Culinary (eaten)
- The fruit of Blackberry (the berries) can be eaten
fresh or juiced. Also used in jams, jellies, pies and other foods.
Infusion (like a tea)
- Pour near-boiling water over the herb and let steep
5-10 minutes. Standard quantities are 30g dried leaves or powdered berries
to 500ml water. The Infusion must be taken same day. It may be sweetened,
but do not add milk. This is the best method for leaves.
Decoction
- Simmer the herb for 15-30 minutes and strain. A Decoction
is the best method for bark and roots. Standard quantities are 75g fresh
or 30g dried herb to 500ml water, reduce by one-third before using. The
Decoction must be used on the same day.
Tincture
- A traditional Blackberry Tincture uses vinegar. Place
clean fresh berries in a non-metallic container. Using a cider vinegar
(unfiltered and unpasteurised is better), cover berries and steep for 3
days, stirring each day, strain and press vinegar from the berries. Measure
the juice, add 450g honey for each 500ml of liquid. Simmer gently for 5
minutes. Revove the top scum, cool, bottle and use. Tinctures store very
well.
- Used for treating Fever
(drink 1 tsp Tincture every hour until fever drops), Arthritis
and Gout (use topically for pain, mix 1 tsp
Tincture in glass of water and drink three times each day to dissolve deposits)
|