With the modern emphasis on reducing amounts of simple
carbohydrates we ingest, it may seem strange to think about the production of
sugar or honey based recipes. Unless you are faced with someone suffering from
diabetes or Syndrome X, there are good reasons for delivering herbal medicines
in a syrup.
Children are much more likely to take their medicine if
they are syrup based (and personally I would much rather give them a small dose
of sugar rather than a mouthful of artificial sweeteners!). Syrups can also be
helpful when you are using very bitter or bad tasting herbs (remembering not to
do this if you are taking a bitter which much be tasted to kick start your
digestive processes.) They can also be fun, allowing you to match flavours and
herbs to suit your mood and physical need.
The production of medicinal syrups has been set out in
great theory and detail on The Herbarium website. If you wish to make syrups from layering sugar and powdered leaves, barks or
petals, it is best to follow the herbarium instructions. They also advocate
producing syrup which has a 2:1 sugar to liquid ratio to prevent decay and
bacterial infiltration of the finished product. If you are producing syrups for
your own use and keep the bottle in the fridge after opening, I use a 1:1 ratio
as this has always worked for me.
My basic syrup recipe comes from Non Shaw and Christopher
Hedley. After you have made your decoction of herbs, you need to evaporate the
resulting liquid by 7/8s over a minimum heat. On my gas cooker, an inch of
liquid evaporates during the course of one hour, so if I’m making a medicinal
syrup from four pints of liquid, it can take a whole day to evaporate leaving
me with the required one eighth. That’s fine if you have sufficient time but if
I’m making syrups and cordials during a workshop which only lasts three hours,
we usually compromise and make a simple cordial which doesn’t require such a
massive volume reduction.
General syrup
recipe from Non Shaw and Christopher Hedley's Herbal Remedies
1 l (2 pints) water
40 g (1 1/2 oz) dried
herb or 100g (4oz) fresh chopped herb
450 g (1 lb) sugar
Put herb in water,
bring to a boil, let simmer 20-30 minutes, strain. Clean out pan, pour liquid
back into it, let sit on minimum heat until you only have 2 dl (7 fl.oz) left.
Add sugar, simmer until sugar has dissolved, pour into jars, label. If making a
syrup with more liquid, the general rule of thumb is add 1lb sugar or honey to
every 1pint of liquid.
When we were making syrups during yesterday’s workshop,
the question was asked, “Which herbs would you not put in a syrup?” It wasn’t
something I’d really thought about before, but apart from the obvious poisonous
herbs, I really couldn’t think of anything I would actively avoid putting in a
syrup.
What I would be wary of is to use herbs which could be
dangerous in high doses. For example, several years ago I experimented with a
Seasonal Affective Disorder (SAD) syrup made from St John’s wort seed tops and
lemon balm with added lemon juice. It tasted wonderful and I was really worried
that anyone with children who might get hold of the syrup could ingest large
quantities which might do them harm. You could argue that this holds true for
any medicinal product and is the reason why one should always be mindful of dosage
and safety where any kind of medicinal product is concerned.
I have to admit, I don’t use most of my syrups in their
concentrated form. I prefer to drink them in a mug of hot water. I find this
the most comforting way to take them as I don’t have a very sweet tooth and a
spoonful of syrup is too sweet and doesn’t last long enough in my mouth to
truly savor.
What I really like about making syrups is the ability to create
something unique for an individual at this moment in time. Yesterday was a
classic example. Judith has been suffering with a lingering tickly cough. It is
irritating especially as she sings in several choirs during the week. She was
going to make a classic cough syrup of hyssop, white horehound and marshmallow.
When I mentioned that Chris has found relief for his coughs with sage and thyme,
she added some of those, proving heat with root ginger and added flavour with
juice and rind of a lemon.
Judith’s cough
syrup
1 handful dried horehound, marshmallow, sage and thyme
½ handful dried hyssop
Fresh orange peel diced.
1” root ginger grated.
2 pints water
Everything was placed in a saucepan, covered with water ,
brought to the boil and simmered with the lid on for 20-30 minutes. It was then
strained and the liquid measured (1.5 UK pints). After cleaning the saucepan,
the liquid was returned and 1lb 8 ozs sugar was added. The mixture was heated
slowly, stirring with a wooden spoon until all the sugar was dissolved. The
syrup was then brought to the boil and poured into sterilised bottles, sealed,
labelled and dated.
Maggie was interested in a mineral rich and fortifying
syrup. She chose to make a nettle and rose petal syrup, to which was added
ashwagandha roots and a small handful of rosehips.
Maggie’s Nettle
and rose syrup
2 large handfuls of dried nettle leaf
1 12oz jar full of dried apothecary’s rose petals
1 small handful of dried ashwagandha roots
1 small handful of rosehips
¼ inch grated
ginger root
2 pints water
Everything was placed in a saucepan, covered with water,
brought to the boil and simmered with the lid on for 20-30 minutes. It was then
strained and the liquid measured (1.25 UK pints). After cleaning the saucepan,
the liquid was returned and 1lb 4ozs sugar was added. The mixture was heated
slowly, stirring with a wooden spoon until all the sugar was dissolved. The
syrup was then brought to the boil and poured into sterilised bottles, sealed,
labelled and dated.
Lorraine was attracted by the bowl of fresh rosehips on
the table. These had been picked on the farm two days previously. She decided
to make a warming rosehip syrup with added ginger and lemon.
Lorraine’s Spiced Rosehip
Syrup
3/4lb fresh rosehips
1” root ginger grated
1 lemon juiced and peel diced.
2 pints water
After placing all the ingredients in a saucepan, they
were blitzed to a pulp using a stick blender before bringing to the boil and
simmering for 30 minutes with the lid on. The contents were then strained
through muslin to remove all the seeds and hairs. 1.25 (UK) pints were returned
to the clean pan together with 1lb 4 ozs of sugar. The mixture was stirred
constantly on a gentle heat until all the sugar dissolved and then was brought
to the boil before pouring into sterilised bottles. The bottles were then
sealed, labelled and dated in the usual way.
Bill and Janey made a spiced apple cordial using the
recipe posted last time. During lunch we drank a rose and lemon balm cordial
which I made during the summer and froze.
Rose and lemon
balm cordial
5-6 strongly scented roses (I used a mixture of
Apothecary’s Rose, William Shakespeare and Gertrude Jekyll)
20 lemon balm stems
4 flowering stems of self-heal
4 lemons
2 lbs of sugar
2 UK pints (20fl oz) of water
Remove the leaves from the lemon balm stems and the
leaves and flower stalks from the self-heal and place in a large bowl. Chop
into small pieces with scissors. Add all the rose petals and mix. Remove the
ends of the lemon and cut into slices. Add these slices to the herbs. Measure
the sugar and cold water and place in a saucepan on the heat. Bring to the boil
stirring all the time with a long wooden spoon. Pour the sugar syrup carefully
into the bowl. Cover with a suitably sized dinner plate so all the plant
material is submerged under the syrup. Place the bowl in a cool larder or
fridge overnight. You will see that the syrup has turned pink by the following
morning. Remove the dinner plate and strain the syrup into a jug. Squeeze the
plant material well to remove as much syrup as possible. If you want to
maximise your syrup, return the squeezed plant matter to the bowl and cover
with cold water. Mix well then strain again and drink. (This should provide
your first taste of the cordial at a suitable strength for imbibing.) Pour your
rose syrup either into sterilized glass bottles or clean plastic bottles and
immediately freeze. The glass bottles should be sealed, labelled and dated and
kept in the fridge once open. Dilute to taste with still or sparkling water.
With recent drops in temperature, it is tempting to think
there is very little produce available to make ourselves something fresh. A
quick walk around our urban environment in the noontime sunshine revealed a
multitude of fresh nettles and a red exuberance of rosehips. There is still
time to forage and make sufficient cordials to keep us through the winter.
8 comments:
Sarah, for the cough syrup, is it a handful each of horehound,marshmallow, sage and thyme ? or is it a handful all together?
Thanks,
Rita
Hi Rita, it can be equal amounts of all three herbs i.e. 1:1:1 but don't put too much hyssop or it can taste quite strong. I'd normally do a handful of each or you can make it with 40g (total) dried herb to 1litre of water and then evaporate the liquid.
Thank you Sarah, will give it a try this week xxxfit
The syrup is ready to poor into my bottles. It smells really good, But I think I overdone a little with the ginger in it, I took a whole one. That was maybe to much, the ginger taste is predominant, I hope that's not bad Sarah.
Have a nice and warm evening xxx
You will need to experiment with how much syrup your body can tolerate because of the extra ginger. I made my father a syrup once and because he is fairly "hot bloodied", the ginger in that syrup gave him night sweats, so he stopped taking it. (He'd only had two tsps!). Let us known how you get on.
Thanks Sarah, I thought, maybe I could prepare the same syrup without ginger and then pour all together and cook it once again. It would give me the double, what do you think ?
If you're going to make another one, just bottle each one separately and add them together when you take them rather than combining before bottling. I'm not sure about cooking the first one up again after you've finished it.
Ok, thaks Sarah.
Enjoy your Sunday xxx
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