Archives for October 2014

How To Prepare Chaga Tea and Tincture

How To Prepare Chaga
As you will read in our Chaga Antioxidants and Key Ingredients and Chaga Health Benefits posts, chaga contains many healthy bioactive ingredients that can improve our overall health. But how do we prepare chaga to get the most from it and extract and consume all these healthy ingredients? This post explains how to prepare chaga by covering the two main preparation/extraction methods and a delicious recipe for each one.

Before you get started, you will obviously need some chaga to begin with! If you plan on buying some, please click here to check out our Buying Guide. Or, if you plan on harvesting your own, please check out our Harvest Guide.

Why Do We Need To Prepare Chaga?

Locked inside the cell walls of chaga are all the healthy bioactive ingredients, such as the beta-glucans. These cell walls are made of chitin, which is the hardest all-natural material known to man and, therefore, indigestible without proper preparation. This means that an extraction process is required in order to release these bioactive ingredients and to prepare chaga for human consumption.

What Are The Extraction Methods?

There are two main methods to prepare chaga at home, each having its own pros & cons.

1. Hot Water Extraction: Chaga Tea

Hot water extraction is the most common, easiest and cheapest method to prepare chaga. It’s similar to the traditional tea-making process, whereby the chaga chunks or powder are steeped in hot water for a period of time, strained and then drunk as a tea.


When using this method, all the water-soluble components, such as the polyphenols and beta-glucans, will be present in the resulting extract. However, water-insoluble components, such as phytosterols, and betulinic acid will be missing. Although I love drinking a good chaga tea, and it’s still very healthy, missing out on these healthy bioactive ingredients is a big loss.

2. Double Extraction: Chaga Tincture

Another way to prepare chaga is by making a tincture. A tincture is an alcoholic derivative of a plant, mushroom or herb. Tinctures are more effective in extracting the medicinal components and preserving them for longer periods of time. Tinctures are also useful because they're simple to use, quickly absorbed, and easily added to recipes, drinks, etc.

A tincture uses alcohol extraction method. This method extracts some of the water-insoluble components, such as betulinic acid, and phytosterols that the hot water extraction alone cannot do. This extraction process is generally used in combination with hot-water extraction since alcohol alone will not break down chitin effectively.

Chaga Recipes

Cleaning and Drying

Before we can begin any Chaga recipe, raw unprocessed Chaga must first have any parts of the tree bark removed. It then needs to be chopped into smaller chunks and dried. It can then be left as chunks or ground into a powder, depending on how you want to use it. If you're buying processed Chaga from a reputable supplier, this part is most likely taken care of.

Note: If like me, you do not have time for the recipes below first thing in the morning or late at night, a great quick alternative is to purchase Chaga Elixir from Four Sigmatic. You simply open the packet, mix the contents with some hot water and that's it! To check it out, please click here.

Simple Chaga Tea Recipe

prepare chaga

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Break up the chaga into smaller chunks, roughly 1 inch in size.
  2. In a 1 litre pot of water, drop in a handful of chunks and bring to a boil. Let them simmer until the water turns a reddish brown color, or, at least, an hour to extract more of the bioactive ingredients.
  3. Strain the tea into a mug and add some maple syrup or honey to taste.

You can reuse the chaga chunks several times before they start to lose their strength. Simply put them in a mason jar without a lid, and store in the fridge.

Chaga Tincture Recipe

tincture

Ingredients

  • Sayan Chaga Chunks. Use enough to almost fill a one-gallon jar after it's ground into a powder.
  • At least 100 proof vodka, but the stronger the better!

Instructions

The recipe below combines both the alcohol (part 1) and hot water (part 2) extraction methods and requires a lot of patience. Note that this recipe is based upon a 1-gallon size jar of tincture. However, any size jar will do, just try to keep the ratio of chaga to alcohol the same. However, given that it take so long to make, it makes sense to make it in large batches.

Part 1 - Preparing the Chaga and Alcohol Extraction

  1. Break up the chaga into smaller chunks, roughly 1 inch in size.
  2. Grind the pieces into a powder. You can use a coffee/spice grinder or a good blender to do this.
  3. Almost fill a 1-gallon glass jar with the chaga powder, BUT leave close to 2 inches of room at the top.
  4. Fill up the rest of the jar with vodka.
  5. Let it sit for at least 8 weeks and shake the jar every day.

Part 2 - Hot Water Extraction

  1. After at least 8 weeks, strain out the alcohol into another glass jar using a cheesecloth.
  2. Put the chaga into a clay pot.
  3. Measure an amount of water equal to alcohol that was strained in step 1.
  4. Pour the water into the pot of chaga and then use a wooden chopstick to measure the water level. Use a sharp knife to mark the exact water level on the chopstick. This is where you want the final water level to be after the decoction is complete. Fill the pot with twice that amount of water.
  5. Bring the pot to boil and let it simmer on low heat.
  6. Keep checking the water level with the chopstick. When the water level is the same or less than the mark on the chopstick, take it off the heat and let it cool.
  7. The next day, add more water and do another decoction. Repeat for a total of three decoctions.
  8. Once the third decoction is finished, let it cool. Then mix the decoction with the alcohol saved from earlier and store in a glass jar.
  9. That's it, you now have a Chaga Tincture! Note: 1tsp is enough to add to a single 8oz drink.

For more recipe ideas on how to prepare chaga, click the button below to receive your FREE Chaga Recipes eBook.

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Where to Buy Chaga

buy chaga
There are many products and suppliers where you can buy Chaga from today, so the choice can become overwhelming. The aim of this guide is to help you buy chaga products that fit your needs and budget. There are three main product groups when it comes to chaga for sale; Dual Extract (either in capsule, tablet or powder form), Raw Powder/Tea Bags and Dried Chunks. Let's go through each group so that you can make better decisions when you buy chaga products online:

Chaga Product Groups

The three main chaga product groups are described below.

Extract

The major advantage of Chaga Extract over other forms of chaga is that you receive all the healthy benefits of BOTH the water-soluble AND non-water soluble bioactive ingredients. With Raw Powder/Tea Bags and Dried Chunks, you can only get the water-soluble ingredients.

Here you should be looking for a genuine dual extract, either in its powder, capsule or tablet form.Dual extract is based upon the double extraction method, which extracts both the water-soluble and non-water-soluble bioactive ingredients of chaga. For this reason, you will notice that genuine dual extract is much more expensive than raw/unprocessed chaga, due to the sophisticated methods required to extract all of the bioactive ingredients. For more information about dual extracts, check out our guide to Chaga Supplements.

The double extraction method typically uses high temperatures combined with high pressure and hot ethanol to extract the bioactive ingredients. This method extracts the non-water-soluble bioactive ingredients, such as betulinic acid and phytosterols that hot water extraction (e.g. chaga tea) alone cannot do. For more information about chaga's key ingredients, check out our Chaga Antioxidants and Key Ingredients post.

One key metric in determining the antioxidant potency of the chaga is by looking at the ORAC score. See ORAC note at the bottom of this post for more details.

Raw Powder/Tea Bags

Chaga powder is simply chunks ground down, and in some cases with extra ingredients added such as birch bark and oregano. The powder can be used to make chaga tea (via loose tea or tea bags) or a tincture. See our How to Prepare Chaga or Chaga Recipes posts for more info.

Dried Chunks

Chunks are just raw harvested chaga broken into chunks and then dried. Dried chunks can be used to make chaga tea or a tincture.

Where to buy Chaga: Top 3 Products

Our favorite chaga products for you to compare are detailed below:

1. ORIVeDA Chaga Extract Capsules

Although it appears expensive to buy chaga extracts, Oriveda offers the most potent dual extract on the market. The therapeutic potency is three times higher than its competitors and is the only certified chaga extract (ISO 9001:2008; cGMP, HACCP) with guaranteed levels of bioactive ingredients. This ensures therapeutic effectiveness and safety of use.


Click Here to find more info on Oriveda.com

2. Four Sigmatic Chaga Mushroom Elixir

Tea bags for making quick & easy chaga tea for when you don't have time for steeping raw chunks or grinding them into powder. There are plenty of chaga tea brands out there, but we find these guys to be the best.

Click Here to find more info on us.foursigmatic.com

3. Sayan Raw Chaga Chunks

High quality dried chaga chunks. Great for making chaga tea or tincture, but as with all raw chunks, they require at least an hour to steep if you want to extract all of the water soluble ingredients.

Click Here to See Pricing, Ratings, and Reviews on Amazon.com

Comparison Table

BrandProductHarvested fromQuantity (oz)Price (US$)Cost per oz (US$)ORACReview (out of 5 stars)
ORIVeDAChaga Extract Capsules (300mg X 180)Siberia, Russia1.9$69.95$38.82110,000 - 150,000 TEunits/100 gram5
Four SigmaticChaga Elixir, 20 Count (0.053 oz per bag)Siberia, Russia1.06$35$33.024.7
SayanChaga ChunksSiberia, Russia8$27.98$3.504.7

How The List Was Chosen

The list and table above were designed to help you buy chaga products that offer the best value for money. With that goal in mind, we have compiled our top 3 chaga products (one for each type) and listed them in order of preference, along with customer reviews. We also listed all the key details you should be aware of when you buy chaga products, namely; Quantity, Cost and Quality (reviews and ORAC rating if available). When looking to buy chaga products, especially extracts, remember to review the supplements facts label as this provides the true value of the product when compared with the price and quantity.
Note that we've expressed the quantity in ounces even when the product lists its number of capsules instead of weight. Here we've just multiplied the number of capsules by the mg per capsule and then converted it to ounces.

Note About ORAC

When you're looking to buy chaga extract, one of the most important values to understand is the ORAC (Oxygen Radical Absorbent Capacity) score. This is the antioxidant potency of the chaga. The ORAC-score depends on where the chaga was harvested, the conditions where it grew and how it has been processed (the extraction method employed). As the antioxidant level is very important, you must take this value into consideration when comparing chaga products. For example, it may seem like one product has more value than another until you factor in the ORAC score. Chaga extract, especially high quality genuine dual extract, has a much higher ORAC score than chaga tea (chaga that’s just been processed using the hot water extraction method).
Many suppliers don't provide this score because it's expensive to test and/or their score is much lower than their competitors. Oriveda does a great job here, detailing the exact numbers from verified lab tests. Then even provide a Certificate of Analysis (COA) if you ask them for it!

For recipe ideas on how to prepare chaga, click the button below to receive your FREE Chaga Recipes eBook.

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