Sunday, July 22, 2018

What's in those compilations?

We've had the three big books for quite a while now.

  In fact, it's getting to be time for another, but we have to work up the energy to put it together and rustle up the cash to print it.  In the meantime, I JUST figured out a way to share the indexes so you can see all the amazing content they hold.
The table of contents just don't do them justice.  To make these books, we completely deconstructed the magazines, then we repositioned all the information, creating meaningful chapters.  Monographs, medicine, teas, bath and body, and food, along with lore and history, make these books really wonderful.  So full of ideas for bringing herbs into your every day around the home.
Without further ado...

#1 Under the Sun
Our first compilation.  5 years (2002-2006) of Spring and Summer issues.
INDEX


#2 By the Hearth
2002 - 2006 Fall and Winter issues
INDEX


#3 Through the Seasons
In this case, we put all of the seasons together into over 400 pages of delight. 2007 -2011
Yes, the years on the cover are incorrect.
INDEX
 
 

They are a great deal.  It's been said that the indexing alone is worth the money - just to be able to find things!  So have a look.  We're sure you'll be needing one, two - or for the very best deal, all three.

Tuesday, July 17, 2018

Mom's Clematis

For 12 years, I've tended the clematis that was my mother's.  She planted it here when she first moved in, and loved the deep, vibrant, violet flowers that climbed up a little lattice. 
Flowers growing outside were a big deal to Mom.  She wasn't good with plants.  We learned never to give her houseplants, and if we gave her bouquets for special occasions, we could be sure to find them perfectly (kind of) preserved, still in their vase weeks later.  She took an interest in plants when she moved up here, and some of her plants remain.  I really dislike "red hot pokers" but can't bring myself to tear them out. There were several things here that she loved, but the clematis was "her color."
 
When I got here, it barely bloomed.  3 or 4 blossoms a year for the last 11 years, and then this year something changed.  It started climbing, and I gave it some ribbon to find its way to the porch railing.  On it went, blooming all the way.  I appreciated every single flower.
As it got closer and closer to the date that the kids were to arrive from California, I told the clematis that they were coming; to hang on. 
It's about time for them to leave.  I went out on the porch for something and saw this one lone flower left.  No more buds, and the petals are barely hanging on.  It did its job.



If you knew how much these kids meant to Mom, you would be right there with me, knowing that the clematis flowers this year are from her, and she too stuck around to be with the kids.  I knew it when one of the petals drifted to the ground while I stood there looking at it.  

I'm not sure if the tears that filled my eyes were about the kids leaving, thinking about how proud she'd be of them, or the whole kit and kaboodle.  Dang flower.

Monday, July 16, 2018

SUBSCRIBER NOTICE!

From the very beginning, we've paid extra postage in order to be informed by the post office if subscribers move.  In order to obtain that benefit, we also had to accept the part where any magazines returned as undeliverable for any reason cost about 2.5X the first class rate.  That is currently $4.02.  The returns always come in after the next mailing goes out, so that means $8.04.  Sometimes situations can bring in a third issue.  Since we profit a good bit less than 50% of the subscription price, I'm sure you can see how this has become untenable, and we have had to cancel subscriptions on occasion.  We can only ship it where it is ordered to go.  That's where our responsibility ends.

With the Sept/Oct issue, we will be ending that benefit.  Subscribers will be responsible for notifying us of a change of address.  If the customer does not receive magazines and we have been shipping to the provided address, we have no further liability.  Sometimes there are errors on our part, and we will gladly accept responsibility if that is the case.

So please.  Let us know when you move and notify us if you don't get a magazine.  Thank you.

Saturday, July 14, 2018

2017 Magazine Index

We decided to put together yearly indexes until we get around to deciding whether to do another compilation, or what we want to do with the now 7 years of magazines that have not been compiled in books like Under the Sun, By the Hearth, or Through the Seasons. An index is helpful in looking for that recipe or article or writer or reference... you get my drift. If you've ever wanted to get some idea what we can fit into the pages of The Essential Herbal, this may be an eye-opener!







Friday, July 13, 2018

Iced Herbal Teas

Favorite iced herbal teas -
Last year we asked reader for favorite herbal teas that held up to being iced. Here is a excerpt from that article:


Ginger and Hibiscus Tea
2 parts ginger
1 part hibiscus
1/2 part cranberries (if you want some extra tart)
honey to taste (for some sweet)

Peppermint and Green Tea
2 parts peppermint
1 part green tea

Dirty Girl (from our local coffee shop Mean Cup)
1/2 c drip coffee
1 T chai concentrate
1/2 c chocolate milk

Chaider (also from Mean Cup)
1/2 c apple cider
1/2 c chai

Molly Sams
*******

I have no real recipe, as I tend to just grab a mix of various mints when making a garden tea. But I was just remembering that if a replica of black tea is desired, both Wood Betony and Red Clover give that base or body to a mix.
Ruth Davis
*******

Wisdom Tea
Mint for wisdom (1/4 cup Peppermint, 1/4 cup Spearmint)
Rosemary to improve the memory (1/4 cup)
Lemon Balm, sometimes called "The Scholars Herb" (1/4 cup)
For each serving of tea, use 1 tsp. mix to 1 cup boiling water. Add some honey, if desired. Store in fridge for a delicious iced tea.
Mary Ellen Wilcox
*******

From Nancy Reppert at www.sweetremembrancestearoom.com
This recipe is from dear old Mom (Bertha Reppert). It is slightly adapted from her booklet Herb Teas for Pleasure.

Lemon Balm Tea
2 T honey, or to taste
10 cloves
20 sprigs of fresh lemon balm
juice of half a lemon
Place above ingredients into a quart container. Pour 2 c. of boiling water over them. Steep 10 minutes or more. Strain. Add 2 c. of iced water. Light and refreshing! Enjoy!
Option: To make a Lemon Balm Spritzer, instead of adding 2 c. of iced water, let strained mixture cool and add a 20 oz. bottle of chilled ginger ale.
**********

Marcy Lautanen Raleigh
I love lemon herbs in tea and these are my favorites.

Chamomile Lemon Iced Tea
Chamomile with its gentle apple flavor when combined with Lemon Herbs makes a great summer iced tea. I use a combo of lemon herbs, like lemongrass, lemon balm, lemon thyme, lemon verbena and lemon scented geranium leaves.
½ C chamomile flowers
2 T lemon herbs
1/3 C raw honey
6 C water
Bring water to boil then add chamomile and lemon herbs. Allow to steep 10 minutes. Strain out herbs and add honey and allow to cool before adding ice and serving.

Lemonade Hibiscus Iced Tea
6 C water
6 t hibiscus flowers, dried
2 lb. strawberries, hulled and halved
¼ C plus 2 T sugar
¼ C plus 2 T fresh lemon juice
¼ C simple syrup
Bring water to boil and steep hibiscus in water for 30 minutes. Remove hibiscus and allow to cool completely. Place strawberries and sugar in a saucepan and warm until they start to break down, about 25 minutes. Run through a sieve and allow juice to collect in the pitcher with hibiscus tea. Try not to press on strawberries or this will cloud the tea. Add lemon juice and simple syrup to pitcher and stir. Cover and refrigerate up to 3 days and serve over ice. This is amazing after a day in the garden! And you can add a dash or two of gin or vodka too if the garden work is done.

Something for everyone!

Thursday, July 12, 2018

Basil and summer are meant to be together.

Nearly 10 years ago, a publisher approached me about a book and asked for one (very small) chapter to take to the Book Fair in Germany to see if it would fly. It didn't. Today I was searching for something, and found the file from that writing sample, and thought I'd share some of it with you.
The mouth-watering aroma and taste in Italian dishes is usually what we associate with basil, but the popular round-leaved, emerald-hued "sweet" basil is just the beginning.  Green Lettuce Leaf or purple "Ruffles" can be mixed into salads with delicious results.

Purple, Opal, or Cinnamon basils make a tasty ruby-red vinegar easily by simply filling a jar loosely with their leaves, and covering for a week with rice wine vinegar.  Strain and bottle for use all during the year.  Lemon and Lime basils are divine with chicken or fish, and the spicy Globe basil is a pleasure for indoor gardeners, growing well on sunny windowsills.  Greek Columnar basil is carefree to grow, as it never bolts or flowers. Thai basil, African Blue basil, Licorice, Holy basil... there are so many to love!

The name of this herb may be derived from the mythical reptilian creature, the basilisk, that was capable of striking one dead with a mere glance.  In superstitious medieval times, it was spurned and dreaded because it was believed that basil plants drew scorpions with their scent and the act of smelling basil would draw the creatures right into the brain. It's not all bad, though! In Italy, basil symbolizes love, and a man may present a would-be lover with a sprig. In the Greek language, basilus means "royal", and is considered by many to be "the king of herbs".  In the language of flowers, basil means "best wishes".  Nowadays, it is one of the most popular herbs in the world.

PESTO is one of the simplest and most elegant of summer meals and the recipe is very forgiving, allowing one to use handfuls to measure.  While the pasta cooks, gather a good handful of fresh basil leaves.  Toss them together with a clove of crushed garlic, a handful of good Parmesan cheese, another handful of walnuts or pine nuts, and enough olive oil to moisten well.  Process to a slightly chunky, green paste.  Serve over piping hot pasta, alone or with shrimp or chicken.  Some crusty bread, a little white wine, and in 15 minutes, you have a luscious culinary masterpiece.  Be sure to make plenty of pesto during the summer and freeze it in meal-sized portions for a delicious green reminder of summer gardens in the dark months of winter.

A cup of basil tea after dinner can be relaxing and beneficial to digestion, relieving bloating and gas.  To each cup, add 2 or 3 basil leaves and cover with boiling water.  Allow to steep 3 to 5 minutes.

Friday, July 06, 2018

After the Berries

From mid to late June until the 4th of July, I pick berries twice a day. My freezer is full of raspberries, blueberries, black currants and gooseberries. I lost (???) my canner, so I'll be on the hunt at yard sales so there will be jelly eventually. There are still some blues, but the birds can have the rest of them. Today I went out there, and it seemed like I was seeing everything else for the first time. Except for the flower garden outside my bedroom window, everything else has been ignored. It was exciting to see, and if you'd like to come along, we can take a little tour.

The birds are possessive about these and set up quite a racket when I walk near.

Right outside the door, the borage is setting off fireworks of its own.

I swear, the echinacea was barely budding last time I saw it.

Baby elderberries are looking good so far.  On the other bush across the yard, beetles have done a number on the leaves, so I'm interested to see how that is going to turn out.  More circulation might mean fewer fruit flies.  Maybe?

Fleabane daisies and chicory cozy up to a little balsam fir in the field.  The fields are filled with masses of these along with drifts of Queen Anne's lace between the trees.  They are mowed periodically, but so pretty.  And they grow back.

Monarda is starting to bloom in the back, but not yet in the front. 

Mountian mint!  Lush and healthy, it's been a couple of years since it took a turn in the still.  We'll remedy that soon.

Oh yeah... the reason I went out was to harvest some nettle seeds.  This patch was a 4" pot 3 years ago.  The bare area in the picture is what I wound up pulling.  Those roots!  Those stings!  What an exciting hour!  Jewelweed grows right next to it and really came to the rescue.  Shorts and t-shirt are a poor choice for this work, by the way.

This is what I pulled, and it isn't quite done yet.  This is a full-sized shower curtain.  Nettle roots are really incredible.  Tenacious... sneaky... strong... I'll have to do this every year.

I was beginning to think the passionflower was not coming back, but low and behold, there it is!  Instead of 100 shoots, I only found 2.  This was a rough winter.  Almost all of the lavender died, and one of the figs.  Guess it was rough for the passionflower, too.

I planted poppies all over the place in all kinds of varieties.  I am completely in love with them.

Finally, I was walking past the raspberry patch and thinking about how this seemed to be one of the years when no St Johns wort would be coming up.  Sometimes there's lots, sometimes there's none. 
I looked up and there was a glimmer of gold off to the right! 
It looks like rest of the summer will be pretty exciting. In the last 12 or 13 years, so many different perennials and "planned weeds" have been added to this plot of land that I don't remember them all, and get pleasant surprises almost every time I walk through the yard!
Here's hoping that you're enjoying the plants in your surroundings too!

Friday, June 29, 2018

A short summer sampler

We've been putting out "mini mag" samplers for over 5 years now, to let you know what we do around here!  So follow the link under the cover shot, and enjoy the articles!  If you like what you see, subscribe HERE


LINK TO THE MINI MAG SAMPLER

Sunday, June 17, 2018

#100 July August 2018

Just out and in the mail!  Pdf subscribers will get them on the 20th.
Start your subscription today at www.esssentialherbal.com


In comparison to the January/February 2002 issue cover...


Here is the current Table of Contents:

Field Notes from the Editor, Tina Sams                            
Cooling Cocktails,
Rebekah Bailey     
Cucumber Cooler
Pot it Up - Container Gardening, Kathy Musser                     
Candied Ginger Root, Marci Tsohonis                                     
Cabbage Salsa,
Marci Tsohonis                                               
Ground Ivy Grimoire,
Kristine Brown     
              
An Herbal Journey,
Debra Sturdevant                                     
Sweet, Beautiful, Invasive Honeysuckle,
Raven McGinnity
Roots (and Leaves) in Music, Miranda Hoodenpyl     
          
Herb and Tea Cocktails, Marcy Lautanen-Raleigh                      
Natives in My Garden,
Barbara Steele                                    
Dorry Norris and Queen Anne’s Lace,
Diane H. Campbell

Dandelion - A Poem, Connie Todd Lila                                        
Time for Rhubarb!
Sandy Michelsen        
Summer Crafts in the Still Room,
Catherine Ann Love     

Herbs of Colonial Times, Rita Richardson
Valerian, Jackie Johnson                                                           
We’ve Had Some Issues,
Tina Sams                                       
Synchronicities,
Maryanne Schwartz     

100th Issue Offers for You!
(Valid in US, July/Aug 2018)
     We would like to thank the following businesses for helping us celebrate our milestone:
Bumbling Acres 
Colorado Aromatics
From Nature With Love
SKS Bottle and Packaging
Herbal Roots Zine
The Rosemary House
Sweetbriar Farms
Garden Delights Herb Farm
Brigid's Way
Missouri Herbs
The Country Artist
Lillian Organics
Bohemian Prairie Alchemist
Elderberry Herb Farm
Nature's Gift
Blessed Maine Herb Farm
The Original Soap Dish
MoonMaid Botanicals
The Stillroom at Pitch Pines
The Backyard Patch
Learning Herbs
Soyphisticated Candles

If you aren't a (print) subscriber, visit the great herb businesses and suppliers in the above list!  If you are, open your magazine to the pages of offers, and click along to use the codes on the offers provided.

Pdf subscribers will be getting a different surprise gift.







Wednesday, May 30, 2018

Because it was there... pine pollen.

 It is tree pollen season here.  Cars turn yellow and we all sneeze and rub our eyes.  Molly is allergic to this as well as corn pollen, so she had a pretty rough time of it here for a few months every year.  Eventually she found that bee pollen really helped.  BUT since it is here now and I've read random bits about it here and there. I decided to try gathering some so that if I decide to try something later, I've got the the powder to work with.
That's how I found out I'm allergic to it too.  Not terribly, but it isn't something I want to work with on a daily basis.  Here's how I did it... 

Looking up at the White Pine tree, there were pollen covered male cones everywhere.I'd read that all one has to do is put it into a bag and shake.  No.  All over me! Hair, clothes, hands... everywhere.

So instead, I cut about a cupful of the bunches and gently dropped them into the bag.
 
To keep the pollen contained, the cones went into a mesh strainer over a bowl, and the whole thing went into a gallon bag with the top (side?) left open so it could dry and continue to mature.

This is about half of what came from the cones.  I emptied it the other day.

Dumped out onto a clear cutting board.

Using a 15X lens so you can see the individual grains of pollen.

Another close-up.  I used a slim knife blade to scrape up the pollen and slide it into a bottle.

All done and happy to get this eye glue out of the kitchen.  About 1/2 ounce of pollen from a cup of cones.  That's more than I expected.  Pretty amazing, really.

So now I have it ready when I've had time and inclination to fool around with it.  Right now there are so many herb medicines showing up and needing attention.  By the time fall rolls around, I'll have a dozen things like this to do.

Monday, May 28, 2018

Is that food herbal?


Which are foods and which are herbs?  Can you tell?
It all depends on what you call an herb.  For me, that would be any useful plant, so...
Mr. Stern, my 5th grade teacher gave us an overnight assignment to list (hah) all of the foods that were not derived from plants*.  Derivation included meat from animals that ate plants or ate animals that ate plants.
I've always felt that herbs and food are deeply intertwined.  We think of them in the culinary sense, but in fact, all plant foods are herbs.  It goes WAY beyond that parsley on the edge of the plate, to realizing that almost everything on the plate is herbal.
What about these herb pastes?
How about some elderberry goodies?
We all know they're medicinal, right? Every ingredient in the recipes are herbs.  Eggs for the pie came from chickens that ate grass and bugs that ate plants.  It's all plants.  It's all herbal.

Broccoli is considered great for arterial health.  Cabbage is practically a medicine chest.  Oats - need I say more?  Carrots for eye support, asparagus or dandelion greens as diuretics to flush us clean... I could go on and on.  Everything we eat is medicine.


I was just in the very beginning stages of a conversation about whether certain herbs might be more beneficial for people whose ancestors lived where they grow.  That made me think about the book that came out in the 90's about losing weight by eating foods specific to your blood type.  We had our shop at the time, so there were several rousing discussions about whether ancestral foods for different blood types (which generally originate in specific areas of the world) make a difference.
It's an interesting concept.

Last week when attempting to order some copies of my Healing Herbs book and finding out it is now out of print (grrrrr....), I went over to grab a couple for myself on Amazon and, being a masochist, read the few negative reviews among the glowing positives.  Because who doesn't love to pick a scab?
 Anyhow, one negative comment was that herbs not included in the book were used in recipes.  Would that be wheat?  Olive oil?  Perhaps they meant the almonds or milk?  Don't get me wrong, I AM being intentionally obtuse here, but we only did chapters on 20 herbs.  I know the reviewer was referring to something like nutmeg or parsley or saffron. But that would have severely limited recipes to only use 20 plants, right?  Smash some raspberries into plantain?  Don't even get me started on the dude who was seriously miffed that rosemary wasn't a chapter, because he wanted to learn about rosemary.  No... don't even bring that guy up.

Sometimes a magazine subscriber will say something like, "more medicinal, fewer recipes."
I get it.  It's just hard to separate the two.  I'll even admit that occasionally the sweets included are meant for tea time, because that's good stuff too.  Besides, there is a lot more to herbs than medicine.
Without question, we try to make sure there's a good blend of everything in the magazine each issue.  I'm making light of it here, but we take every comment seriously.  If it was important enough to mention to us, we listen and do what we can.

*Do you know the answer yet?
Salt

Sunday, May 27, 2018

Know your audience?

This afternoon my sister and I were driving across the county and talking about this and that.  I told her that renewal postcards had gone out, and I'd probably send emails shortly.  She said, "oh yeah, a little nudge, nudge, wink, wink."  We laughed, and I wondered if I could get away with that in the subject line.  Which led to a more serious discussion.
I mentioned that looking back for a long ago post for a project, it was sort of surprising how different my writing was.  Back then I was casual, full of zest, and didn't care quite so much how it came across. In talking about it, I remembered that I USED to pretend to be writing to a good friend.  Someone who would enjoy whatever tidbits or news were written, because we're friends.  It makes it so much easier than worrying about a few hundred people who might consider me a dweeb.  AND by this time, most of you do know me (and Molly... and Maryanne), and the sense of humor around here.  We do goofy stuff sometimes, and we have fun.  Sometimes we make mistakes, and hopefully that keeps you from having to do it too.
For instance, last night I decided to gather some pine pollen to experiment with after noticing the tree in the side yard was loaded.  While shaking the pollen into a bag, it suddenly became apparent that I must have a bit of an allergy. So I'm letting you know.  Be careful the first time. 
The yellow powder was all over my hands, clothing, face, hair, and the only thing to do was jump in the shower.

I've been wondering why it was so hard to write lately.  Writing is kind of my jam.  As a teen, when angst, heartbreak, and awesome new things were every day experiences, I could pour out page after page of feelings, thereby saving anyone from having to deal with *that*.  Eventually it became a pressure release valve, for when things - good or bad - became too large to contain.  Bam!  A few pages, and things started to fall into place and make sense again.  I have written an entire book since my daughter was born, filled with how it felt to feel trapped by a sick little person, the worry of watching her play on the floor while waiting for a biopsy report, how it felt when she graduated, and a million other things.  I still haven't been able to write the part about her moving across the country...

For people who write a lot, it can be hard to express ourselves verbally in the moment.  Molly started writing me notes as soon as she learned to write, and I totally got it.  It's so much easier to sit down, take a few deep breaths, and get it out.  The ability to finish a thought, stay on topic, and erase, refine, and rephrase is so comforting.  It has usually been important in my romantic relationships.  The more intense the relationship, the more frightening it can be to try to explain something.  I have learned though, that it is very important to be with someone who reads.  Heh.

So I'm going to try to get back to it.  I'm not going to compete with the blogs that are run by people who do it for a living, spending days doing set-up and photography.  It's going to be fun again.  Hopefully.  I'm not going to attempt to compete with anyone except myself.  Heck with that!

 Oh, and I'm going to use "Nudge, nudge, wink, wink," for the subject in the email.

See ya later, buddy!

Sunday, May 13, 2018

Readers' Favorite Backyard Remedies

List ArticlePrior to each issue of The Essential Herbal, we used to pose a question to The Essential Herbal Yahoo List (when it was a lot more active than it is now), and ask for ideas, recipes, or crafts dealing with that question.  They were a lot of fun.  This one is from the May/June ’06 issue.
What is the one home remedy that comes from your back yard (or wherever your plants are), that you make every year?


Photo credit:  Lori Stahl

☀️My answer:  Every year, I fill a jar with chopped up plantain, jewelweed and aloe.  They are covered with either vinegar or alcohol (depending on what I have around).  That way we always have something on hand in very early spring - when bug bites and poison ivy are present, but the "remedy plants" aren't up yet.

☀️One of my favorites that seems to come in handy at some point each summer is sage in apple cider vinegar for poison ivy.  Bertha Reppert casually mentioned this one at an herb gathering one spring. That summer, just as the Renaissance Faire began, almost all the actors managed to get poison ivy. As soon as she could, the Queen came to our shop because she could barely walk with poison ivy all over her feet!
We remembered Bertha's instructions to fill a bottle with bruised sage leaves, then pour apple cider vinegar into the bottle until full.  We gave the solution to the Queen the next morning with instructions to dab it on her feet as often as she could.  She was very grateful because it dried up almost overnight and she shared it with the cast.
Maryanne
lancastersoap.com

☀️I always make myself some rose petal vinegar, to use as a sunburn treatment. I use red or pink roses from our garden, and organic, unfiltered apple cider vinegar (it smells and feels better than "regular" vinegar), and just infuse them together until the vinegar is a gorgeous red/pink shade. Then i strain off the roses, and put the vinegar into a beautiful, cut-glass decanter I got years ago at an antique store. I keep it in the bathroom and add a cup or two of the vinegar to my bathwater after I get my first sunburn of the year. I use a bit of lavender body oil after my rose-vinegar bath and my sunburn is practically healed immediately!
Maggie
prairielandherbs.com

☀️So many come to mind, but the one I'm the most anxious for is a green drink made with tender new leaves of mints, chickweed, plantain, calendula, dandelion, etc. whirled in the blender with apple juice or pineapple juice or both.
Drinking this is like pouring pure sunshine (we never can get enough of here in western WA) into your body.  A great tonic packed for of vitamins.  Yum!!!
My second favorite is Calendula flowers, Lavender, Plantain, Chickweed, Comfrey & Lobelia infused in virgin olive oil.  We make several gallons as a base for our very healing salves and to add to our soaps.
This is the hardest topic because there are so many that our family couldn't live without.  Enough Basil Pesto for the winter, gallons of different Herbal Vinegars for flavor & digestion, Echinacea, Oregon Grape, Usnea for tinctures, and, of course, Spearmint, Catnip, Fennel, Peppermint, Lemon Balm, Lemon Verbena, Lemon Thyme for teas.
Kristine
www.herbalmomma.com

☀️I have Yarrow planted, and you can use the leaves for cuts and wounds to aide with disinfecting and bleeding.  I learned this from reading Family Herbal by Rosemary Gladstar! She also suggests that you can take a pinch of dried herb, place in nose when you have a nose bleed.
Gabby

☀️The last several years I have made 2 quarts of echinacea tincture using Echinacea purpura root and 100 proof vodka.  It helps to ward of those pesky colds and flu. Between my friends and family all is used. This year I think I will double my stores.
Collee

☀️My  favorite concoction as well as everyone who tries it is my Comfrey Salve...
We pick leaves, wilt them just a bit in the sun and solar infuse for two to three weeks, strain, and make a salve using a 5:1 ratio of beeswax, add in eucalyptus, rosemary, lavender & peppermint essential oils. My emerald salve heals very fast and is great for poor noses sore from colds, hands that are very chapped and minor skin abrasions. It heals so fast it is amazing.
Deb Sturdevant
thecountryartist.com

☀️For the past 20-25 years I've made an Herbal Salve with Calendula, Comfrey, Plantain and St. Johns Wort harvested from our gardens.  I infuse the fresh herbs in olive oil.  After six-eight weeks I make the salve. I harvest & infuse those herbs on a regular basis throughout the growing season so I have plenty for the entire year. If I have a good crop of Arnica.....I'll use that
also!
Karen Lee Hegre

☀️We like to make nettle soup in the early spring.
Mary Ellen Wilcox
NETTLE SOUP  
Makes 6 servings
3 tablespoons butter
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium onion, peeled coarsely chopped
½ cup uncooked rice
4 quarts stinging nettle tips, loosely packed
2 teaspoons chopped garlic
6 cups chicken broth
1 teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
Wash nettles (wearing rubber gloves) by plunging them into a sink full of water, then lifting them out of the water, leaving any debris behind.
In deep pan over medium-high heat, melt the butter with the olive oil. Stir in the onion and sauté until the onions are soft and just beginning to brown, about 8 minutes. Stir in the rice and cook until the grains are translucent, about one minute.
Add the nettles, the garlic and the broth and bring the soup to a full, rolling boil. Reduce heat to low and simmer until the rice is very tender, about 20 minutes. Transfer the soup in small batches to a blender and purée until smooth. Add the salt and pepper and serve hot.

☀️Ooooh...every spring I can't wait til the mint pops up so I can make this incredibly refreshing skin toner (I call it Minty Orange Julep Face Tonic).
I take about 3 tablespoons of fresh mint leaves (usually peppermint, spearmint and a mint called [what else] Mint Julep and sometimes a little bit of pennyroyal) and cover them with a cup of boiling water and let them sit (covered) until the water has cooled.  In another bowl I put the zest
from an organic orange and cover that with a cup of boiling water, cover the bowl and let it cool.  Then I strain the water off the mint and orange peel, combine the mint water and orange water and, yum yum … mint and citrus toner!  I add about a tablespoon or so of Everclear per 1/2 cup of "tea" and bottle 'er up.  This is the most awesome "wake me up in the morning" skin freshener.  I like to apply it with a cotton ball, but others prefer misting it with a spray bottle.  My friends say they can *feel* it working and
toning their pores.
Barbara Korando
jgecko.com

☀️Here is a summer recipe that is good for all ages.
Sam saponisoaps.com

Watermelon facial refresher
2 Tbsp. watermelon juice
1 Tbsp. vodka
2 Tbsp. water
2 Tbsp. witch hazel
Make sure that you don’t have any seeds in the watermelon juice.
Combine all ingredients and stir well.
Pour into an air tight container
To use: apply to face with cotton balls. Store in the refrigerator.

And here is one to keep the bugs away!
Bugs away!
1 tsp. citronella essential oil
2 cups witch hazel
3 tsp. apple cider vinegar
Mix together well. Pour into a spray bottle. Apply to exposed skin liberally.
(does not need to be kept in the refrigerator)

☀️Well, as you might guess from my frequent allusions to it, the most useful herb in my garden is feverfew. Although I've tinctured it, I prefer to eat the fresh leaves when I have a migraine.
Feverfew tastes nasty, so I roll up the leaf and pour salt on it before I pop it into my mouth. Like salting a radish, that takes away the intense bitter flavor.
If the headache is especially bad, I'll eat two leaves. Within the half hour, I usually realize I'm feeling well again.
Feverfew is quite hardy. It's a great fresh remedy from March through December. After that, I use the tincture or drink feverfew tea.
Geri         
ny-attitude.com

☀️I have been mulling this over, this last year has really been the first year I grew any of my own herbs.  But the one I appreciated the most was my calendula.  Those little darlings would bloom, and I would pick the blooms off, then they would grow and bloom again!  I infused them in olive oil, which is used in almost all my products.  The next best thing was my mints, everyone enjoyed either picking them fresh and eating or making heavenly iced tea, which believe me, is a quick remedy, on hot Oklahoma days!
Pam            
healingherbals.org

☀️We always have to make lavender vodka--it is antibacterial, antiviral, and antifungal. We use for injuries, used it to disinfect all sorts of things and it smells so much better than Lysol.  It prevents infections and even will cure athlete's foot...once you have it, you will find many uses for it.
GreenMaggie
Greenspirit Nursery,   N Idaho