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#herbal blend
stonerindia · 1 year
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Curated the list of best organic smoking mixtures, order now from anywhere in the world 
click on the link to order.
https://www.amazon.com/shop/stonerindia/list/10BK3J8JC0S3R?ingressOrigin=shop&ref_=aip_sf_list_spv_ons_mixed_d
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teainspoons · 1 year
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August Uncommon Tea’s Far Afield | Tea Review
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onyxeve · 2 years
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A black woman owned crystal boutique and herb shop. Check us out during our Anniversary Sale 💜
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Just bought a bunch of seasonings and threw out old expired ones.
New:
Green Chile Seasoning
New England Seasoning
Sicilian Seasoning
Silk Road Seasoning
Viking Blend
Louisiana Voodoo
Zhug
Spice of the Ancients
French Seasoning
Brazilian Seasoning
Plus a free packet of birch smoked sea salt
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kajalsing · 4 months
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Experience the transformative power of Shudh Triphala Ras, a natural elixir crafted for effortless weight management. Harnessing the potent blend of three fruits, it cleanses, rejuvenates, and supports your body, guiding you towards a healthier and balanced lifestyle.
🌐https://swadeshiayurved.com
📞9555050888
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amberwellnessgroup · 2 years
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Uplift and Renew Herbal Blend
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We love herbs! Using an herbal tincture is a great way to support your body and has the convenience of sitting on your bedside table, being tossed in your bag, and you don’t have to have a glass of water to swallow most of them. Tinctures are also a wonderful way to feel quick action from your herbs because some absorption happens right under your tongue and gets right into your bloodstream.
Our gift to you this month is a 20% discount on Dr. Lisa’s Uplift and Renew tincture from last month’s Refresh and Renew Daycation event. This is a great balanced supportive blend that helps mental clarity, balance, and focus throughout the day. Many of our patients already love our sleep support blends for winding down at night. This is a great addition to create wakefulness and keep you on point for your day!
To visit more wellness blogs please, click here.
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jahntang · 2 years
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Phyto-Vira
Our Phyto-Vira is starting to get popular overseas as well! This army of 30 immune-boosting herbal blends will be making its way down to Hong-Kong. Many Singaporeans have already used this blend successfully to treat all kinds of colds and flu, as well as a daily preventative from falling sick. To find out more: https://www.leaftolife.com.sg/en/phyto-vira
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deadmomjokes · 2 years
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I used to hate herbal tea. I drank it for medicinal purposes, but it was a chore. But then I learned The Secret, the one that makes herbal tea not only palatable, but enjoyable. Tasty. Delightful, even. I will tell it to you now:
Herbal tea is not tea.
Duh, you say, but let me explain further.
Herbal tea is not tea, and it will suck if you treat it like tea.
Actual tea, as in the tea plant Camellia sinensis, has very specific steep times and temperatures. This varies by variety (green vs black vs white), but it all comes down to a common factor:
Tea is high in tannins.
Tannins make stuff bitter. Tannins are released from the tea if you heat it too high or too long (again, specifics depend on variety but the point stands). If you steep it too long, BOOM, tannins. You put it in water that is still boiling or hasn’t cooled down enough from boiling? TANNINS. You get nasty, bitter, burnt-grass-tasting tea.
Herbal tea almost universally doesn’t have tannins. This means you almost universally can’t over-steep herbal tea. And in fact, and listen up because this is the practical part of the secret, you need to steep it way longer than actual tea if you want to get the flavors into the water!
Those recommended steep times on your herbal tea box are based off actual tea (black tea to be specific). It’s usually somewhere around 5-7 minutes, but what you actually need is something like 10-15 minutes.
And most conventional tea-making wisdom will tell you to not put the water in too soon after boiling, but again, that’s for tannin-rich Camellia sinensis. You could literally boil* your herbal tea if you wanted. It might make it slightly less sweet depending on variety, and you will probably bust your tea bag doing so, but my point is that you should put as hot of water as you can get into your steeping vessel. As in kettle starts whistling, pour it in immediately over the tea bag. Then let it sit for 10-15 minutes as discussed above.
The only exceptions that I know of personally are meadowsweet, red raspberry leaf, and yarrow, and only one of those is a very common herbal tea ingredient. And honestly, it’s not even high enough in tannins to affect your whole cup if it’s just part of a blend.
So please stop drinking weak plant-adjacent water and start getting the actual flavors you paid for.
*I have actually just dumped herbs in a pot and boiled them and it made a delicious tea. I used lavender, chamomile, lemon balm, and mint, all of which I’d grown myself, and literally just tossed the fresh-picked sprigs into a pot and boiled the crap out of it for close to 10 minutes because I forgot about it while I was rearranging the freezer. It was delicious and not bitter at all despite being a color I can only describe as “positively murky,” and I could taste every single one of the herbs I put in there. It also made my whole apartment smell like a sunny meadow. Do with this information what you will. Am I recommending you boil the devil out of your herbal tea bags? Not necessarily. But I’m also not not recommending it.
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A beginner guide to tea blending 🌿
⚠️This is meant to be a simple guide based on my own research and experience, by all means, educate yourself further and double check everything before proceeding!⚠️
First, define your intention or goal for this blend: what medicinal properties do you want to extract from these plants? You should know the medicinal value and effects of each plant separately before trying them out together and finding out how they interact with each other. Similarly, taste all the herbs separately before putting them together to get a better tasting blend. You’ll have to find a good balance between:
the right dosage of each herb to get their medicinal value,
the taste of said herbs to your liking,
the right dosage to avoid any possible side effects.
The herbs that cause the main desired effect should take up to 70% of the blend. 
One type of effect can be based on which system you want to work in (if the herbs all have similar positive effects on immune, circulatory, digestive, or other systems, like for example calming nerves or easing digestion). The other would be a nourishing effect (if the effects on each system cancel each other and thus you’re only taking in the nutrients, like minerals and vitamins, of the herb). The first kind would all have herbs that work together towards a common goal, the second would have effects that counteract each other so you only absorb their nutrients.
Then you’ll have supporting herbs, up to your 20%, that either boost the good medicine, and/or relief possible side effects of the main herbs.
Depending on the effects each plant has on your body, you’ll want them to boost each other or counteract each other. Also take into account if it’s an overall cooling or warming effect, boosting or slowing down metabolism, if it dries or moistens the tissues with minerals and fluids, and whether it’s relaxing or constricting/toning in tissues aswell. 
Last should be possible catalysts. These are optional, but recommended. That would be up to 10% of stimulant herbs that boost metabolism or enhance the overall effects of  the others, to really get all the good stuff into your body.
Some good examples of catalysts are ginger root, cayenne or licorice root, but be careful with licorice as it can be toxic in high amounts!
To give you an example of how I’d put everything into practice: if my goal is to make a tea blend that’s toning, rich in minerals and vitamins and strengthens the immune system, I’d use 5 parts stinging nettle, 2 parts lemon balm (for the main effects), 2 parts thyme (supporting), and 1 part ginger root (catalyst), then sweeten to taste. Parts can be grams, teaspoons, or smaller measures, depending on how much blend you want to prepare. If you’re going to try this blend, do this exercise: research each plant, it’s medicinal value and side effects, and you’ll find out why I put them together! 
Also, I personally love the taste of stinging nettle, yet someone else may prefer to use 5 parts of lemon balm and 2 parts of stinging nettle instead and get a slightly different result, more soothing to the nervous system, try it for yourself and always check for the effects and right dosages. I normally measure each part as grams, and this formula gives me around 2-3 liters of infusion, depending on how strong you make it. That is, using dry herbs, if you’re using fresh plant material you’ll need more grams. Normally 1 teaspoon of dry herb equals 1 tablespoon of fresh herb, or 1 part dried equals 3 parts fresh, but there may be slight differences between each plant depending on how much water it contains.
Finally, write everything down! The formula, how it worked for you and what it tastes like.
Thanks for reading ♡
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revenantghost · 6 days
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Sorry for the bad news you received! I hope you can salvage your birthday! May you have a good cup of tea and a treat to go with it. Have a picture of my budgie mid-preen. The fluffenchops are real with budgies haha. Also, what’s your favorite kind of tea?
A baby!!!!!!!!!!! Thank you so, so, so much for sharing <3 <3 <3 What a lovely fluffy feather ball
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I did manage to have a cup of tea, even if it was microwaved XD (NO MURDERING ME, PLS) Oh man, I gotta choose one?! Honestly I frink whatever I can get my hands on--but I'm always particularly drawn to oolong, and anything with lavender :3
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mikrotyalm13 · 3 months
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onyxeve · 2 years
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It means a lot to me to share a message that I truly believe in — there is healing power to be found in the natural elements of this world and we ALL can tap in! 
Thank you for supporting me as I grow. And please enjoy 33% off this week to celebrate our 1 Year Anniversary! 
www.onyxeve.com
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ashantisgarden · 2 months
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Cleaning for Spring Sale~
Everything in the shop is 20% off with code SPRING20 at checkout. I’m currently taking a break from making anything until majority of the stock is sold. I haven’t been feeling well for a while, and I’m just now getting my health back on track. After I feel rested enough, I will restock the shop. If you are interested, I also have other ways to support me and my business. All of the l!nks are in my bi0, including the sh0p, my tip jar, my Depop page, and my patre0n for my art. Please check out everything here, and feel free to share this post.
IG: ashantisgarden
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honeydrop-sweetheart · 7 months
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It's a good evening for a sweater and some tea. 🥰🫖
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amberwellnessgroup · 2 years
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Uplift and Renew Herbal Blend
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We love herbs! Using an herbal tincture is a great way to support your body and has the convenience of sitting on your bedside table, being tossed in your bag, and you don’t have to have a glass of water to swallow most of them. Tinctures are also a wonderful way to feel quick action from your herbs because some absorption happens right under your tongue and gets right into your bloodstream.
Our gift to you this month is a 20% discount on Dr. Lisa’s Uplift and Renew tincture from last month’s Refresh and Renew Daycation event. This is a great balanced supportive blend that helps mental clarity, balance, and focus throughout the day. Many of our patients already love our sleep support blends for winding down at night. This is a great addition to create wakefulness and keep you on point for your day!
To visit more wellness blogs please, click here.
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jahntang · 2 years
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CASE: Iron deficiency anaemia
CASE: Iron deficiency anaemia
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