Tinturas
http://mountainroseblog.com/guide-tinctures-extracts/
Tinctures are concentrated herbal extracts that have alcohol as the solvent. If you are using water, vinegar, glycerine, or any menstruum (solvent) other than alcohol, your preparation is an extract – not a tincture. Although, there are exceptions to every rule and sometimes an acetum is defined as "a vinegar tincture" in the tomes.
Herbal Tinctures…
- Tinctures are concentrated herbal extracts.
- Alcohol is the solvent. You can use any spirit you like, but I prefer something neutral like vodka so I can taste the herb.
- They can be taken straight by the dropper or diluted in tea.
- They can be made with fresh or dried flowers, leaves, roots, barks, or berries.
How much plant material to use?
Fresh Herbal Material: Leaves & Flowers
- Finely chop or grind clean herb to release juice and expose surface area.
- Only fill the jar 2/3 to 3/4 with herb.
- Pour alcohol to the very top of the jar. Cover plants completely!
- Jar should appear full of herb, but herb should move freely when shaken.
Dried Herbal Material: Leaves & Flowers
- Use finely cut herbal material.
- Only fill the jar 1/2 to 3/4 with herb.
- Pour alcohol to the very top of the jar. Cover plants completely!
Fresh Herbal Material: Roots, Barks, Berries
- Finely chop or grind clean plants to release juice and expose surface area.
- Only fill the jar 1/3 to 1/2 with fresh roots, barks, or berries.
- Pour alcohol to the very top of the jar. Cover plants completely!
- Jar should appear full of herb, but herb should move freely when shaken.
Dried Herbal Material: Roots, Barks, Berries
- Use finely cut herbal material.
- Only fill the jar 1/4 to 1/3 with dried roots, barks, or berries.
- Pour alcohol to the very top of the jar. Cover plants completely!
- Roots and berries will expand by ½ their size when reconstituted!
Alcohol Percentages
40% – 50% (80-90 proof vodka)
- "Standard" percentage range for tinctures.
- Good for most dried herbs and fresh herbs that are not super juicy.
- Good for extraction of water soluble properties.
67.5% – 70% (½ 80 proof vodka + ½ 190 proof grain alcohol)
- Extracts the most volatile aromatic properties.
- Good for fresh high-moisture herbs like lemon balm, berries, and aromatic roots.
- The higher alcohol percentage will draw out more of the plant juices.
85% – 95% (190 proof grain alcohol)
- Good for dissolving gums and resins – but not necessary for most plant material.
- Extracts the aromatics and essential oils bound in a plant that do not dissipate easily.
- The alcohol strength can produce a tincture that is not easy to take. Stronger is not always better!
- Often used for drop dosage medicines.
- Will totally dehydrate herbs.