The importance of the right alcohol

Two different concentrations, two different results.

Folk tinctures are easy to make but you can fine tune your tincturing technique by choosing the right concentration of alcohol to macerate (soak) your herb in.

Alcohol is a mix of ethanol and water, the percentage you read on the label is the percentage of alcohol in the liquid, the rest is water. That means 40% alcohol is also 60% water. The percentage is called ‘ABV’ or ‘alcohol by volume’. Double the alcohol percentage and you get the ‘proof’. For example, 80 proof is 40% ABV.

When you are making tinctures in your kitchen, you will, probably, be using Vodka which is around the 40% mark. As you know from the above paragraph, that’s 40% alcohol, 60% water. Vodka is a fine solvent. It is easily available and you can get it in the 40-60% range.

Some of a herb’s constituents ae soluble in water, some in alcohol. That makes knowing what is in your herb important when choosing the concentration of alcohol.

Calendula (Calendula officinalis) is a great example of how different concentrations of alcohol can perform differently on the same herb. The colour of the Calendula petals won’t affect the final tincture, they do however affect the colour of the marc. That was taken into consideration for this example and a roughly equal proportion of yellow and orange were used for each test.

In our example for this post, I macerated (soaked in alcohol) two lots of Calendula in different strengths of alcohol – 50% and 95%. The Calendula flowers all came from the same batch, foraged earlier in the day. Both samples were macerated for a month, in the same location (on top of the fridge) They were shaken with the same frequency and roughly the same amount. In other words, they were treated the same.

After a month, both jars were filtered and you can see the results. If you compare the pictures of the marc (the stuff leftover after filtering), you can see that the 50% concentration left the petals with a lot more colour than the 95% did. It’s hard to tell from pics but I can tell you that the 50% were still soft and squishy and clumped together when squeezed. Those that were macerated in the 95% have lost much more colour and were almost dry to the touch, nor would they clump together when squeezed into a ball .

Macerated in 50% alcohol.
Macerated in 95% alcohol.

If you look at the pics of the filtered tincture, you can see that the 95% is a lot darker than the 50% and though I couldn’t get a decent pic of it, it is a little oily.

Left: 50% Right: 95% alcohol.

What could be the reason for this? The constituents that give Calendula flowers their amazing colour and some of their healing ability (they are potent anti-oxidants that benefit blood vessels, especially capillaries) are water soluble or soluble in low concentrations of alcohol.

But if you’ve ever picked a number of Calendula flowers, you will know that your fingers end up sticky and a greenish brown. That’s caused by a resinous material that contains most of Calendula’s healing compounds and resins are only soluble in higher concentrations of alcohol. A little is drawn out from the flower heads by lower concentrations of alcohol but not much.

Do we need to go to 95% ? No, for kitchen herbalists, 40-50% alcohol gets us most of the way to a great healing tincture that is good enough for day to day use.

If you’d like to discover more about the ins and outs of using alcohol as a solvent, check out our A little about alcohol page and our Tincturing pages on this website.



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