Essiac liquid extract is prepared by boiling Turkish rhubarb root, slippery elm bark, burdock root and sheep sorrel and steeping the mixture overnight. The extract takes its name from its inventor, Canadian nurse Rene Caisse. ("Essiac" is "Caisse" spelled backwards.) Caisse used the formula to treat cancer patients, but it can also be drunk for your general well-being. When preparing the extract, distilled water is required to keep the mixture free of impurities, and aluminum utensils cannot be used because the metal can adversely react to the herbs.
Instructions
- 1
Blend all of the herbs together in a large mixing bowl with a long-handled spoon.
2Measure out 1 cup of the herbs.
3Place the remaining herbs in a 16-oz. glass jar with a lid and store them in a dry, dark place for later use.
4Pour two gallons of distilled water into a four-gallon stew pot.
5Put the pot on a stove burner with the heat set on high.
6Bring the water to a rolling boil.
7Put the cup of herbs in the water and put a lid on the pot.
8Boil the herbs on high for 10 minutes.
9Shut off the stove.
10Sit the stew pot on a cold burner and stir the contents with the long-handled spoon to keep them from sticking to the sides of the pot.
11Recover the herbs and let them sit overnight for 10 to 12 hours.
12Reheat the pot until the Essiac extract is steaming, but do not let it boil.
13Shut off the stove and sit the pot on a cold burner for a few minutes.
14Have someone hold a large colander over the top of an empty four-gallon stew pot.
15Pour the Essiac extract into a colander to strain it.
16Sit a funnel in the mouth of a sterilized 16oz glass canning jar.
17Use a ladle to transfer the extract from the stew pot into the glass jar.
18Sit the lid atop the jar but don't secure it.
19Repeat Step 17 and Step 18 until all 16 glass jars are filled.
20Let the jars sit and cool to room temperature
21Screw on the lids to all the jars.
22Store the jars in a dark, cool place.
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