although some may argue that lol How much water did you use? You said it in millimeters or something. I'm mathematically not inclined
Will someone please explain the 1:5 ratio? How does one determine how much liquid should be used for tincturing? She said 456 grams of ashwagandha root and 45% ethanol, so does that mean you do a calculation like this: 456×0.45 = 205.2 205.2 × 5 (the five times part of the ratio), which equals 1026 milliliters?? Someone, please help!
DuBrolyMusic Because you don’t have the right amount of ashwaganda, which is 460 grams actually, not 456, therefore all the ratio and what you calculated is wrong. It’s 460x0,45=207: 207x5=1035 so it’s 1035 millimeters of alcohol. You can redo the calculation if you want.
Hi @DuBrolyMusic and @@Veronique428 , I did my calculations and with 460 g of dried Ashwagandha, the total of Menstrum should be 2300 mL to obtain a ratio 1:5. They wrote in the label 45% of Ethanol, and we don't know if they used Ethanol 100% or 95%. If They used 1035 mL of Ethanol 100%, They should have used 1265 mL (43 oz) of destilled Water, but in the video they said they used 1021 mL (34,5 oz). In case They used a Ethanol 95% the volume used should it be 1090 mL of Ethanol, and 1210 mL of destilled water. My conclusion is that they made a mistake or problable the video is edited and we can't see all the speech of the quantity of ingredients.
Please note: they are selling their product so ratios are much more important for quality control and repeatability. For some herbs the ratio might be 1:4 or 1:2. Try using 100gm of herb to 500ml of vodka 80 proof although I usually do less like 50gm to 250ml. For very dry roots you may need to add extra liquid to cover the herb over time. If you are making tinctures for your own use you can use the folk method - put the herb in a clean glass jar no more than three quarters full. Cover the herb with an alcohol/water mix like the vodka 80 proof (40%) which will extract water soluble and alcohol soluble properties and allow to steep for 4-6 weeks or however long you like. Then strain and press the herb to extract the liquid, bottle, LABEL and store in a cool, dark place away from light and heat. The alcohol content also acts as a preservative. This isn't rocket science; it has been done by people since alcohol was invented and before that herbs were made as teas and poultices or just chewed. While I enjoy seeing the commercial process this is not necessarily how you must do it in your family home for your family's use.
Your florescent lighting is toxic and weakens your tinctures even with the brown bottles. No LEDs either.use 1920s style incandescent s or yellow bug lights ( incandescent s)
Excellent observation about the florescent lighting. Most labs are unaware that the lights they use impact their chemical concoctions. Simple changes in the types, frequencies and heat ranges of the lights bring significant results. Florescent lights are cheap, but bad in most respects. Labs should think twice about using Florescents.
This is my first time hearing of (I shall gonda; Ashley gonda (dont know how to spell it)) and they have said it so much in this video I would expect a compilation of every time they say it. The alternative is taking a shot every time they say "that" word. Seriously Google didn't understand what I was trying to say.
lol that is so so wrong. All those tinctures might as well go back to the ground. You have made. Did you not know that each herbs, flowers, barks, roots, leaves, stems, have a different percentage of alcohol. Some require 20%,30%, 40% 50%60% so on! What you're teaching to ppl is very wrong lol!
@@TudorFencing A person on the net on this page asked me for more information. So I sent the name of the book on how to make proper tinctures. And the person of this channel remove my reply on a book I sent. They removed my link..
I really enjoyed your video, there was one concern for your health and safety in regards to no safety glasses, gloves or masks worn. Your exposure everyday to these powders and chemicals are dangerous. Also these tinctures amongst other things are for clients right, yes they get filtered, but your breathing all over it and using a bottle jack for a car over the tincture too.... woh...
Great work on the presentation. As a practitioner it brings me back to my training.
Both of them so nice ,. nice presentation
*That's crazy, powered form Ashwagandha is the exact herb I am seeking to make a tincture from right now - which is what prompted me to watch this video. Wild.* Nichole you're cute
What are the uses of those alcohol extracts? Can I add them to soap or cosmetics
Wow! Thank you for sharing knowledge. I am surprised that there is a university graduating profesional in this particular field!!! I am from Panamá 🇵🇦 and wondering if you offer online practical courses? Anyway thanks again. You are awesome!!!
They are making the tinctures wrong, each herbs, flowers, barks, roots, leaves, stems, have a different percentage of alcohol. Some require 20%,30%, 40% 50%60% so on!
@@SahMai where can u find information on that? 😊
@@isabel8965 Modern herbal dispensatory by Thomas Easley, Steven Horne. Great book!
@@SahMai thank u 😊 looks very informative!
@@isabel8965 You welcome. You will love this book.
Wow I just appreciate how well you guys explained the whole process Thank You
I thought Tinctures were herbs sitting in alcohol only, not with water added because of shelf life and to prevent bacteria from growing.
Jourell NOVA they using undiluted alcohol so they has to dilute it. At home we use Vodka that's already diluted😁
The Alcohol does not pull out all the constituents from the plant, some plant material can only be pulled out with water so they either mix pure ethanol with water or use Vinegar which has over 50% water
@@Healthyhappynewbeginnings thank you for this explanation because I was just as confused but your explanation makes sense
@@Healthyhappynewbeginnings Same... I just wing it, which I know is horrible to do but my Boneset tincture just completely took away some terrible body aches and chills that came on. I was soooo sick I thought for sure it was the big C. It was pretty amazing, I could feel the boneset gently easing my symptoms throughout the day, by evening I felt normal again. I was trying to find other reasons for such a quick recovery but it was for sure the boneset tincture.
Simply use rectified spirit 90% add 40% distilled water now it's 50% alcohol ready now
Now 50% v/v alcohol to make 100ml tincher use atleast 60-80 ml alcohol in mixture.
She used 30% mixture (300gm) with 70% (1000ml) alcohol but alcohol v/v is 45%
I'm understanding that process
The video very useful thanks for that.
Very nicely explained mam, god bless we make in India as Aswagandharishta and aswagandhaasava ready to use with dilruin of water for disease in ayurveda
Where do you think they learn from?
Outstanding presentation.
Great info. You provided the amount of water (1021 ml) but did not provide the amount of alcohol, can you please provide that info. Thanks!
Everything I've researched shows: if it's a 1:5 ratio, 400 G of herb. 2000 ml of alcohol.
@@toniashump5345 specifically 1 (400 dry herb) :5 (2000ml is the amount of menstrum) The menstrum in this case is alcohol 45% and 55% H2O. Tinctures using both water and alcohol helps to extract polar and non-polar constituents. The amount of water depends on the plant material used (fresh, dried, root, leaves) etc.
How do you decide the amount of water to be used. Is it a ratio like the Alcohol?
What proof alcohol was used? I use 100 proof vodka which is 50% alcohol and 50% water. Is it necessary to add more water
Hi, what was ratio of water and alcohol, second ratio of solvent and herb was 1:5 means 100 gm herb and 500 water and alcohol?
I enjoyed this very much. Thank you.
In India, we are given ashwagandha powder or tablets to maintain good health... thank you for sharing such detailed video.
Could you please guide me with ratio for Hamamelis Virginica? I use it for my daughter's chronic summer nose bleeds but can't find the mother tincture easily in USA.
Check your daughters liver function
An irritated liver often causes nose bleeds
Cayenne pepper will stop a nose bleed very quickly
If it has no specific indication, it means its just a placebo.
Is the press hose made of silicone?
1-2 weeks? The tutorials I've seen say 5-8 weeks. Is the longer time because they're using fresh green plant material instead of dried? I plan to use both at different times, so I'd really like to know the turnaround time.
Excellent video
Could you please list the exact measurements in detail and how we can press and process the products at home?
Thanks
It's a 1 to 5 ratio. 1 part plant material, 5 parts alcohol. 1ml of ethanol is .78 grams, or you could just use a scale and weigh the liquid. I have used linen pillow cases to strain, just keep twisting and you'll recover a pretty good portion of the retained alcohol.
@@omanafire or cheesecloth
Not paper coffee filters
@@RK-su4hs or organic unbleached coffee filters or organic unbleached cheese cloths
…your video indicated water and alcohol….the amount of water was given but not the alcohol…can you please help me to understand
@@omanafireWhat is stage 5 for?
How much alcohol did you add with 1000ml of water?
How would you make a tincture with granules (pre-cooked herbs made into granules)?
Very Impressive, Thank You ❤️🙏
Do you supply for homoeopathy medicine also
how much alcohol??
Big fan from India thanks mam
Dr Hauskha doesn't use alcohol, glycerin, or any heating process as a solvent. Do you know their process? Many thanks
I notice you only keep the mixture for a week before straining it. Nearly everywhere else says things like 4-6 weeks. Is a week enough? it would be great if a week was enough steeping for the process.
they are using grain alcohol. It is not the best method.
@@itsmypukapuka4710 what’s the best method?
@@abcreations6734 Grain alcohol is very strong alcohol that has to be diluted to be safe for human consumption. Sometimes people don't dilute it enough to have a faster result, which will lack the water-soluble compounds of the plant, making the tincture almost pharmaceutical in strength. This can result in various bad reactions from those who take it. If you use grain alcohol, you have to dilute it to the point that it is reaching 38% vol.(100 proof vodka strength).- This way your menstruum may be "weaker" and it takes 6-8weeks to get a tincture, but you will end up a more rounded product that contains the majority of the medicinal compounds of the plant. Time is never wasted. People just impatient. Also, I normally use fresh plant material, not dried, for the same reason. Plants medicinal compounds work synergistically, and that is what you want to save, not to make a pharmaceutical drug that has lost this benefit.
@@itsmypukapuka4710 100 proof vodka would be 50% alcohol. You can be dismissive, or wrong, but not both. I'd advise anyone reading this person's advice to carefully consider taking it to heart, a very basic mistake like this makes the credibility of their entire statement very dubious.
Looks like their information is coming from medical studies rather than one of the great herbals books and /or herbalists of time
Herbalists w books & sites with much knowledge
Dr John Christopher
Dr Matthew Woods
Book
The Complete Herbal by Nicholas Culpepper
Don’t use paper filters small pieces of paper can get into the tincture
No need to purify ashwaganda with milk?
This has been so educative. Where can I find the tincture press? I have never thought about having one. Thank you for enlightening me.
What type of Alcohol and percentages are you using for this?
They probably used a grain alcohol like Everclear (about 175 proof).
Organic Corn, 190proof from pharmco-aaper.
what kind of alcohol?
The end of the bottle jack handle normally slides onto the hydraulic release valve so you can open or close it, no need for those pliers 👍
This was so helpful. Thank you
Happy to be of help!
what a fantastic video. Thank you
hello dear
Please show how Ceanothus Americana Q is prepared
Thanks pl bring more such videos
How to extract with glycerin? Can I use vodka instead of water and alcohol?
Generally yes but don’t use cheap vodka. Some plants will require a higher alcohol than vodka and in that case you can acquire everclear.
Any idea how esculentine tincture is prepared
So interesting :-) I'm wondering why are mother tinctures stored in only amber colored bottles, cant the green bottles be used for storing!
Save it from sunlight
I think it can be stored in a dark place because the idea is to keep it from the sun
Because it keeps out the most light
Does anyone know if the spent herbs can be composted once they’ve been soaked?
Yes they can
they are usually pressed then thrown to compost
Great video, thank you
What is stage 5 for?
Please tell Name Brand of alcohol with proof .
you have heart of logwood tincture by chance?
Why would you not measure in MG?
Thanks for the great clip. Where do you recommend buying a good press?
Would you say the one week rule works with oils as well?
No, you will have to leave them sit for at least one moon circle
What's the measurement of distilled water & alcohol?
If I wanted to make a stronger tincture (if possible) can I strain the tincture and then take that same tincture and add herbs to it again to add more herbal benefits. If the answer is no, why not?
Yes this is just a double extraction and fairly common
@Forest Farming, You didn’t explain the measurement well. You forgot to say what you measured on the alcohol. What is the ratio? I was so frustrated it’s like why go through all that but skip the important stuff?!?!
Can you show your online format?
Who makes the Press???
Do you have a website to sell these tinctures your making
may I know you have Hematoxylin tinture?
Can someone point me to video on nux vomica please
What is the alcohol percentage %
I'm looking for ways to revive *_the scent/fragrance_* of dried herbs, more specifically, of dried Catnip (nepeta cataria) that's lost much of its original aroma over time.
After spending considerable time with online searches, I managed to find a grand total of 2(!) potential ways: Rehydration.
Both had similar goals, ie, "to restore some of the *flavours* found in fresh herbs", so it didn't say anything on account of aroma (which is what I'm essentially looking for).
Method 1: Put the dried herbs in a small bowl with enough water to cover them, leave for 10 minutes and strain.
Method 2 (Leaves): Rehydrate in a solution of one part glycerin to two parts water, soak for 2 to 3 days, strain. Though this one didn't mention whether it was for consumption or, eg, decoration purposes.
I've also read about making a tincture, using vodka (similar to making vanilla extract from pods), but again, intended for consumption purposes; besides, I don't think cats appreciate the alcohol smell, if I were to make something like a sprayable scent.
So *please,* can anyone point me in the right direction? My kitty will be ever so grateful (especially after being introduced to the delights of *true* catnip aroma, but now has to do without for the time being).
Problem is, good, potent catnip is extremely hard to come by here, in Holland. I bought a _"Yeowww"_ banana, *which was epic,* but alas, all 3 subsequent purchases were massive let-downs (utterly dried out, no smell whatsoever)😣, and since I don't have my own laboratory (or anyone else's) to distil my own catnip essence, I *_really_* need a good alternative to achieve my goal...
Meowww
@@timothytremblay7763
Purrr....
Do you also teach the percolation method?
How do you keep the tincture from burning under the tongue?
You can add the tincture dose to a shot glass and then add a little water ( a few ml or more if you need too ) to dilute. If your dose is 1 ml and you add 2 ml then a 45% by volume alcohol tincture goes down to 15%, not much higher than some wines and far less burning sensation. I've gotten used to 63% alcohol content, it doesn't take long to get used to it and enters the blood stream easier from what I'm aware off.
@@pa_maj.MARTINI-van-MAN thank you!
@@abcreations6734 You're welcome!
Do you make and sell specific tincture?
Hi, it's interesting you mention a week is enough. Any souce? :-)
I'm trying to understand how can be just 1021 ml water in that formula. If the ratio is 1:5 at 45% ETOH the amount of water should be 1265 ml and 1035 g of alcohol (=1327 ml; 1 ml alcohol is 0,78g). Can somebody explain if I'm wrong? Thank you.
Weight of herbs to final liquid extract
weight of the herbs to the extraction solvent volume (in mL), not the final liquid
They said earlier in the video that they take the moisture content in the herb into account. There may be water content in the root we cannot account for by watching the video.
really is best to find a herbalist that is experienced do not try to do this without training. Even they are not leaving the ashwaganda long enough! professional herbal books indicate 3 weeks and watering down the alcohol like that really does affect potency. - Certified Herbalist
Can you use lemon juice and water or honey and water to make herbal tinctures?🤔
preferably alcohol with 80%-100% proof, as it's efficient in extracting the terpenes and flavonoids of the herbs, roots or any natural element.
Can I make a tincture from fresh, raw plants?
Thanks for the answer
Yes, and using the fresh plants actually makes the tincture more potent over dried herbs. You'd have to get them in the alcohol/vegetable glycerin immediately though before wilting/browning. Since it's more potent, person would require less, a couple drops over a dropperful. But since you'd be making it fresh, make sure to clean them really good and triple check for tiny hidden bugs.
@@bigray2859 no that's actually the opposite of the truth. Most herbs are more potent when dry. Typically of you use fresh you use more in the recipe. Fresh herbs contain more water and you need a higher proof for fresh so you can have more alcohol in the solution. You want it to wilt so some of the water will be evaporated and you want to chop them using.
@@HerHealthyHome I do chop them up and use 100 proof alcohol, let them sit for months, shaking daily, they're plenty potent. I haven't experienced dried being more potent, but I appreciate what you've said because it makes sense too, and just because I personally haven't experienced it doesn't mean it isn't true.
Dried herbs are typically more potent because fresh herbs have a high water content and drying herbs weakens the cell structure of the plant. You can use fresh herbs but personally I prefer dried. I also never use this folk style of maceration to make a tincture. I prefer to use a soxhlet and/or percolation.
Nice informative videos
No smart meters near tinctures
?
No ac wiring behind the tinctures
You can also use honey as an extract also
its quite funny we used to do this India at a large scale pre 21st century now its all tablets. LMAO
no angry tincture makers-VERY IMPORTANT
😀😀 ohh my goodness!!
I’ve met Chinese who said they would soak ginseng root in vodka all the time without taking it out.When that is done they add more vodka and start the process. Again
Whats the ratio between withania somnifera and alcohol
you used a blender? the heat destroys properties of herbs????? how are you guys trained
No it depends on how hot it is. Heat doesn't destroy the properties...EXTREME HEAT does
Awesome
How can I make tincture from safron please.
1 part saffron to 5 parts alcohol. So if you have 1 gram of saffron, you'd use 5 grams alcohol.
I tried making a 1:4 ratio eleuthero root tincture using 200 g dried root (chopped) to 800 ml alcohol. Well,I am on my way to binnys now to buy more alcohol as my herbs are about half way only submerged.
Nice and very well
Awesome!
You did not say how much alcohol. And I'm not an idiot although some may argue that lol How much water did you use? You said it in millimeters or something. I'm mathematically not inclined
Good technology homeo tencher aswagandha ...D watwr & alcohol ...45% + 55 -- ...tencher formula ,
thanks ,
laxmi homeo pharmacy..
dr.kishan lal sharma.
iindian....
What is 5-1 ratio?
One part herb, to 5 parts solvent. In this video, the solvent is 45% ethyl alcohol in water.
I've never made a tinture with water only vodka.
Vodka is already watered down.
Your grate madam
Very good lecture,, but my dear you are talking so fast. Viewer from other countries have no the English mother language. Please talk slow slow.
Will someone please explain the 1:5 ratio? How does one determine how much liquid should be used for tincturing? She said 456 grams of ashwagandha root and 45% ethanol, so does that mean you do a calculation like this: 456×0.45 = 205.2
205.2 × 5 (the five times part of the ratio), which equals 1026 milliliters?? Someone, please help!
DuBrolyMusic Because you don’t have the right amount of ashwaganda, which is 460 grams actually, not 456, therefore all the ratio and what you calculated is wrong.
It’s 460x0,45=207: 207x5=1035 so it’s 1035 millimeters of alcohol. You can redo the calculation if you want.
Brother please tell me how much water gr and alcohol gr ? Alcohol present?
Hi @DuBrolyMusic and @@Veronique428 , I did my calculations and with 460 g of dried Ashwagandha, the total of Menstrum should be 2300 mL to obtain a ratio 1:5. They wrote in the label 45% of Ethanol, and we don't know if they used Ethanol 100% or 95%. If They used 1035 mL of Ethanol 100%, They should have used 1265 mL (43 oz) of destilled Water, but in the video they said they used 1021 mL (34,5 oz). In case They used a Ethanol 95% the volume used should it be 1090 mL of Ethanol, and 1210 mL of destilled water. My conclusion is that they made a mistake or problable the video is edited and we can't see all the speech of the quantity of ingredients.
Ruby Bernal Thank you for your input 😊 Maybe they keep secret their recipes 🤷🏾♀️
Please note: they are selling their product so ratios are much more important for quality control and repeatability. For some herbs the ratio might be 1:4 or 1:2. Try using 100gm of herb to 500ml of vodka 80 proof although I usually do less like 50gm to 250ml. For very dry roots you may need to add extra liquid to cover the herb over time. If you are making tinctures for your own use you can use the folk method - put the herb in a clean glass jar no more than three quarters full. Cover the herb with an alcohol/water mix like the vodka 80 proof (40%) which will extract water soluble and alcohol soluble properties and allow to steep for 4-6 weeks or however long you like. Then strain and press the herb to extract the liquid, bottle, LABEL and store in a cool, dark place away from light and heat. The alcohol content also acts as a preservative. This isn't rocket science; it has been done by people since alcohol was invented and before that herbs were made as teas and poultices or just chewed. While I enjoy seeing the commercial process this is not necessarily how you must do it in your family home for your family's use.
Please turn off the background droning music.........
Your florescent lighting is toxic and weakens your tinctures even with the brown bottles. No LEDs either.use 1920s style incandescent s or yellow bug lights ( incandescent s)
These people are professional!
Excellent observation about the florescent lighting. Most labs are unaware that the lights they use impact their chemical concoctions. Simple changes in the types, frequencies and heat ranges of the lights bring significant results. Florescent lights are cheap, but bad in most respects. Labs should think twice about using Florescents.
No wifi
One week is really not enough and that hose with tape? no thanks
This is my first time hearing of (I shall gonda; Ashley gonda (dont know how to spell it)) and they have said it so much in this video I would expect a compilation of every time they say it. The alternative is taking a shot every time they say "that" word. Seriously Google didn't understand what I was trying to say.
Ashwagandha
It shows the label at 5:07.
Closed caption will spell it out also.
I hate ashwogandha.i used so much time not got any power even than simple egg.
Everyone on this video high
Real sterile environment ... not even wearing GLOVES! 👎🏼
lol that is so so wrong. All those tinctures might as well go back to the ground. You have made. Did you not know that each herbs, flowers, barks, roots, leaves, stems, have a different percentage of alcohol. Some require 20%,30%, 40% 50%60% so on! What you're teaching to ppl is very wrong lol!
The whole process they’re showing is aweful. I can’t believe they’re teaching people this methodology.
@@TudorFencing yep so true.
@@TudorFencing A person on the net on this page asked me for more information. So I sent the name of the book on how to make proper tinctures. And the person of this channel remove my reply on a book I sent. They removed my link..
@@SahMai wow, that’s really wrong.
This process does not appear very hygienic.
I really enjoyed your video, there was one concern for your health and safety in regards to no safety glasses, gloves or masks worn. Your exposure everyday to these powders and chemicals are dangerous. Also these tinctures amongst other things are for clients right, yes they get filtered, but your breathing all over it and using a bottle jack for a car over the tincture too.... woh...