Master Class

Family Herbalism Reference Guide

Where This All Comes From

This guide is the companion resource for the 20-Herb Foundation Course. Over 20 classes you are learning 20 essential herbs — one at a time, understanding each one deeply before combining them. After every few herbs, a Formula Class shows you how to put what you've learned to work.

The formulas in this guide did not come from a textbook. They came from decades of real practice. My father spent over 40 years testing, measuring, and adjusting herbal formulas for real families with real health needs. What you hold here are first-level formulas — the starting points he worked from. They work. But understand that the refined formulas in our professional capsule line represent 40 years of continued development on top of this foundation. That is not something you can replicate by buying herbs off a shelf and throwing them together. The ratio IS the formula. The years of test-measure-adjust are irreplaceable.

These formulas are yours to use, experiment with, and learn from. They are starting points, not endpoints. The more you work with them — taste them, observe how they affect you, study the properties of each herb — the more you will understand why professional-grade herbal formulas are what they are.

How to Use This Guide

Use the navigation tabs at the top to move between the four sections of this resource.

Reference Guide — The universal principles that apply to every herb and every formula. Preparation methods, extraction efficiency, storage, safety. Read this once thoroughly and refer back often.

Herb Classes — One detailed sheet for each of the 20 herbs. Sheets are added as each herb is taught in class. These are your deep reference for each individual herb.

Formula Classes — Complete formula sections organized by formula set. Every formula is self-contained — everything you need to make it is right there on the card. New sets are added as the class progresses.

One Principle Before You Read a Single Formula

The medicine comes from the herb, not the water. Water is the delivery vehicle. A cup of tea and a half-cup of concentrated tea can contain exactly the same amount of medicine — the difference is only how much liquid you're drinking to receive it.

Every formula in this guide can be made stronger or weaker by adjusting how much water you use. The herbs and ratios stay identical. What changes is your dose size. A strong preparation means a smaller amount of liquid delivers the full therapeutic dose. A weak preparation means you drink more liquid to receive the same medicine from the same herb amount. Neither is wrong — they are simply different concentrations of the same thing.

This is one of the most important things you will learn in this course: think in herb amounts, not cup volumes.

Universal Reference Guide

These principles apply to every herb and every formula in this course. This is the foundation — read it once thoroughly and refer back to it throughout your herbal journey. These principles work for all 20 herbs in this course and for any herb you encounter in the future. Expand any section below to read it in full.

The Three Keys to Understanding Any Herb

The framework that works for every herb you will ever encounter

To confidently use any herb — not just the 20 in this course, but any herb you encounter — you need to know three things. Master these three elements and you can use any herb with confidence.

1. Properties — How It Works
Properties are the ACTIONS an herb has on the body. This is the most important thing to know because properties tell you what the plant will reliably do. Properties are the mechanism — the "how." When you know an herb's properties, you can reason about any situation, even ones you've never encountered before. Properties don't change. They are consistent and dependable.

2. Traditional Uses — What It's Been Used For
Traditional uses show you the application — what people have successfully used this herb for over long periods of time. These are valuable evidence. But properties explain WHY those uses work. Properties are the foundation; traditional uses are the proof. When you understand both, you are no longer just following a recipe — you understand why it works.

3. Proper Preparation — How to Get the Medicine Out
Different herbs require different preparation methods to extract their medicine effectively. Using the wrong method can mean you receive very little medicine at all from an otherwise excellent herb. Using the right method unlocks the full benefit of the plant. Learn the right method for each herb and it will work reliably every time.

This three-key framework is how you learn to read and understand any herbal formula, any new herb, and any herbal product you encounter — for the rest of your life. It's not just for this course.

The Most Important Principle: Herb Amount Is the Medicine

The water is just the delivery vehicle — think in herb amounts, not cup volumes

If you need 2 grams of peppermint medicinally, it doesn't matter much whether you make it into a large cup of tea or a small concentrated cup. The 2 grams of herb delivers roughly the same medicine either way. The ratio of herb to water just determines how much liquid you drink — not how much medicine you get.

A strong preparation — more herb per volume of water — means a small amount of liquid carries a full therapeutic dose. A weak preparation — less herb per volume of water — means you need to drink more liquid to receive the same amount of medicine from the same herb. The herb doesn't change. The medicine doesn't change. Only the concentration changes.

This is why the same formula can be made at different strengths depending on the situation. Someone with an acute condition who needs fast results might make a concentrated preparation and take small doses frequently. Someone taking an herb daily for long-term support might make a lighter preparation and enjoy a full cup. Same herbs, same ratios — different water volumes.

Think of it this way: the herb IS the medicine. Tea, tincture, and capsules are just different ways of delivering that herb to your body. Some delivery methods are more efficient than others — but the herb is always the source. Water is just the vehicle.

What DOES matter: How much herb you use (the dose) · How well the preparation method extracts it (efficiency) · What form you take it in (capsules are much less efficient than tea or tincture)

Extraction Efficiency — Tincture vs. Tea vs. Capsules

Different preparations get different amounts of medicine from the same herb

Tincture (Alcohol Extract) — 80–95% efficiency
Alcohol extracts both water-soluble and fat-soluble compounds. It extracts volatile oils very well, and gets resins and other compounds that water cannot reach. This makes tincture the most efficient extraction method overall. Standard ratio: 1 part dried herb to 5 parts alcohol by weight. Shelf life: 5–7 years. Convenient for daily long-term use — no preparation needed.

Tea (Water Extract) — 70–85% efficiency
Water extracts most water-soluble compounds excellently. It gets many volatile oils when prepared correctly with a lid. It misses some fat-soluble compounds and resins that only alcohol can reach. Tea gets roughly 10–20% less than tincture from the same amount of herb. However — there are situations where warm tea is therapeutically superior to tincture, because the warmth itself is medicine. For fevers, for soothing an irritated throat, for promoting sweating — warm tea can outperform tincture even with slightly lower extraction.

Capsules (Raw Powder) — approximately 33% efficiency
No extraction has happened before you take capsules — your digestive system must do ALL the work. Volatile oils often pass through without being absorbed. Many compounds are not broken down effectively. Most of the herb passes through unused. You need approximately 3 times as much herb in capsules as in tincture to get similar medicine. However — capsules win for long-term daily use because people actually take them consistently. The best medicine is the medicine you will reliably take.

⚠️ Important: These percentages vary by herb. Some herbs extract equally well in water or alcohol. Some extract much better in alcohol. Each individual herb sheet in this course notes the specific extraction rates for that herb. Fennel seed, for example, extracts considerably more thoroughly in alcohol than in water — its oil tubes are better opened by alcohol than by water alone.

When to Use Tea vs. Tincture vs. Capsules

The right form for the right situation

Use TEA when: Treating acute conditions like fevers, nausea, or digestive upset — when you want results now · Warmth is therapeutically beneficial (fevers, soothing the throat, promoting sweating) · You have time to prepare it · You want to avoid alcohol · You have fresh dried herbs available

Use TINCTURE when: You need convenience — instant, no preparation time · Traveling or away from home · You want maximum extraction efficiency · You are building long-term storage — tinctures last 5–7 years · You don't have dried herbs on hand · You're working with an herb that extracts much better in alcohol than water

Use CAPSULES when: Taking herbs daily for months — capsules win for compliance because people actually take them · Chronic conditions requiring long-term consistent use · Convenience matters more than efficiency · The herb tastes unpleasant and you cannot tolerate it in tea or tincture

The honest truth: For acute situations, tea usually wins — you're motivated to make it and the warmth helps. For chronic situations, capsules often win — people actually take them consistently over months. The best medicine is the medicine you will actually take. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.

Tea Preparation — Infusion (Leaves & Flowers)

For tender plant parts — leaves, flowers, stems

Use for: Any plant part you can easily crush between your fingers — leaves, flowers, stems. From this course: Peppermint, Catnip, Comfrey Leaf, Sage, Red Clover, Lavender, Horehound.

Standard measurement: 2g dried herb per 240ml (1 cup) water. This is a basic preparation strength. Each formula gives you the specific amounts needed.

  1. Measure your herb and place in a pot with a tight-fitting lid
  2. Add cold water and cover immediately
  3. Place on stove over medium-low heat
  4. Heat gently until the water just begins to simmer — tiny bubbles forming at the bottom of the pot
  5. Turn off heat immediately — do not let it boil
  6. Keep covered and steep undisturbed for 15–20 minutes — do not lift the lid
  7. Strain through fine mesh into your cup
  8. Keep covered while drinking
⚠️ Never boil aromatic herbs. Always keep covered. Peppermint, Catnip, Lavender, and other aromatic herbs contain volatile oils — these oils ARE the medicine. They evaporate rapidly with heat and escape as steam if uncovered. Keep the lid on from the moment you begin until the last sip. If your peppermint tea doesn't smell strongly minty when you lift the lid to strain, you have lost the medicine. Remake it and keep the lid on.

Tea Preparation — Decoction (Roots, Seeds & Barks)

For hard plant parts that require sustained heat

Use for: Roots, barks, seeds, berries — hard, woody plant parts that need sustained heat to break down their tough cell walls. From this course: Fennel seed, Burdock root, Comfrey root, Goldenseal root, Marshmallow root, Slippery Elm bark, Juniper berry.

Standard measurement: 2g dried herb per 240ml (1 cup) water.

  1. Measure your herb and place in a pot with a tight-fitting lid
  2. Add cold water and cover
  3. Place on stove over medium heat
  4. Bring to a gentle simmer — small, steady bubbles. Not a full rolling boil
  5. Continue simmering gently with the lid on for 15–20 minutes
  6. Remove from heat
  7. Strain through fine mesh
  8. Keep covered while drinking
Hard plant parts do not contain volatile oils that would be destroyed by heat — they need sustained heat to break down tough cell walls and release their medicinal compounds. A gentle simmer is ideal. A full rolling boil is unnecessary and reduces your final volume too quickly.

Special note on Fennel seed: Always crack the seeds lightly before simmering. Use the back of a spoon, a mortar and pestle, or a brief pulse in a blender. You are cracking them open to release the oil tubes inside — not grinding to powder. This significantly improves extraction. Store seeds whole and crack only when ready to use.

Tea Preparation — Combination (Formulas with Both Types)

When your formula has both hard and tender plant parts

Use when: Your formula contains BOTH tender parts (leaves/flowers) AND hard parts (roots/seeds/barks). This is the most common situation in formula work. You cannot simmer everything together — the tender herbs would be destroyed. You cannot steep everything together — the hard parts would barely extract. Each plant part gets the preparation it requires.

This requires two vessels running at the same time. It is easier than it sounds once you have done it once.

Phase 1 — Both Vessels Simultaneously (15–20 minutes)

Divide your total water: approximately ¾ goes with the hard parts for simmering, approximately ¼ goes with the tender parts for soaking.

  1. Simmer vessel — hard parts (roots/seeds/barks): Place in a pot with their portion of cold water. Cover with tight lid. Bring to a gentle simmer. Keep simmering covered for 15–20 minutes.
  2. Soak vessel — tender parts (leaves/flowers) — at the exact same time: Place in a separate heat-safe container. Add just enough cold water to cover well. Let soak at room temperature for the same 15–20 minutes. No heat. Just soaking.

Phase 2 — Combine and Steep (15–20 minutes)

  1. After 15–20 minutes, add the soaked tender herbs AND all of their soaking water into the pot with the simmered hard parts
  2. Check the temperature — the combined mixture should be hot. If it has cooled, bring it gently back to a simmer, then turn off heat immediately
  3. Cover tightly and steep the combined mixture for 15–20 minutes
  4. Strain through fine mesh and keep covered while drinking
⚠️ The most common mistake: Adding the tender leaves or flowers during the simmering phase. The tender herbs go in ONLY at the combining step — never during the initial simmer. Add them too early and their volatile oils will evaporate into the air instead of staying in your tea.

Poultice — External Application

For wounds, bruises, inflammation, boils, and infections on the skin

A poultice applies herbal medicine directly to the skin at the site of the problem. This is used for conditions requiring direct external application — wounds, bruises, sprains, skin inflammation, infections, boils, abscesses, and drawing conditions.

  1. Prepare the herb mixture: Use powdered herb OR fresh crushed herb — 1 part herb to 1 part Slippery Elm powder as binder. Mix together thoroughly.
  2. Add water gradually: Add small amounts of water and mix until you reach the consistency of clay — it should hold its shape but not be runny. If too thick, add a little more water to thin.
  3. Apply to the affected area: Spread the poultice about ¼ to ½ inch thick over the area. Cover with a clean cloth.
  4. Optional — keep warm: Cover with a warm damp cloth to maintain warmth. Replace the cloth as it cools. Warmth increases circulation and drives the herbs deeper into the tissue.
  5. Duration: Leave on 1–4 hours depending on the condition. Change and reapply 2–4 times daily for acute conditions.
Alternative binder: If Slippery Elm is not available, cornstarch can be used as the binder instead. Slippery Elm is preferred because it adds its own demulcent and drawing properties to the poultice.

Drawing poultices: Some herbs like Comfrey and Marshmallow are specifically used to "draw" infection or bring boils to a head. These may be left on longer as appropriate for the condition. The warmth helps draw the infection to the surface.

Suppository — Internal Application

For hemorrhoids, constipation, and lower bowel conditions

A suppository applies herbal medicine directly to the rectal area for conditions requiring it. Slippery Elm is the primary herb used because it is soothing, anti-inflammatory, and helps the suppository hold its shape while providing its own medicinal benefit.

  1. Mix ingredients: 1 tablespoon Slippery Elm powder + 1 teaspoon water. Add any additional powdered medicinal herb if called for. Mix to the consistency of firm clay.
  2. Form the suppositories: Roll the mixture into pencil-length pieces approximately the width of your little finger. Cut into 3 pieces — each about 1.5–2 inches long.
  3. Allow to firm slightly: Let sit 5–10 minutes so they hold their shape.
  4. Insert: Insert each piece as far as comfortably possible. Can insert all 3 pieces at once or separately. Best done before bedtime.
Frequency

1–3 times daily as needed. For hemorrhoids: daily until relief. For constipation: as needed.

The Slippery Elm soothing and anti-inflammatory properties help regardless of what additional herb is used. It is not just a binder — it is medicinal in its own right for bowel and rectal conditions.

Optional Enhancement — Cayenne

The universal accelerator — speeds the formula without changing its target

A small pinch of Cayenne pepper (1/8 teaspoon or less) can be added to almost any tea formula after straining. Add it to your individual cup, not to the whole batch.

Cayenne is a powerful circulatory stimulant. It speeds circulation and helps the body receive and use the other herbs faster. This is what a stimulant does in a formula — it presses the accelerator.

Critical understanding: Adding Cayenne does NOT change where a formula goes in the body or what it targets. The other herbs in the formula determine the target. Cayenne simply accelerates delivery. The destination is the same — you get there faster. Think of it as speeding up the journey, not changing the destination.

Some formulas specifically call for Cayenne as part of the formula. In those cases it is not optional — it is intentional. When a formula does not list it, adding a pinch is always an option if you want faster action.

This is why Cayenne appears in so many different formulas for so many different conditions. It is not because Cayenne treats all those conditions — it is because Cayenne gets everything else there faster, regardless of what "everything else" is targeting.

How to Make Tinctures

30-day alcohol extract · 5–7 year shelf life · Most efficient extraction

Tinctures are concentrated liquid extracts made by soaking herbs in alcohol for 30 days. They are the most efficient extraction method and last 5–7 years — making them ideal for building a long-term herbal supply.

Why make tinctures: Long-term storage (5–7 years vs 1–2 years for dried herbs) · Most efficient extraction (80–95%) · Instant use — no preparation time · Portable and convenient · Consistent strength every time

Standard ratio: 1:5 (1 part dried herb to 5 parts alcohol by weight)
Alcohol: 40–60% — standard 80-proof vodka works for most herbs

  1. Weigh your dried herb — for example, 20 grams
  2. Calculate alcohol needed: multiply herb weight by 5 (20g × 5 = 100ml alcohol)
  3. Place herb in a clean glass jar
  4. Pour alcohol over the herbs until all are covered
  5. Label clearly: herb name, date started, date to strain (30 days later), ratio (1:5), alcohol percentage
  6. Seal tightly
  7. Shake daily for 30 days
  8. After 30 days: strain through cheesecloth or coffee filter, squeezing the spent herb to get all the liquid out
  9. Bottle in amber glass, label with strain date, store in a cool dark place

How to use tinctures: Take straight — place dose under tongue or swallow with water for fastest absorption · Or dilute in hot water to make instant tea (more pleasant, good for children). For children, adding tincture to hot water and letting it sit 5–10 minutes allows some alcohol to evaporate.

Tincture vs. Tea: Each herb sheet notes whether tea or tincture is preferred for that specific herb and situation. Generally, tea is preferred when warmth provides additional therapeutic benefit — like for fevers. Tincture is preferred for convenience and maximum efficiency.

How to Make Your Own Capsules

Best for long-term daily use — remember capsules are only ~33% efficient

If you prefer capsules for long-term daily use — which often wins for compliance on chronic conditions — you can make your own. Remember that capsules require approximately 3 times more herb than tincture to deliver equivalent medicine, because your digestive system must do all the extraction work.

What you need: Empty capsules — size "00" holds approximately 0.7g · Very finely powdered dried herb · A small shallow bowl · Optional: capsule filling tray

  1. Place finely powdered herb in a shallow bowl
  2. Separate the capsule halves
  3. Take the larger half (the body) and hold it upright
  4. Tap it repeatedly down into the powder — pack firmly
  5. Use a finger or pen to pack the powder down tighter
  6. Keep tapping and packing until the capsule body is firmly and fully filled
  7. Place the smaller cap on top and press closed
  8. Wipe clean

Storage: Airtight jar · Label with herb name and date · Keep dry — moisture softens gelatin capsules · Use within 6–12 months — powder goes stale faster than whole dried herb

⚠️ Capsules are only ~33% efficient. You need 3 times more herb in capsule form than in tincture form to receive equivalent medicine. Adjust your dose expectations accordingly, or increase the number of capsules per dose to compensate.

Storage and Freshness

A fresh tea beats a perfect formula made with old herbs — every single time

Freshness matters more than preparation method. You can prepare a formula perfectly with precisely the right method and the right ratios — and still get disappointing results if your herbs are old. Always check freshness before you begin.

The Smell Test — your most important quality check: Open your jar and smell immediately. You should be hit with a strong, characteristic aroma. For peppermint — intensely minty. For fennel — strong anise/licorice. For catnip — distinct and aromatic. If you have to sniff hard to detect anything, the volatile oils are gone and the medicine is largely gone with them. Replace the herb.

Visual check: Color should still be vibrant — not brown, faded, or dusty looking. No signs of moisture, mold, or clumping.

Taste test: A small piece should taste characteristic and strong. If it tastes like bland dried grass, replace it.

Storage for dried herbs: Airtight glass jars · Away from light, heat, and moisture · A cool dark cupboard is ideal · Shelf life: 1–2 years maximum even if they pass the smell test — replace regularly

Seeds (Fennel and others): Store whole — always. Crack only when ready to use. Pre-cracked or pre-ground seeds lose their volatile oils rapidly. A whole seed is a sealed container that protects the medicine inside.

Prepared tea: Best consumed the same day. Refrigerate covered for up to 48 hours maximum. Reheat gently — never boil aromatic herb teas when reheating.

Tinctures: Amber glass bottles in a cool dark place. Shelf life: 5–7 years or longer.

Capsules: Airtight container, keep very dry. Use within 6–12 months — powder goes stale faster than whole herb.

Safety and Special Populations

Children · Pregnancy · Infants · Medications

Quality matters: Source herbs from reputable suppliers who test their products. Freshness is crucial. Know what you are buying.

Start small: Begin with smaller doses to observe your response. Increase gradually if needed. Children need proportionally smaller doses.

Infants (under 2 years): Use only gentle herbs with a well-established safety history — Catnip and Fennel are classic infant herbs with centuries of safe use. Doses are very small — often just a dropperful of tea as needed. Use only under professional guidance for anything beyond simple colic or digestive support.

Children (2–12 years): Generally ¼ to ½ adult dose depending on age and size. Most herbs in this course are appropriate for children when dosed correctly. Each herb sheet notes any specific child considerations.

Pregnancy: Many herbs are safe in food and gentle tea amounts. Some herbs should be avoided, particularly in large therapeutic doses. Always check the individual herb sheet. When in doubt, consult a qualified practitioner. The safety notes on each herb sheet specifically address pregnancy.

Medications: Herbs can interact with medications, particularly with long-term high-dose use. Inform your healthcare provider of any herbs you are taking regularly. Most significant interactions occur with daily use over extended periods, not from occasional use.

When to seek professional help: Serious or persistent conditions · High fever that will not break · Severe pain · Pregnancy complications · Interactions with medications · Any emergency situation. These formulas support the body's own healing processes. They are not a substitute for professional medical care when that care is genuinely needed.

Course Structure — What You Are Building

20 herbs · Formula classes · A complete home apothecary

Phase 1 — Learn Individual Herbs (20 classes)
One herb per class. One hour per herb. You build your home apothecary one herb at a time. Each class is designed to stand alone — you don't need to have attended every previous class to benefit from any given herb class. This guide fills in anything you may have missed.

Phase 2 — Formula Classes (after every few herbs)
Learn to combine what you've learned. Understand the principles of formula construction — why herbs are combined, how ratios change a formula's emphasis, what a stimulant does, and how to read any formula you encounter. This resource grows with each formula class.

Phase 3 — Complete Formula Collection (after all 20 herbs)
100+ proven formulas using your 20 herbs. Learn formula construction principles fully. Understand how to read and evaluate any herbal formula independently.

Phase 4 — Continued Learning
Apply the three-key framework to new herbs. Read and evaluate formulas independently. Adapt to your family's specific needs.

By the end you will have: 20 herbs — as dried herbs or tinctures · 100+ proven formulas · The skills to learn any new herb you encounter · The ability to read and understand any herbal formula · The confidence to care for your family's common health needs

Key Principles — Quick Reference Summary

Everything important on one card

Medicine comes from the HERB AMOUNT — not the liquid volume. Think in herb amounts.

Three keys to any herb: Properties · Traditional Uses · Proper Preparation

Extraction efficiency: Tincture 80–95% › Tea 70–85% › Capsules ~33%

Hard plant parts simmer (roots, seeds, barks) — tender parts steep (leaves, flowers)

Formulas with both types require both processes — never simmer the leaves with the roots

Freshness matters MORE than preparation method — use the smell test every time

Store seeds whole — crack only when ready to use

Different herbs extract differently — each herb sheet notes the specific rates

The best medicine is the medicine you will actually take consistently

Warmth can be therapeutic — hot tea isn't just about the herb, it's about the delivery

Herbs work better together — but ratios matter; the ratio IS the formula

Properties tell you what an herb will RELIABLY do — this is your foundation

Cayenne accelerates delivery — it does not change the target, only the speed

These formulas nourish body systems — the body heals itself when given what it needs

Properties Glossary

Complete reference — what every herbal action term means

Alterative — Gradually alters and corrects impure conditions in the body; blood cleanser

Anodyne — Relieves pain

Anthelmintic — Destroys parasitic intestinal worms

Antibilious — Relieves biliousness by acting on bile

Antiemetic — Stops vomiting and nausea

Antiperiodic — Arrests morbid periodical movements

Antirheumatic — Relieves rheumatism

Antiseptic — Stops or opposes putrefaction; prevents infection

Antispasmodic — Relieves or prevents spasm and cramping

Aperient — Gentle laxative

Aphrodisiac — Enhances sexual desire and function

Aromatic — Stimulating; spicy; contains volatile oils; stimulates digestion and circulation

Astringent — Induces greater density and firmness to tissues; tightens; reduces secretions

Carminative — Expels gas from the bowel; relieves bloating and griping

Cathartic — Stimulates the alimentary tract; strong laxative

Cholagogue — Increases flow of bile from the gallbladder

Demulcent — Soothes inflammation in skin and mucous membranes; coats and protects

Depurative — Blood purifier; cleanses the blood

Detergent — Cleansing to wounds, boils, ulcers, and infected tissue

Diaphoretic — Produces sweating by increasing blood flow to the skin; also influences the nervous system; supports fever response

Diffusant — Spreads the action of other herbs throughout the body; increases distribution

Discutient — Dissolves and helps remove tumors and growths

Diuretic — Increases the secretion and flow of urine

Emetic — Produces vomiting

Emmenagogue — Promotes and increases menstrual flow

Emollient — Softens and soothes inflamed tissues externally

Expectorant — Promotes the expulsion of mucus and morbid matter from the lungs and bronchi

Febrifuge — Reduces and relieves fevers

Galactagogue — Promotes and increases milk production in nursing mothers

Hepatic — Supports and strengthens the liver and its functions

Laxative — Promotes bowel movement gently

Maturatant — Brings boils, tumors, and ulcers to a head; drawing action

Nervine — Relieves pain and tension by influencing the nervous and circulatory systems; calms without sedating or narcotizing

Nutritive — Nourishing; provides nutrients to build and restore tissues

Ophthalmicum — For diseases and conditions of the eye

Parturient — Induces and promotes labor at childbirth

Pectoral — Relieves and supports chest and lung afflictions

Refrigerant — Cooling; reduces heat in the body

Relaxing — Promotes relaxation of tension in muscles and nervous system

Resolvent — Dissolves and helps remove tumors and abnormal growths

Rubifacient — Increases local circulation and produces reddening of the skin

Sedative — Tonic to nerves; quieting and calming; reduces nervous excitement

Sialagogue — Increases the secretion of saliva

Stimulant — Increases activity and function in body systems; promotes and speeds circulation; drives other herbs in a formula

Stomachic — Strengthens and gives tone to the stomach; improves digestive function

Styptic — Arrests bleeding and hemorrhage; stops blood flow

Sudorific — Produces profuse perspiration

Tonic — Restores tone and strength to body systems; primarily works through consistent use over time rather than acute action

Vermifuge — Expels worms and intestinal parasites

Vulnerary — Promotes wound healing and tissue repair

Herb Classes

One herb. One class. One hour. Each herb sheet gives you everything you need to understand, prepare, and use that herb with confidence. Tap any herb to expand its full reference sheet. New herbs are added as each class is taught.

Peppermint Mentha × piperita L.

Steep only · Never boil · Always keep covered · Herb #1 of 20
Herb #1
Lamiaceae (Mint family)
Leaves & stems, fresh or dried
Stimulant
Steep — never boil
Tea 70–80% · Tincture 80–95%
~2.3g · 2 tbsp tea · 2 tsp tincture · 8 capsules
Properties
Stimulant Carminative Anti-emetic Diaphoretic Anti-spasmodic

Stimulant (Primary): Increases circulation, digestive secretions, and overall physiological activity. This is the property that makes peppermint so useful in formulas — it drives and distributes the action of other herbs.
Carminative: Relieves gas and bloating in the digestive tract.
Anti-emetic: Stops vomiting and nausea — direct action on the stomach.
Diaphoretic: Promotes sweating and increases blood flow — valuable in fevers when taken warm.
Anti-spasmodic: Relieves muscle spasms and cramping.

Traditional Uses

Peppermint is a splendid stomach remedy, highly valued for digestive complaints and fevers.

Digestive conditions: Flatulence, colic, nausea, vomiting, constipation, dysentery, indigestion
Fever & inflammatory: Fevers of all kinds, influenza, chills — one of the most reliable fever treatments in traditional herbal practice
Nervous & circulatory: Dizziness, palpitations of the heart, nervous agitation, circulation problems
Children's conditions: Convulsions, measles, colic, and similar infantile troubles
Women's health: Menstrual obstruction, especially when accompanied by nervousness

Botanical Identification

Peppermint is a hybrid between spearmint (M. spicata) and water mint (M. aquatica). Two varieties: Black peppermint (purple-tinged) and White peppermint (green). Height 30–90cm (12–36"). Key identifier: square stems + strong cooling minty aroma. Leaves are pointed, oval-lance shaped with serrated edges. Flowers are lilac-pink or white on a conical terminal spike, blooming late summer to mid-autumn. Grows in sun or part-shade in rich, damp soils.

Active Constituents

The volatile oil (1–3% of dried plant) provides ALL primary therapeutic effects — this is why proper preparation is absolutely critical.
Volatile oil contains: Menthol and neo-menthol (main compounds) · Cineole · Limonene · Caffeic, chlorogenic, and rosmarinic acids · Flavonoids including luteolin and hesperidin · Carotenoids · Choline · Minerals
These volatile oils are what you smell when you open a fresh jar. If that smell is faint, the medicine is largely gone.

Dosing

Standard adult dose: approximately 2.3g dried herb per dose.

Tea2 tablespoons per cup · preferred for fevers — warmth aids diaphoretic action
Tincture (1:5)2 teaspoons · 10–15% more efficient extraction
Capsules8 capsules · requires 3x more herb — only 33% efficient

Children: use proportionally smaller doses based on age and weight. Frequency varies by condition — see formulas in the Formula Classes section.

Preparation — The Critical Rules
⚠️ NEVER BOIL PEPPERMINT. ALWAYS KEEP COVERED. These two rules cannot be overstated. Peppermint's entire medicine resides in its volatile oils. Boiling drives them into the air and leaves useless plant material behind. An uncovered pot lets them escape as steam. Keep the lid on from the moment you begin until the last sip. When you strain, lift the lid and smell — you should be hit immediately with a strong minty aroma. If it is faint, the medicine was lost. Remake it and keep the lid on.

To prepare: Place herb in a pot. Add cold water. Cover. Heat gently to a simmer — tiny bubbles only. Turn off heat immediately. Steep covered 15–20 minutes without lifting the lid. Strain into cup. Keep covered while drinking.

Traditional Formula — Flu and Fever Remedy

One of the most reliable fever treatments in traditional herbal practice. This combination promotes perspiration, breaks down congestion, and equalizes circulation.

Ingredients: Peppermint leaves 28g (1 oz) · Elder flowers 28g (1 oz) · Water 714ml (1.5 pints)
Note: Elder flowers are not in the 20-herb foundation course — they are covered in advanced herbal studies. This formula is presented here so you understand the traditional context of peppermint as a fever herb.

Preparation: Place herbs in vessel. Pour on boiling water. Cover tightly and keep warm 15 minutes. Strain, keep warm and covered.

Dosing for fever: Initial phase — give ½ to 2 tablespoons warm every 30–45 minutes until the patient perspires freely. Maintenance — after perspiration begins, give ¼ cup every 1–2 hours. May sweeten with honey. Keep patient in bed. The key is administering warm and continuing until free perspiration occurs — this breaks congestion and restores equilibrium.

Follow-up care: After the patient sweats freely, keep in bed overnight. In the morning, sponge the entire body with equal parts apple cider vinegar and warm water — one body part at a time, keeping the rest covered. This acts as a skin tonic and removes waste matter eliminated through the skin during the fever.

Traditional Formula — Menstrual Obstruction with Nervous Agitation

For cases where menstruation is blocked and the person is highly nervous or agitated.
Ingredients: Peppermint equal parts · Wood Betony equal parts (advanced herb, not in foundation course)
Preparation: Hot infusion as described above
Dosing: 3 tablespoons warm every 3 hours

Storage & Quality

Dried herb: Airtight glass jar away from light and heat. Shelf life 1–2 years maximum. The smell test is critical — open the jar and you should be hit immediately with a strong minty smell. If you have to sniff for it, replace the herb.
Prepared tea: Drink same day. Refrigerate covered maximum 48 hours. Reheat gently — never boil.
Tincture: Amber glass, cool dark place. Lasts 5–7 years.

Safety Considerations

Generally safe for most people including children when used appropriately.
GERD / acid reflux: Peppermint can relax the lower esophageal sphincter — potentially worsening reflux in some individuals. Use with caution if this applies to you.
Gallstones: Peppermint stimulates bile flow. Use cautiously if gallstones are present.
Infants under 2 years: Seek professional guidance. Menthol applied near the nose or face can cause breathing difficulties in very young infants. The tea itself is generally fine in small doses but use carefully.
Pregnancy: Safe in food and tea amounts. Traditional use includes morning sickness. Some sources suggest avoiding large therapeutic doses in the first trimester as a precaution.
Note: These cautions apply to peppermint herb in tea or tincture form. Peppermint essential oil is far more concentrated and has different, more serious safety considerations.

✓ Primary property: Stimulant — drives other herbs in formulas, promotes circulation and secretions
✓ Splendid stomach remedy — flatulence, colic, nausea, digestive complaints
✓ One of the most reliable fever herbs — especially effective when taken warm
✓ NEVER BOIL — ALWAYS COVER — the volatile oils ARE the medicine
✓ Tea preferred for fevers (warmth itself is therapeutic), tincture for convenience
✓ Freshness is critical — strong minty smell essential; replace after 1–2 years

Catnip Nepeta cataria L.

Steep only · Extremely safe · Classic children's herb · Herb #2 of 20
Herb #2
Lamiaceae (Mint family)
Catnip, Catmint, Catnep
Leaves and flowering tops
Anti-spasmodic Nervine
Steep — never boil
Tea 75–85% · Tincture 85–95%
~2.3g · 2 tbsp tea · 2 tsp tincture · 8 capsules
Extremely safe · Appropriate for infants
Properties
Anti-spasmodic Nervine Aromatic Relaxing Diffusant Diaphoretic Stimulant

Anti-spasmodic Nervine (Primary): Calms the nervous system without sedation and without being a narcotic. Relieves spasms, cramps, and pain through its influence on the nervous and circulatory systems. This is the most important thing to understand about catnip — it calms without knocking out.
Aromatic: Contains volatile oils that stimulate digestion and circulation.
Relaxing: Eases nervous and physical tension — the muscles and the mind both respond.
Diffusant: Spreads the action of other herbs throughout the body — valuable in formulas.
Diaphoretic: Promotes sweating when taken warm — useful in fevers.
Stimulant: Gently increases circulation and secretions including bile.

Traditional Uses

Catnip has been considered for ages an excellent children's remedy — though its usefulness extends well beyond childhood.

Primary applications: Restlessness and colic in children · Convulsions in children (particularly effective as enema through sacral plexus) · Hysteria and nervous headaches · Nervous agitation · Sleeplessness and insomnia · Teething pain and irritability · Digestive complaints with a nervous component

Additional traditional uses: Pain · Spasms · Gas and acid stomach · Constipation (as enema) · Worms (as enema) · Promotes urination · Promotes bile secretions · Promotes menstrual flow · Fevers · Colds and flu · Bronchitis and cough · Allergies · Inflammation · Hemorrhoids · Sweat production

Botanical Identification

Height 40–100cm (about 2–3 feet). Key identifier: square stems (mint family) + aromatic minty-but-distinct smell. Leaves are heart-shaped (cordate), oblong, coarsely serrated, covered with soft down — undersides are paler in color. Flowers are white or purplish in whorled spikes, blooming mid-summer to mid-autumn. The calyx has 15 ribs — a distinctive identification feature. Native to Europe and Asia, naturalized widely. Grows in moist, well-drained alkaline soils — roadsides, open places.

Fun fact: Cats are strongly attracted to this plant due to nepetalactones in its volatile oil — the same compound that makes it medicinally active.

Active Constituents

Volatile oil (up to 0.3%) — primary medicine: Alpha and beta-nepetalactone (up to 42% of the oil) · Carvacrol · Citronellal · Nerol · Geraniol · Pulegone · Thymol · Nepetalic acid
Iridoids: Epideoxyloganic acid, 7-deoxyloganic acid
Tannins: Provide mild astringent effect
Minerals: Iron, selenium, potassium, manganese, chromium, plus moderate amounts of other minerals and vitamins

Dosing

Standard adult dose: approximately 2.3g dried herb per dose.

Tea2 tablespoons per cup · generally preferred, especially for children when sweetened
Tincture (1:5)2 teaspoons · about 10% more efficient extraction
Capsules8 capsules · requires 3x more herb — only 33% efficient
Preparation Notes

Do not boil — always keep covered: Like peppermint, catnip's medicine is in its volatile oils. These evaporate with heat and escape as steam if uncovered. Use the same steeping method — bring just to a simmer, turn off heat, keep covered 15–20 minutes.
Hot for perspiration: When the goal is promoting sweating to break a fever, the tea must be taken warm. The warmth enhances the circulatory and diaphoretic action.
Sweeten for children: Catnip tea can be sweetened with honey or sugar to make it pleasant. Children will then accept it readily and willingly.
As enema: For convulsions or to expel worms, catnip infusion is administered as a warm enema. This works through direct action on the sacral plexus (the nerve complex at the base of the spine) and produces rapid, reliable results.

Traditional Formula — Composition Powder for Perspiration

This preparation uses catnip to promote sweating and support recovery from illness. Adding ginger intensifies the diaphoretic effect.
Ingredients: Catnip in fine powder — 1 teaspoon · Optional: small amount of ginger to intensify (advanced herb, not in foundation course)
Preparation: Mix powder in 1 cup boiling water. Sweeten to taste. Cover and let stand a few minutes.
Dosing: Adults — ¼ cup warm every 1.5–2 hours · Children — proportional to age and weight
This hot infusion produces perspiration through its influence on circulation. Useful when sweating is needed to break a fever or eliminate toxins.

Traditional Formula — Enema for Convulsions in Children

This traditional emergency application works through direct action on the sacral plexus — the nerve complex at the base of the spine that governs the lower body.
Preparation: Make a strong catnip infusion. Strain thoroughly. Cool to body temperature.
Administration: Give as warm enema.
Result: Convulsions are speedily overcome. This is considered one of the most reliable emergency remedies in traditional herbal practice for childhood convulsions. Catnip is so safe that this application is entirely appropriate.

Traditional Formula — Strong Infusion for Hysteria and Nervous Headaches

Preparation: Make double-strength infusion — use twice the normal amount of herb per cup of water.
Administration: Give warm.
Result: Very beneficial — acts practically immediately through its influence on the sacral plexus. Relief from hysteria, severe nervous headaches, and acute nervous agitation typically occurs quickly.

Storage & Quality

Dried herb: Airtight glass jar away from light and heat — and away from cats. Seriously. They will find it and get into it without fail. Shelf life 1–2 years. Should have a characteristic aromatic scent. Replace if aroma fades.
Prepared tea: Drink same day. Refrigerate covered maximum 48 hours.
Tincture: Amber glass, cool dark place. Lasts 5–7 years.

Safety Considerations

Catnip is one of the safest herbs in herbal practice. No specific contraindications are documented in traditional use. It is appropriate for frequent use in children and has centuries of documented safe use including for infants.
Pregnancy: Generally considered safe. Long history of use during pregnancy for relaxation. The emmenagogue properties (promotes menstrual flow) are very mild.
Long-term use: Safe for ongoing use as needed.
Infants: Particularly well-suited for pediatric use. Give as sweetened warm tea in small doses as needed.

✓ Primary property: Anti-spasmodic Nervine — calms nervous system without sedation; relieves spasms
✓ THE classic children's herb — extremely safe for infants; proven for colic, restlessness, teething, convulsions
✓ Enema application is highly effective for convulsions — works through sacral plexus, acts speedily
✓ Hot infusion promotes perspiration — valuable for fevers; adding ginger intensifies this
✓ Strong infusion for acute nervous conditions — hysteria, nervous headaches — acts practically immediately
✓ Dual action: calming to nerves, gently stimulating to circulation — unique and valuable combination
✓ Store away from cats — they will find it

Fennel Foeniculum vulgare

Simmer only · Crack seeds before use · Alcohol extracts more than water · Herb #3 of 20
Herb #3
Apiaceae (Umbelliferae)
Common Fennel, Sweet Fennel, Fennel Seed
Seed (fruit) only
Carminative
Simmer (decoction) — crack seeds first
Tea 65–75% · Tincture 80–95%
~2.3g · 2 tbsp tea · 2 tsp tincture · 8 capsules
Crack seeds immediately before use — store whole
Properties
Carminative Stimulant Galactagogue Diuretic Diaphoretic Stomachic Pectoral Aromatic

Carminative (Primary): Relieves gas and bloating, expels intestinal gas, reduces griping pains. This is fennel's most reliable and direct action.
Stimulant: Increases digestive activity and circulation.
Galactagogue: Promotes and increases milk production in nursing mothers — one of the most well-documented traditional uses.
Diuretic: Increases secretion and flow of urine.
Diaphoretic: Promotes sweating.
Stomachic: Strengthens and tones the stomach; improves digestive function over time.
Pectoral: Supports chest and lung conditions.
Aromatic: Contains volatile oils; stimulating to digestion.

Traditional Uses

Fennel has been used as both medicine and culinary herb for centuries, prized especially for digestive complaints and its pleasant flavor.

Digestive system (primary uses): Flatulent colic · Gas and bloating · Stomach ache · Indigestion · Cramps · Colic in infants
Women's health: Suppressed lactation (promotes milk production in nursing mothers) · Amenorrhea (suppressed menstruation) · Increases menstrual flow
Urinary system: Increases urine flow · General kidney support
Liver & glandular: Jaundice · Liver support · Spleen · Gallbladder disorders · Thyroid support · Hormonal support
Additional uses: Eye wash (weak infusion) · Gout · Fever · Brain and memory · Swelling · As a corrigent — improves the taste of unpleasant-tasting herbs in formulas

Special note on infant use: Fennel has a long, well-documented tradition of safe use for infant colic. The carminative properties gently relieve gas and griping pains. The pleasant anise flavor is generally well-accepted even by very young infants.

Botanical Identification

A biennial or perennial plant, 3–4 feet tall (90–120cm). The whole herb is smooth and deep blue-green (glaucous). Stems are erect, solid, round, and striated. Leaves are alternate and triply pinnate with thread-like leaflets. Flowers are large, flat, pale yellow umbels. Key identifier: oblong, nearly cylindrical seeds 4–8mm long, brownish or greenish-brown with a strong anise/licorice aroma. Each seed readily splits into two halves (mericarps), each with 5 light brown ribs and the oil tubes that contain the medicine. Native to Europe, grows wild on sandy and chalky ground. Three commercial varieties: Sweet/Roman fennel (most common, palest green, longest seeds), German/Saxon fennel (brown), and Bitter/Wild fennel.

Active Constituents

Volatile oil — primary medicine: Aromatic compounds responsible for the characteristic anise-like flavor and smell. Extracted more thoroughly by alcohol than water — this is why tincture is preferred for maximum extraction from fennel seed.
Fixed oil: Approximately 12% of seed weight
Oil tubes: 4 on the back face, 2–4 on the flat face of each seed half — these contain the aromatic medicinal compounds. Cracking the seed opens access to these tubes.
Sugar and ash: Approximately 7% ash content

Why You Must Crack the Seeds — And Store Them Whole

Fennel's medicine lives inside the seed in structures called oil tubes. A whole seed is essentially a sealed container — water has difficulty reaching the medicine inside. Cracking the seed breaks it open and exposes the oil tubes to the water or alcohol, dramatically improving extraction.

You do not need to grind it to powder — just crack it open. Use the back of a spoon pressed firmly against the seeds, a mortar and pestle, or a few pulses in a blender. Do this immediately before making your preparation.

⚠️ Always store seeds whole. Crack them only when you are ready to use them. Pre-cracked or pre-ground seeds lose their volatile oils rapidly — within days they will be significantly less potent. A whole seed is a sealed container that protects and preserves the medicine inside. Shelf life of whole seeds: 2–3 years. Pre-cracked: use immediately.
Dosing

Standard adult dose: approximately 2.3g dried seed per dose.

Tea2 tablespoons cracked seed per cup · good for acute digestive complaints
Tincture (1:5)2 teaspoons · more efficient — alcohol extracts fennel more thoroughly than water
Capsules8 capsules · 3x less efficient; least preferred for fennel

Children's doses: Ages 6–12: half adult dose (1 tbsp tea or 1 tsp tincture) · Ages 2–6: quarter adult dose · Infants: a dropperful (about 1ml) of tea as needed for colic and gas

How to Make Fennel Tea

Crack your seeds first using any of the methods above. To make 1 cup: 1 teaspoon cracked fennel seed per cup.

  1. Place cracked seeds in pot with 1 cup cold water
  2. Cover with tight lid
  3. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat — small steady bubbles, not a rolling boil
  4. Simmer covered for 15–20 minutes
  5. Remove from heat, strain through fine mesh
  6. Keep covered while drinking

Why simmer and not steep? Fennel is a seed — a hard plant part. Unlike peppermint leaves, it does not have volatile oils that evaporate with heat. It needs sustained heat to break down its tough outer coating and allow water access to the oil tubes inside. Steeping alone extracts very little from fennel seed.

Tincture note: Alcohol takes up fennel's properties more thoroughly than water (80–95% vs 65–75%). For maximum extraction, tincture is preferred. However, tea is still very effective for acute digestive complaints and the warm preparation is often part of the therapeutic experience.
Dosing for Specific Situations

For digestive complaints, colic, and gas: Adults — 2 tablespoons warm tea every 30–45 minutes until stomach settles, then stop. Unlike the fever formula, you do not continue to a maintenance dose once the stomach settles. Resume if discomfort returns.
Infants with colic: A dropperful of warm fennel tea as needed. Can repeat every 30–45 minutes until colic settles. The pleasant anise flavor makes this easy to administer.
For fever: 2 tablespoons warm every 30–45 minutes. Discontinue or reduce once improvement is noted — no maintenance dose needed.
For suppressed lactation: 1 cup warm fennel tea 2–3 times daily. Safe for nursing mothers and will benefit the nursing infant through the breast milk.
As a corrigent in formulas: Add a small amount of fennel to any formula containing unpleasant-tasting herbs. The pleasant sweet anise flavor makes other herbs more palatable — particularly useful in children's formulas.

Storage & Quality

Dried whole seeds: Airtight glass jar away from light and heat. Shelf life 2–3 years — seeds store longer than leaves when kept whole. Smell test: should smell strongly of anise/licorice immediately upon opening.
Freshly cracked seeds: Use immediately. Do not store cracked seeds.
Prepared tea: Drink same day. Refrigerate covered maximum 48 hours.
Tincture: Amber glass, cool dark place. Lasts 5–7 years.

Safety Considerations

Very safe with a long, well-documented history of use including for infants.
Infants: Safe and classically used for colic. One of the most trusted infant remedies.
Nursing mothers: Safe and beneficial — promotes milk production. Benefits pass to the nursing infant through breast milk.
Pregnancy: Use in food amounts is generally considered safe. Larger medicinal doses that promote menstrual flow should be used with caution in early pregnancy.
Carrot family allergies: Those with known allergies to other Apiaceae family plants (carrots, celery, parsley, dill, anise) should use with awareness as cross-reactions are possible.

✓ Primary property: Carminative — excellent for gas, bloating, colic, digestive cramping
✓ Always crack seeds immediately before preparation — store whole, crack fresh
✓ Simmer 15–20 minutes — seeds require sustained heat, unlike tender leaves
✓ Tincture extracts more thoroughly than tea for fennel — water is less efficient (65–75% vs 80–95%)
✓ Classic infant remedy — dropperful of warm tea for colic and gas
✓ Galactagogue — promotes milk production in nursing mothers
✓ For acute digestive complaints: take every 30–45 minutes until stomach settles — then stop
✓ Corrigent — improves the taste of other herbs in formulas
✓ The most-used herb in the first formula set — understanding it well is essential
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Where These Formulas Come From

My father spent over 40 years testing, adjusting, and refining herbal formulas for real families. What you have here are first-level formulas — the starting points, the proven combinations he began with. They are not the finished, refined formulas in our professional capsule product line. Those represent decades of continued development on top of this foundation.

These formulas are yours to use, learn from, and experiment with. They work. But understand what you are holding: a starting point, not an endpoint. The ratio IS the formula. You cannot simply pick up any herbal combination, use any quantities, and expect the same results. Understanding why each herb is present, why the ratios are what they are, and what role each herb is playing — that is the real education. That is what these formula classes are teaching you.

When you eventually hold one of our professional formulas and compare it to these starting points, you will understand — in a way you couldn't before this course — exactly what 40 years of refinement looks like.

Understanding How Formulas Are Built

Formulas nourish body systems — they don't target diseases. The body knows how to heal itself when the right system receives adequate nutrients and support. A well-built formula covers all aspects of a body system so the body can do its own work. This is also why these formulas are more legally appropriate and more broadly useful than disease-specific treatments.

Ratios tell the formula where to go. The herb present in the largest amount generally leads the formula toward the body system it most directly affects. When Fennel is at ratio 3 and Peppermint is at ratio 1, Fennel is leading — pointing the formula toward digestive and glandular function. Reverse those ratios and you've changed what the formula is emphasizing. Same herbs, different direction.

The stimulant accelerates without redirecting. Cayenne in a formula does not change the formula's target — it speeds up how quickly the body receives and uses it. The destination is set by the other herbs. Cayenne gets you there faster. This is why it appears in so many formulas and why adding it doesn't change what a formula does, only how quickly it works.

Sometimes herbs are equal contributors. Not every formula has a single leader. When several herbs appear in similar amounts all working within the same body system — say, several diuretics in a kidney formula — they are equal partners, each doing slightly different things within that same system to give broader, more complete support.

Formula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel

Introducing: Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
12 formulas

With just three herbs you can address twelve different conditions. As you go through these formulas, pay close attention to how the ratios shift — the same three herbs behave very differently depending on how much of each you use and which one leads. This is the foundation of formula literacy.

Acid · Heartburn · Indigestion

Fennel leads · Catnip & Peppermint support
What This Formula Does

Fennel leads at roughly three times the other herbs — directly targeting the digestive glands and the gas and acid that cause heartburn and indigestion. Catnip in support addresses the nervous component: that tight, anxious feeling that almost always accompanies digestive upset. Peppermint at ratio 1 acts as a secondary digestive support and mild stimulant driver.

Compare this to the Nausea formula where all three are in equal parts. Equal parts is a general digestive calming formula. Here with Fennel at 3, the emphasis shifts specifically to the glandular digestive system and acid. Same herbs — the ratio changes the focus.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed leader — carminative, stomachic, glandular
4g · 16 oz water
Catnip leaf supporter — nervine, anti-spasmodic
1g · } 8 oz water
Peppermint leaf supporter — digestive, stimulant
1g · }
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Weigh each herb separately on a kitchen scale. 2g of herb per cup is the standard. 4 oz of water per gram of herb — so 6g total always uses exactly 24 oz of water. The water is split between vessels based on which herbs go where.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels (a pot and a heatproof container)

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds — back of a spoon, mortar and pestle, or brief blender pulse. Cracking them open, not grinding to powder.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: Place 4g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 16 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer — small steady bubbles, not a rolling boil.
    Steep vessel: Place 1g Catnip and 1g Peppermint together in a separate heatproof container. Pour 8 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly. Leave undisturbed.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped leaf mixture — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Ongoing Support

3 cups per day or as often as you desire.

Acute Episode

One cup as needed — repeat every hour until things settle. Then reduce to 3 cups per day for continued support.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Rootnatural antibiotic, digestive toning, liver supportFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Slippery Elmsoothing coating for the irritated digestive liningFormula Set — Slippery Elm · Lobelia
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Nausea · Morning Sickness

Equal parts — balanced digestive calming
What This Formula Does

All three herbs in equal parts — no single leader. This is a balanced, broad digestive calming formula. Peppermint's anti-emetic property directly addresses the vomiting reflex. Fennel soothes the stomach and addresses the gas and cramping that contribute to nausea. Catnip calms the nervous component through its nervine action.

Notice the contrast with the Acid formula where Fennel leads at 3. That formula emphasizes the glandular digestive system. Here with equal parts, the approach is gentler and broader — useful when nausea is present without a strong digestive or acid component, and particularly useful for morning sickness where gentle is appropriate.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed equal — carminative, stomach soothing
2g · 8 oz water
Catnip leaf equal — nervine, settles digestive nerves
2g · } 16 oz water
Peppermint leaf equal — anti-emetic, stimulant
2g · }
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Equal parts by weight — 2g of each herb. 4 oz water per gram: 8 oz goes with the Fennel to simmer, 16 oz goes over the leaves to steep.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip and 2g Peppermint together in a heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped leaf mixture — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
General Use

One cup every hour until condition improves, then adjust as needed.

Morning Sickness

Prepare a thermos the night before. Keep it at the bedside. Sip a small amount before getting up. Having it warm and ready before you move prevents the rush of nausea that can come with rising too quickly.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Rootdigestive tonic, settles the stomach from the glandular sideFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Slippery Elmdemulcent, soothes and coats an irritated stomach liningFormula Set — Slippery Elm · Lobelia
Hopssedative nervine, calms the nervous component of nauseaFormula Set — Hops · Cleavers
Lavendergentle nervine and carminative — especially calming for nausea with anxietyFormula Set — Lavender
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Colic

Fennel leads — safe for infants · strong carminative action
What This Formula Does

Fennel leads at roughly three times the other herbs — this is a carminative-focused formula addressing the intestinal gas and cramping that cause colic. Catnip and Peppermint in equal supporting roles cover the nervous and spasm components respectively. All three herbs have long, well-established histories of safe use with infants when dosed appropriately. This is one of the most time-tested infant remedies in herbal practice.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed leader — carminative, anti-spasmodic, gas relief
4g · 16 oz water
Catnip leaf supporter — nervine, calming
1g · } 8 oz water
Peppermint leaf supporter — anti-spasmodic, digestive
1g · }
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Fennel leads at 4g. Catnip and Peppermint at 1g each. Water splits with the herb weight — 16 oz to simmer with Fennel, 8 oz over the leaves.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 4g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 16 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 1g Catnip and 1g Peppermint together in a heatproof container. Pour 8 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped leaf mixture — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Adults & Children

½ cup four times per day, or as needed during colic episodes.

Infants

2–3 ounces total per day. Give a dropperful or 1–2 teaspoons as needed during an episode — the pleasant anise flavor is generally well-received. Can sweeten with a small amount of honey for children over 1 year old.

⚠️ Never give honey to infants under 1 year of age.
Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Hopssedative, calms intestinal spasmFormula Set — Hops · Cleavers
Lavendergentle nervine and carminative, especially good for infantsFormula Set — Lavender
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Vomiting

Peppermint alone — direct anti-emetic action
What This Formula Does

A single herb formula — Peppermint working alone through its anti-emetic property to stop vomiting. When the stomach is actively rejecting everything, simplicity is your ally. One herb, one clear action, one preparation method. Peppermint's volatile oils work directly on the stomach and vomiting reflex. This is also an ideal study formula — the simplest possible case. One herb, no ratios, no combination method. Just the steep method done correctly.

Herbs & Ratios
Peppermint leaf single herb — anti-emetic, calming to stomach
6g · 24 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Single herb — all 6g is Peppermint. All 24 oz water goes over the leaves to steep. No simmering needed.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · one pot

  1. Weigh out 6g dried Peppermint leaf.
  2. Place in a pot. Pour 24 oz just-off-the-boil water over the herb. Cover tightly. Do not stir.
  3. Steep covered 20 minutes. Do not lift the lid — every time the lid comes off, volatile oils escape with the steam.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  5. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never boil Peppermint. The medicine is in the volatile oils — boiling drives them off as steam. Just-off-the-boil water is exactly right. Check for a strong minty aroma when you strain — if it's faint, the lid was not tight enough.
Dosing
Dosing

One cup every hour until vomiting stops, then adjust as needed. When vomiting is active — sip slowly in small, frequent amounts rather than drinking a full cup at once. Small sips are better tolerated.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Catnipanti-spasmodic nervine, calms the stomach from the nervous sideFormula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Fennelcarminative, directly settles the stomachFormula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Thyroid

Fennel alone — glandular system tonic
What This Formula Does

Fennel seed alone for thyroid support. Fennel's traditional use for liver, spleen, gallbladder, hormonal function, and brain places it within the glandular system the thyroid is part of. This is your cleanest single-seed example — simmer only, no leaves to complicate things. A good formula to practice getting the simmer right and to observe how a single herb can be the right tool when it truly covers the system you need.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed single herb — glandular, hormonal, stomachic
6g · 24 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Single herb — all 6g is Fennel seed. All 24 oz water simmers with the seeds. No steep vessel needed.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · one pot

  1. Weigh out 6g Fennel seed. Crack the seeds — back of a spoon, mortar and pestle, or brief blender pulse.
  2. Place cracked Fennel in a pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly.
  3. Bring to a gentle simmer over medium heat — small steady bubbles, not a rolling boil. Simmer covered 20 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat. Let rest covered 5 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
Dosing
Dosing

3 cups per day. This is a tonic — you are nourishing and supporting the thyroid system over time, not addressing an acute situation. Consistency of use matters far more than any individual dose. Give it time to work.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Rootglandular tonic, normalizes functionFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Hormones

Fennel alone — endocrine and hormonal support
What This Formula Does

Fennel seed alone targeting the hormonal and endocrine system through its galactagogue, diaphoretic, and traditional hormonal properties. Notice that Thyroid and Hormones use the exact same preparation. They address different aspects of the same glandular system — thyroid is more specific, hormones is broader. The preparation is identical; the intention and consistency of use guide the outcome.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed single herb — galactagogue, hormonal, endocrine
6g · 24 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Identical preparation to the Thyroid formula. Same herb, same amounts, same process.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · one pot

  1. Weigh out 6g Fennel seed. Crack the seeds.
  2. Place in a pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly.
  3. Bring to a gentle simmer. Simmer covered 20 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
Dosing
Dosing

Take as often as you desire. For hormonal support, daily consistent use delivers more value than occasional large doses.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Rootglandular tonic, normalizes hormonal functionFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Sagehormonal support, especially beneficial for womenFormula Set — Comfrey · Sage
Mormon Teastimulant, adrenal and endocrine supportFormula Set — Mormon Tea · Horehound
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Gall Bladder

Fennel alone — liver and biliary support
What This Formula Does

Fennel's direct traditional use for liver, spleen, and gallbladder disorders makes it the appropriate single herb here. The gallbladder is part of the same digestive and glandular cluster that Fennel naturally targets through its stomachic and carminative properties. When more herbs are available, this formula expands considerably — but Fennel alone is a solid, targeted starting point.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed single herb — liver, gallbladder, biliary
6g · 24 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Single herb, simmer only. This batch gives you 3 cups — take ½ cup four times per day. Refrigerate unused portion and use within 2 days.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · one pot

  1. Weigh out 6g Fennel seed. Crack the seeds.
  2. Place in a pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly.
  3. Bring to a gentle simmer. Simmer covered 20 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
Dosing
Dosing

½ cup four times per day. This batch makes 3 cups — take ½ cup four times across the day and refrigerate the remainder. Use within 2 days.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Rootcholagogue, increases bile flow, liver and gallbladder tonicFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Bad Breath

Fennel alone — addressing the source, not masking the symptom
What This Formula Does

Bad breath almost always originates in the digestive system — fermentation, sluggish digestion, or liver and gallbladder imbalance. Fennel addresses the root cause rather than masking the odor. Its carminative and stomachic properties improve digestive function and help clear the fermentation causing the problem from the inside out. This is an important principle to understand: herbs work with the body to correct the underlying problem. When more herbs are available, this formula expands — but Fennel alone is a meaningful start.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed single herb — carminative, stomachic, liver support
6g · 24 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Single herb, simmer only. Take ½ cup four times per day — this batch covers one day. Refrigerate unused portion and use within 2 days.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · one pot

  1. Weigh out 6g Fennel seed. Crack the seeds.
  2. Place in a pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly.
  3. Bring to a gentle simmer. Simmer covered 20 minutes.
  4. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
Dosing
Dosing

½ cup four times per day. Daily consistent use is what corrects the underlying digestive cause over time.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Catnipbile secretion support, digestive nervineFormula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Peppermintantimicrobial, freshens from the inside outFormula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Goldenseal Rootantiseptic, cleans the digestive tract at the sourceFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Slippery Elmcoats and soothes the digestive lining, removes fermentationFormula Set — Slippery Elm · Lobelia
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Appetite

Catnip leads · Fennel supports — digestive toning
What This Formula Does

Here Catnip takes the lead at double the amount of Fennel — notice how different this is from every other formula in this set where Fennel was leading. When Catnip leads, the formula emphasizes the nervous system's relationship to digestion: bile secretion, digestive tone, and the overall nervous-digestive response. Fennel in support adds its stomachic strengthening. Together they stimulate appetite by improving overall digestive function and tone, not by artificially stimulating hunger.

Herbs & Ratios
Catnip leaf leader — bile secretions, digestive nervine, toning
4g · 16 oz water
Fennel seed supporter — stomachic, carminative
2g · 8 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Here Catnip leads at 4g — more water goes with the leaves (16 oz) than with the Fennel seed (8 oz) because the larger portion of herb is in the steep vessel.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 4g Catnip in a heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over it. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped Catnip — herb and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Dosing

3 cups per day. Taking a cup 20–30 minutes before meals is particularly effective for stimulating appetite and preparing the digestive system.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Goldenseal Roottonic to the digestive system, stimulates secretionsFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Sagedigestive tonic, stimulates bile and digestive secretionsFormula Set — Comfrey · Sage
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Digestive Disorder

Equal parts — broad digestive system coverage
What This Formula Does

Equal parts of all three — broad-spectrum digestive support. No leader; all three contributing equally across different aspects of digestive function. Catnip covers the nervous-bile component. Peppermint covers anti-emetic and circulatory stimulation. Fennel covers carminative and stomachic toning. Together they address digestive disorder generally — when the whole system feels off and you are not certain of a specific target. Use this when you want comprehensive digestive support without emphasizing any single aspect.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed equal — carminative, stomachic
2g · 8 oz water
Catnip leaf equal — nervine, bile, digestive tone
2g · } 16 oz water
Peppermint leaf equal — anti-emetic, stimulant
2g · }
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Identical amounts and process to the Nausea formula — equal parts by weight, same two-vessel method.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip and 2g Peppermint together in a heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped leaf mixture — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Dosing

Take as often as you desire. This is a gentle, well-rounded formula — frequent use throughout the day gives the digestive system continuous support.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Comfrey Leafdemulcent, soothes and heals the digestive liningFormula Set — Comfrey · Sage
Goldenseal Roottonic and antiseptic for the entire digestive tractFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Marshmallow Rootdemulcent, soothes inflamed mucous membranesFormula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Slippery Elmcoats, soothes, and nourishes the digestive systemFormula Set — Slippery Elm · Lobelia
Lavendernervine and carminative, calms digestive-nervous connectionFormula Set — Lavender
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

False Labor

Equal parts — anti-spasmodic from three angles
What This Formula Does

Equal parts working together on the same problem — uterine spasm and nervous agitation. This is a good example of herbs being used for a property they all share (anti-spasmodic) rather than for their digestive properties. Catnip calms the nervous component of uterine spasm. Peppermint addresses the muscle spasm directly through its anti-spasmodic action. Fennel contributes its anti-spasmodic and carminative properties from a third angle. Three herbs, same body system, each addressing a slightly different aspect of the same problem.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed equal — anti-spasmodic, carminative
2g · 8 oz water
Catnip leaf equal — anti-spasmodic nervine, calming
2g · } 16 oz water
Peppermint leaf equal — anti-spasmodic, stimulant
2g · }
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

Equal parts by weight — same process as Nausea and Digestive Disorder.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip and 2g Peppermint together in a heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped leaf mixture — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Dosing

One cup every hour until the condition improves, then adjust as needed.

This formula addresses uterine irritability and Braxton Hicks contractions through its anti-spasmodic properties. For any genuine concern about labor or pregnancy complications, consult your healthcare provider.
Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Cayennestimulant driver, speeds the anti-spasmodic action of the other herbsFormula Set — Cayenne
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Hyperactive

Fennel leads · Peppermint supports — nervous system toning
What This Formula Does

Fennel leads at three times the Peppermint — and this is worth paying close attention to because it shows Fennel doing something other than purely digestive work. Fennel's traditional use explicitly includes brain and memory support. That traditional use is what justifies its lead role in a nervous system formula. Peppermint in support contributes circulatory balance and mild anti-spasmodic action. The formula works as a tonic to the nervous system rather than as a sedative — supporting and nourishing the system over time.

Herbs & Ratios
Fennel seed leader — brain, nervous system, memory
4.5g · 18 oz water
Peppermint leaf supporter — circulatory, anti-spasmodic
1.5g · 6 oz water
Batch total: 6g herb · 24 oz water · makes 3 cups

True 3:1 ratio — Fennel at 4.5g leads at exactly three times the Peppermint at 1.5g. Water follows the herb weight: 18 oz simmer with Fennel, 6 oz over the Peppermint.

How to Make It

You need: kitchen scale · cheesecloth · two vessels

  1. Crack the Fennel seeds.
  2. Start both vessels at the same time — set a 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 4.5g cracked Fennel in a small pot with 18 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to a gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 1.5g Peppermint in a heatproof container. Pour 6 oz just-off-the-boil water over it. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour the steeped Peppermint — herb and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, bring briefly to a gentle simmer then turn off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid remaining in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until no more liquid comes out.
  6. Top up to 24 oz (3 cups) with fresh water. Each cup is now a full, accurate dose.
⚠️ Never add the leaves during the initial simmering. Their volatile oils evaporate with heat. They go into their own vessel with hot water — not into the simmering pot until after both have finished.
Dosing
Dosing

3 cups per day. This is a tonic approach to nervous system support — consistent daily use matters more than any single dose. Allow several weeks to assess the effect.

Other Herbs That Also Support This Condition

These herbs are also traditionally used for this condition. As you learn them throughout the course, experiment with adding them to your formula and observe how it changes. There is no single right combination — this is how you develop your own understanding over time.

Catnipanti-spasmodic nervine, calms without sedatingFormula Set — Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Hopssedative nervine, calms the nervous system more deeplyFormula Set — Hops · Cleavers
Traditional Herbal Formulas for This Body System

These are the professional herbal formulas traditionally used to support this body system. They represent years of refinement beyond these starting-point teas — the same herbs, tested and adjusted over decades into more complete formulas.

Formula Set — Cayenne

Introducing: Cayenne · Previously: Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel
Coming soon

Cayenne changes everything. When it joins the formula collection you will understand — in a way the herb class alone can't fully convey — exactly what a stimulant actually does inside a formula, why it appears in nearly every formula you'll ever encounter, and why "just adding cayenne to everything" is both right and wrong depending on how you're thinking about it. These formulas will be added after the Cayenne herb class.

Aches
Cayenne as driver
Bleeding
Cayenne applied direct
Circulation
Cayenne + leaf herbs
Cramps
Fennel + Cayenne
Perspiration
Cayenne in food

Formula Set — Comfrey Leaf · Comfrey Root · Sage

Introducing: Comfrey Leaf · Comfrey Root · Sage · Previously: Peppermint · Catnip · Fennel · Cayenne
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Comfrey Leaf · Comfrey Root · Sage. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~13 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Anemia
Comfrey Root only — simmer in cast iron
Childbirth
Comfrey Leaf + Peppermint
Cleansing
Comfrey Leaf
Constipation
Catnip + Sage
Endurance
Comfrey Leaf + Sage
Fingernails
Comfrey Leaf
Fractures
Comfrey Leaf
Menopause
All four foundation herbs equal parts
Pituitary
Comfrey Leaf alone
Teeth
Comfrey Leaf
Throat
Sage alone
Thrush
Comfrey Leaf + Comfrey Root
Colon
Catnip, Comfrey Leaf, or Sage individually or combined

Formula Set — Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow

Introducing: Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow · Previously: + Comfrey Leaf · Comfrey Root · Sage
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~12 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

After Birth Pain
Comfrey Leaf + Marshmallow + Peppermint
Alcoholism
Fennel or Goldenseal Root
Eyes
Fennel — used as eyewash
Flu
Comfrey Leaf + Goldenseal Root + Sage
Gall Bladder
Fennel + Goldenseal Root — fuller formula
Glaucoma
Fennel 8 + Goldenseal Root 1
Gums
Goldenseal Root — used as mouth rinse
Hypoglycemia
Fennel + Marshmallow equal parts
Jaundice
Fennel 8 + Goldenseal Root 1
Maternity Mask
Fennel
Ulcers
Catnip + Comfrey Leaf + Goldenseal Root + Marshmallow
Warts
Goldenseal Root — used as wash

Formula Set — Red Clover · Burdock

Introducing: Red Clover · Burdock · Previously: + Goldenseal Root · Marshmallow
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Red Clover · Burdock. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~15 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Arteriosclerosis
Red Clover + Cayenne
Blood Poisoning
Burdock + Red Clover
Boils
Burdock + Red Clover
Bruise
Comfrey Leaf + Red Clover
Bug Bites
Red Clover + Marshmallow
Cankers in Mouth
Burdock — used as mouthwash
Dandruff
Burdock + Sage — used as hair rinse
Food Poisoning
Catnip + Goldenseal Root + Red Clover
Hair
Comfrey Leaf + Fennel + Marshmallow + Red Clover
Heart
Red Clover + Cayenne
Hemorrhoids
Burdock — tea and wash
Herpes
Comfrey Leaf + Red Clover
Impotence
Burdock + Comfrey Leaf
Labor
Catnip + Comfrey Leaf + Peppermint + Red Clover
Senility
Comfrey Leaf + Red Clover

Formula Set — Mormon Tea · Horehound

Introducing: Mormon Tea · Horehound · Previously: + Red Clover · Burdock
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Mormon Tea · Horehound. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~11 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Adrenal
Mormon Tea + Sage
Adenoids
Burdock + Comfrey Leaf + Marshmallow + Mormon Tea
Asthma
Comfrey Root + Horehound + Lobelia + Cayenne
Bronchitis
Equal parts — with honey syrup option
Cough
Comfrey Root + Horehound + Sage — with honey syrup
Croup
Comfrey Root + Horehound + Sage + Mormon Tea
Endurance
Comfrey Leaf + Mormon Tea + Sage — all three
Goiter
Comfrey Leaf + Sage + Mormon Tea
Hay Fever
Sage + Mormon Tea + Juniper
Low Blood Pressure
Mormon Tea + Red Clover + Sage
Sinus
Comfrey Leaf + Goldenseal Root + Marshmallow + Mormon Tea

Formula Set — Slippery Elm · Lobelia

Introducing: Slippery Elm · Lobelia · Previously: + Mormon Tea · Horehound
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Slippery Elm · Lobelia. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~12 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Abscesses
Slippery Elm poultice + Lobelia
Colitis
Comfrey Root + Marshmallow + Slippery Elm
Diarrhea
Comfrey Leaf + Marshmallow + Peppermint + Slippery Elm
Emphysema
Comfrey Root + Lobelia + Marshmallow + Sage + Slippery Elm
Female Problems
Slippery Elm + Comfrey Leaf + Goldenseal Root
Mucus
Comfrey Root + Horehound + Lobelia + Marshmallow + Slippery Elm
Obesity
Comfrey Leaf + Fennel
Pain
Catnip + Lobelia + Peppermint
Pneumonia
Comfrey Root + Goldenseal Root + Horehound + Cayenne
Skin
Burdock + Red Clover — fuller formula
Whooping Cough
Comfrey Root + Horehound — with honey syrup
Yeast Infection
Slippery Elm — inserted preparation

Formula Set — Hops · Cleavers

Introducing: Hops · Cleavers · Previously: + Slippery Elm · Lobelia
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Hops · Cleavers. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~11 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Bed Wetting
Marshmallow + Hops + Juniper + Cleavers equal parts
Bladder
Burdock + Cleavers + Juniper + Marshmallow
Blood Pressure
Burdock + Red Clover + Hops + Cleavers equal parts
Diuretic
Cleavers + Comfrey Leaf + Juniper + Marshmallow
Dizziness
Peppermint + Catnip + Hops in any combination
Earache
Hops alone — used as ear rinse
Fractures
Comfrey Leaf + Cleavers — fuller formula
Insomnia
Hops + Catnip + Peppermint equal parts
Migraine
Catnip + Peppermint + Hops
Nerves
Any one or combination of nervine herbs
Vaginal Douche
Comfrey Leaf + Marshmallow

Formula Set — Juniper · Yarrow

Introducing: Juniper · Yarrow · Previously: + Hops · Cleavers
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Juniper · Yarrow. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~11 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Allergies
Comfrey Leaf + Juniper + Mormon Tea
Arthritis
Burdock + Juniper + Comfrey Leaf
Cataracts
Fennel + Marshmallow + Yarrow
Chicken Pox
Peppermint + Yarrow
Colds
Peppermint + Yarrow equal parts
Diabetes
Yarrow alone
Fever
Catnip + Yarrow
Frigidity
Cleavers + Juniper equal parts
Gout
3 or 4 from the list — many options now available
Infection
Burdock + Comfrey Leaf + Juniper
Pregnancy
Comfrey Leaf + Fennel + Red Clover + Yarrow

Formula Set — Lavender

Introducing: Lavender · Previously: + Juniper · Yarrow
Coming soon

This formula set introduces Lavender. The formulas in this set use these new herbs alongside everything learned in previous sets. Approximately ~5 formulas will be added after this herb class is taught.

Colic
Lavender alone — gentlest option for infants
Digestive Disorder
Add Lavender to any 3-herb digestive combination
Emphysema
Adds Lavender to the fuller formula
Migraine
Catnip + Peppermint + Lavender — gentle version
Nerves
Any nervine combination — Lavender adds calming depth

Quick Reference — Find a Formula

Find any formula alphabetically by condition. Each card gives you just what you need at the kitchen counter — ingredients, how to make it, and how much to take. New formulas are added as each formula set is taught.

A B C D F G H N T V All
A

Acid · Heartburn · Indigestion

Catnip · Fennel · Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)4g — simmer in 16 oz cold water
Catnip leaf1g — steep in 8 oz
Peppermint leaf1g — steep in 8 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 4g Fennel in pot with 16 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 1g Catnip + 1g Peppermint in a heatproof container. Pour 8 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 3 cups per day for ongoing support. For an acute episode — 1 cup every hour until settled.

Appetite

Catnip · Fennel
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Catnip leaf4g — steep in 16 oz
Fennel seed (cracked)2g — simmer in 8 oz cold water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g Fennel in pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 4g Catnip in a heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over it. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herb and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 3 cups per day. Especially effective 20–30 minutes before meals.
B

Bad Breath

Fennel
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)6g — simmer in 24 oz cold water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh 6g Fennel seed. Crack just before using.
  2. Place in pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
  3. Simmer covered 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  5. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: ½ cup four times per day. This batch makes 3 cups — take ½ cup four times across the day. Refrigerate remainder, use within 2 days.
Bad breath originates in the digestive system. Fennel works on the source, not the symptom — consistent daily use is what produces results.
C

Colic

Catnip · Fennel · Peppermint · Safe for infants
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)4g — simmer in 16 oz cold water
Catnip leaf1g — steep in 8 oz
Peppermint leaf1g — steep in 8 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 4g Fennel in pot with 16 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 1g Catnip + 1g Peppermint in heatproof container. Pour 8 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat immediately. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Adults: ½ cup four times per day.
Infants: 2–3 oz total per day, given a dropperful at a time. No honey under 1 year of age.
The pleasant anise flavor makes this easy to give to very young infants. All three herbs have well-documented safety for infant use.
D

Digestive Disorder

Catnip · Fennel · Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)2g — simmer in 8 oz cold water
Catnip leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
Peppermint leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g Fennel in pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip + 2g Peppermint in heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: As desired throughout the day. Use when the whole digestive system feels off and no single issue stands out.
F

False Labor

Catnip · Fennel · Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)2g — simmer in 8 oz cold water
Catnip leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
Peppermint leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g Fennel in pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip + 2g Peppermint in heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 1 cup every hour until cramping settles.
For Braxton Hicks and uterine cramping that is not true labor. All three herbs provide anti-spasmodic support from different angles.
G

Gall Bladder

Fennel
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)6g — simmer in 24 oz cold water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh 6g Fennel seed. Crack just before using.
  2. Place in pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
  3. Simmer covered 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  5. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: ½ cup four times per day. Batch makes 3 cups — refrigerate remainder, use within 2 days.
H

Hormones

Fennel
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)6g — simmer in 24 oz cold water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh 6g Fennel seed. Crack just before using.
  2. Place in pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
  3. Simmer covered 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  5. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 3 cups per day. Consistency over time matters more than any single dose for hormonal support.

Hyperactive

Fennel · Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)4.5g — simmer in 18 oz cold water
Peppermint leaf1.5g — steep in 6 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 4.5g Fennel in pot with 18 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 1.5g Peppermint in heatproof container. Pour 6 oz just-off-the-boil water over it. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herb and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 3 cups per day. This is a nervous system tonic — allow several weeks of daily use before evaluating results.
N

Nausea · Morning Sickness

Catnip · Fennel · Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)2g — simmer in 8 oz cold water
Catnip leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
Peppermint leaf2g — steep in 16 oz
How to Make It
  1. Weigh herbs. Crack Fennel seeds just before using.
  2. Both vessels at the same time — 20-minute timer.
    Simmer vessel: 2g Fennel in pot with 8 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
    Steep vessel: 2g Catnip + 2g Peppermint in heatproof container. Pour 16 oz just-off-the-boil water over them. Cover tightly.
  3. After 20 minutes, pour steep vessel — herbs and all liquid — into the Fennel pot.
  4. If cooled, brief return to simmer then off heat. Cover and rest 10 minutes.
  5. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  6. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
General nausea: 1 cup every hour until improved. Small sips are better tolerated than a full cup at once.
Morning sickness: Prepare a thermos the night before. Keep at the bedside. Sip before getting up.
T

Thyroid

Fennel
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Fennel seed (cracked)6g — simmer in 24 oz cold water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh 6g Fennel seed. Crack just before using.
  2. Place in pot with 24 oz cold water. Cover tightly. Bring to gentle simmer.
  3. Simmer covered 20 minutes. Remove from heat. Rest covered 5 minutes.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  5. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 3 cups per day. This is a tonic — results build with consistent daily use, not from a single dose.
V

Vomiting

Peppermint
3-Cup Batch — 6g total herb · 24 oz water
Peppermint leaf6g — steep in 24 oz just-off-the-boil water
How to Make It
  1. Weigh 6g Peppermint leaf.
  2. Place in pot. Pour 24 oz just-off-the-boil water over it. Cover tightly immediately. Do not stir.
  3. Steep covered 20 minutes. Do not lift the lid — volatile oils escape with every lift.
  4. Strain through cheesecloth and squeeze firmly — the liquid in the herb contains medicine. Squeeze until dry.
  5. Top up to 24 oz with fresh water. Each cup is a full accurate dose.
Dosing: 1 cup every hour. Small frequent sips are far better tolerated than a full cup at once.
Never boil Peppermint. When you strain, smell immediately — you should get a strong minty hit. If faint, the lid wasn't tight enough. Remake it.

More Formulas Coming

This quick reference grows as each session is taught. Each new formula set adds more conditions. By the end of all 10 sets this reference will cover 100+ conditions alphabetically — a complete home apothecary lookup in one place.

Family Herbalism Reference Guide · 20-Herb Foundation Course · For educational purposes only

Consult a qualified healthcare provider for serious or persistent health conditions.