Detailed profiles of key herbs forming foundation of home herbal practice.
Introduction
A materia medica is a compendium of medicinal substances—in herbalism, detailed profiles of individual plants. This chapter provides comprehensive monographs for essential herbs, covering identification, chemical constituents, therapeutic actions, clinical applications, preparation methods, dosage guidelines, and safety considerations.
These profiles represent herbs meeting multiple criteria: widespread availability, strong safety profile, versatile applications, and substantial traditional and/or scientific validation. Master these plants before expanding to more specialized or challenging species.
Each profile follows standard format facilitating quick reference whilst providing depth for serious study.
CALENDULA (Calendula officinalis) – Pot Marigold
Family: Asteraceae (Daisy/Sunflower)
Parts Used: Flower heads (whole)
Identification
Annual or short-lived perennial, 30-60cm tall. Leaves alternate, simple, lance-shaped to oblong, slightly hairy, light green. Flowers bright orange to yellow, daisy-like, 4-7cm diameter, with multiple ray petals surrounding central disc. Blooms prolifically spring through autumn. Entire plant slightly sticky-resinous to touch with distinctive, slightly pungent smell.
Habitat: Gardens primarily (cultivated). Occasionally naturalized in temperate regions.
Harvest: Flowers just after opening, morning after dew dried. Peak medicinal potency early in flowering cycle.
Constituents
Triterpene saponins, flavonoids (quercetin, isorhamnetin), carotenoids (responsible for orange color), volatile oils, bitter principle, resin, mucilage.
Actions
Primary: Vulnerary (wound healing), anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial (bacteria and fungi), lymphatic stimulant.
Secondary: Mild antispasmodic, emmenagogue (promotes menstruation), cholagogue (stimulates bile).
Traditional and Clinical Uses
External:
- Wound healing: Cuts, scrapes, surgical wounds (promotes granulation, reduces scarring)
- Burns and sunburn: Cooling, promotes healing
- Skin inflammation: Eczema, rashes, dermatitis
- Fungal infections: Athlete’s foot, ringworm, candida (topical)
- Varicose veins and hemorrhoids: Anti-inflammatory action
- Lymphatic congestion: Swollen nodes, post-infection recovery
Internal:
- Oral health: Gingivitis, mouth ulcers (mouthwash/gargle)
- Digestive inflammation: Gastritis, ulcers
- Menstrual regulation: Delayed or scanty periods
- Lymphatic support: Chronic infections, swollen glands
Preparation and Dosage
Infused Oil (for salves, topical application): Fill jar with dried flowers, cover completely with olive oil. Hot method: gentle heat 2-4 hours. Cold method: sunny window 4-6 weeks. Strain. Apply freely to affected areas.
Salve: Combine calendula-infused oil with beeswax (1:4 ratio wax to oil). Melt together, pour into tins. Apply 2-4 times daily to wounds, rashes, inflammation.
Wash/Compress: Strong infusion (2 tablespoons dried flowers per cup water, steep 15 minutes covered). Use as wound wash, compress for inflammation, or gargle for mouth issues.
Tincture (internal use): Fresh flowers in 40% alcohol or dried in 60% alcohol, 1:5 ratio. Steep 4-6 weeks. Dose: 30-60 drops (1-2ml) three times daily.
Tea: 1-2 teaspoons dried flowers per cup, steep 10-15 minutes covered. Drink 2-3 cups daily for internal applications.
Safety and Contraindications
Generally very safe with extensive use history. Rare allergic reactions possible (Asteraceae family sensitivity—cross-reactivity with ragweed, chrysanthemums). Avoid internal use during pregnancy (emmenagogue properties). No known drug interactions. External use safe during pregnancy and for children.
CHAMOMILE (Matricaria chamomilla) – German Chamomile
Family: Asteraceae
Parts Used: Flower heads
Identification
Annual, 15-60cm tall. Stems branched, erect, smooth. Leaves finely divided (feather-like), alternate. Flowers small (1-2cm), white ray petals surrounding yellow disc, distinctive apple-like scent. Key identification: Receptacle (center) hollow when cut lengthwise (distinguishes from similar species). Blooms late spring through summer.
Habitat: Cultivated gardens, disturbed soil, occasionally naturalized in fields and roadsides.
Similar species: Roman chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile)—perennial, solid receptacle, similar uses.
Constituents
Volatile oils (α-bisabolol, chamazulene, farnesene), flavonoids (apigenin), coumarins, mucilage, bitter principles.
Actions
Primary: Anti-inflammatory, antispasmodic (relaxes smooth muscle), nervine (nervous system support), carminative (relieves gas).
Secondary: Mild sedative, vulnerary (wound healing), antimicrobial, gentle bitter tonic.
Traditional and Clinical Uses
Digestive System:
- Indigestion, gas, bloating: Antispasmodic and carminative actions
- Inflammatory bowel conditions: Soothes mucous membranes
- Nausea: Gentle settling effect
- Children’s colic: Traditional remedy (weak tea, small amounts)
Nervous System:
- Anxiety and stress: Calming without sedation
- Insomnia: Promotes relaxation and sleep (especially stress-related)
- Tension headaches: Combined with relaxation
Skin:
- Inflammation: Eczema, psoriasis, rashes (compress, bath, cream)
- Wound healing: Antimicrobial and vulnerary (wash, compress)
- Eye inflammation: Conjunctivitis (cooled strong tea as eyewash)
Other:
- Menstrual cramps: Antispasmodic effect
- Teething children: Cooled strong tea to gums (traditional)
Preparation and Dosage
Tea (most common form): 1-2 teaspoons dried flowers per cup boiling water. Critical: Cover during steep (10 minutes) to trap volatile oils. Drink 1-4 cups daily as needed. For sleep: 1 cup 30-60 minutes before bed.
Tincture: Fresh flowers in 40% alcohol or dried in 60% alcohol. Dose: 2-4ml (40-80 drops) three times daily.
Compress/Bath: Strong tea (double or triple strength) applied to affected skin areas or added to bathwater for whole-body anti-inflammatory effect.
Essential Oil (steam distilled): Topical use only (diluted in carrier oil). 2-3 drops per tablespoon carrier oil. Anti-inflammatory massage, skin care.
Children’s Dosage: Weak tea (1/2 teaspoon per cup), small amounts (30-60ml). Generally safe for children over 6 months in appropriate doses.
Safety and Contraindications
Excellent safety profile with centuries of use including for children. Rare allergic reactions (Asteraceae family). Avoid if allergic to ragweed, chrysanthemums, or related plants. Very weak emmenagogue—generally considered safe in pregnancy in normal food/tea amounts (avoid therapeutic doses). No significant drug interactions.
ECHINACEA (Echinacea purpurea, E. angustifolia) – Purple Coneflower
Family: Asteraceae
Parts Used: Root (primarily), aerial parts (flowers, leaves)
Identification
Perennial, 60-120cm tall. Leaves lance-shaped, rough-textured, toothed edges, hairy. Flowers distinctive: purple-pink ray petals (drooping) surrounding prominent orange-brown spiky cone center. Blooms summer to early autumn. Taproot thick, dark brown externally.
Habitat: Native to North American prairies. Widely cultivated in gardens.
Species notes: E. purpurea (most commonly grown), E. angustifolia (traditional medicinal, more potent but harder to cultivate), E. pallida (less common medicinal use).
Constituents
Alkamides (tingling sensation on tongue—quality indicator), polysaccharides, glycoproteins, volatile oils, flavonoids, caffeic acid derivatives (echinacoside in some species).
Actions
Primary: Immune stimulant, antimicrobial (bacteria, viruses, fungi), lymphatic, anti-inflammatory.
Secondary: Vulnerary (wound healing topically), sialagogue (stimulates saliva—alkamides).
Traditional and Clinical Uses
Immune Support:
- Acute infections: Cold, flu, respiratory infections (at first symptoms)
- Wound infections: Topical application promotes healing, prevents/treats infection
- Recurrent infections: Short-term courses to boost immune response
Upper Respiratory:
- Sore throat: Anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial
- Sinusitis: Reduces inflammation, fights infection
- Bronchitis: Supportive care
Lymphatic System:
- Swollen lymph nodes: Stimulates drainage
- Tonsillitis: Reduces inflammation and infection
External:
- Minor wounds: Antiseptic wash
- Insect bites: Anti-inflammatory
Preparation and Dosage
Tincture (most effective preparation): Fresh root in 70-80% alcohol, 1:2 ratio (or dried root 1:5 in 60% alcohol). Steep minimum 4 weeks, ideally 6-8 weeks.
Dosage:
- Acute infection: 30-60 drops (1.5-3ml) every 2 hours while awake (up to 6-8 times daily) for first 2-3 days, then 3-4 times daily until symptoms resolve
- Preventive (short courses): 30 drops three times daily for 7-10 days, then break
Decoction (root): 1 tablespoon dried root per cup water. Simmer 15-20 minutes. Strain. Drink 1 cup 3-4 times daily during acute illness.
Tea (aerial parts – less potent): 2 teaspoons dried herb per cup. Steep 15 minutes. Drink 3-4 cups daily.
Quality test: Tincture should cause tingling sensation on tongue (alkamides present). If no tingle, quality questionable.
Safety and Contraindications
Contraindications:
- Autoimmune conditions: Theoretically could stimulate already overactive immune system (lupus, MS, rheumatoid arthritis)—controversial but cautious approach warranted
- Allergies: Asteraceae family sensitivity
Use Pattern: NOT for long-term continuous use. Use in short courses (7-10 days maximum, up to 2 weeks for acute illness). Repeated courses acceptable with breaks between. Long-term continuous use may reduce effectiveness and theoretically burden immune system.
Generally safe for short-term use. Minimal side effects reported. Pregnancy/breastfeeding: Avoid due to insufficient safety data (traditional use suggests safety but modern caution). No known drug interactions of significance.
GINGER (Zingiber officinale)
Family: Zingiberaceae
Parts Used: Rhizome (underground stem, commonly called “root”)
Identification
Rhizome knobby, tan to light brown externally, yellow to buff colored internally with fibrous texture. Fresh rhizome firm, aromatic when cut. Distinctive warm, spicy, pungent smell and taste. Commercially available in most groceries (fresh, dried, powdered). Growing plant has reed-like stems with narrow leaves.
Habitat: Tropical Asia origin. Cannot survive frost. Grows as perennial in tropical/subtropical climates.
Constituents
Volatile oils (zingiberene, bisabolene), oleoresin (gingerols—pungent principles; shogaols in dried ginger—more heating), starches.
Actions
Primary: Antiemetic (prevents nausea/vomiting), anti-inflammatory, circulatory stimulant, diaphoretic (promotes sweating), carminative.
Secondary: Antimicrobial, antispasmodic, expectorant.
Traditional and Clinical Uses
Digestive System:
- Nausea: Motion sickness, morning sickness, post-operative nausea, chemotherapy-induced nausea—well-researched, effective
- Poor digestion: Stimulates digestive secretions and motility
- Gas and bloating: Carminative action
- Loss of appetite: Warming, stimulating
Circulatory System:
- Poor circulation: Warming, stimulating blood flow to periphery
- Raynaud’s phenomenon: Improves peripheral circulation
- Cardiovascular support: Anti-inflammatory, may reduce cholesterol/clotting (research ongoing)
Musculoskeletal:
- Arthritis and joint pain: Anti-inflammatory (comparable to NSAIDs in some studies)
- Muscle soreness: Post-exercise recovery
Respiratory:
- Colds and flu: Diaphoretic (promotes fever, speeds recovery), antimicrobial
- Congestion: Warming, helps expectoration
Menstrual:
- Menstrual cramps: Antispasmodic, anti-inflammatory
- Scanty periods: Warming, stimulating (emmenagogue)
Preparation and Dosage
Fresh Root Tea: Grate or thinly slice 1-2 teaspoons fresh ginger per cup water. Simmer gently 10-15 minutes. Strain. Drink 1-3 cups daily. Add honey and lemon for colds/flu.
Dried/Powdered: 1/2 teaspoon powder in tea or food. Capsules: 1-2g daily in divided doses (standardized extracts available).
Tincture: Fresh root in 70% alcohol, 1:2 ratio. Dose: 30-60 drops (1.5-3ml) three times daily.
Culinary: Freely use fresh or dried ginger in cooking—therapeutic at culinary doses.
Candied/Crystallized: Ginger slices cooked in sugar syrup. Pleasant way to take ginger, especially for nausea. Commercial products widely available.
For Nausea Specifically:
- Start with small amounts (1/2 cup weak tea or small piece candied ginger)
- Can repeat every 30-60 minutes as needed
- Most effective if taken at first sign of nausea
Safety and Contraindications
Generally very safe with extensive culinary and medicinal use. Safe in pregnancy for nausea (moderate amounts—1-2g daily). May increase menstrual flow slightly.
Cautions:
- Blood thinning: Ginger has mild anticoagulant effect. Avoid very large doses with warfarin or other blood thinners. Stop therapeutic doses 1-2 weeks before surgery.
- Gallstones: Stimulates bile—may trigger gallbladder attack in people with stones (rare)
- Heartburn: Some people experience increased heartburn with ginger (uncommon)
Drug interactions minimal at normal doses. At very high therapeutic doses (>4g daily), monitor with anticoagulants and diabetes medications (may affect blood sugar).
NETTLE (Urtica dioica) – Stinging Nettle
Family: Urticaceae
Parts Used: Leaf, root, seed (different therapeutic uses)
Identification
Perennial, 1-2m tall. Stems square, erect, covered with stinging hairs. Leaves opposite, heart-shaped with toothed margins, also covered with stinging hairs. Small greenish flowers in drooping clusters. Spreads by rhizomes, forming dense patches.
Stinging hairs: Contain histamine, formic acid, acetylcholine—cause immediate burning sensation on skin contact. Sting neutralized by cooking, drying, or crushing (breaking hair tips).
Habitat: Disturbed soils, rich in nitrogen. Edges of cultivation, stream banks, woodlands. Widespread in temperate regions Europe and North America.
Constituents
Leaf: Chlorophyll, vitamins (A, C, K), minerals (iron, calcium, magnesium, potassium, silica), flavonoids, histamine.
Root: Lectins, polysaccharides, lignans, sterols.
Actions
Leaf:
- Nutritive tonic (high minerals/vitamins)
- Anti-allergenic (paradoxically, despite containing histamine—freeze-dried leaf most effective for allergies)
- Diuretic
- Anti-inflammatory
- Galactagogue (increases breast milk)
Root:
- Anti-inflammatory (different mechanism than leaf)
- Affects hormones (5-alpha-reductase inhibitor—reduces DHT)
- Prostate health
Traditional and Clinical Uses
Leaf:
- Seasonal allergies: Hay fever, allergic rhinitis (freeze-dried capsules most researched form)
- Arthritis: Anti-inflammatory, mineral support
- Anemia: High iron and vitamin C (enhances absorption)
- Nutritive tonic: General health, pregnancy/breastfeeding, convalescence
- Urinary tract: Gentle diuretic, traditional for UTIs
- Eczema: Internal use may reduce inflammation
Root:
- Benign prostatic hyperplasia (BPH): Reduces symptoms, improves urinary flow (well-researched)
- Hair loss: May reduce DHT (research preliminary)
Seed (less common use):
- Kidney tonic
- Energy and vitality
Preparation and Dosage
Nourishing Infusion (leaf – optimal for mineral extraction): 1 cup (30g) dried leaf per litre water. Pour boiling water over herb in jar, cap tightly, steep 4 hours to overnight. Strain. Drink 2-4 cups daily. Refrigerate unused portion (lasts 2-3 days).
Standard Tea: 1-2 tablespoons dried leaf per cup water. Steep 10-15 minutes. Drink 2-3 cups daily.
Tincture (leaf): Fresh or dried leaf in 40-50% alcohol. Dose: 2-4ml (40-80 drops) three times daily.
Freeze-dried Capsules (for allergies specifically): 300-600mg freeze-dried leaf, 2-3 times daily during allergy season.
Root Decoction or Tincture: Decoction: Simmer 1 tablespoon dried root in 1 cup water for 15 minutes. Drink 2 cups daily. Tincture: 2-4ml three times daily.
Fresh Nettle (as food): Harvest with gloves. Steam, sauté, or add to soups. Cooking destroys sting. Excellent spring green, highly nutritious.
Safety and Contraindications
Leaf: Very safe. Can use long-term as nutritive tonic. Pregnancy and breastfeeding: Traditional use extensive, considered safe and beneficial. May interact with diuretic or blood pressure medications (additive effects). May lower blood sugar slightly—monitor if diabetic.
Root: Generally safe. Avoid in pregnancy/breastfeeding (insufficient data). May affect hormone-sensitive conditions theoretically—discuss with healthcare provider.
Handling fresh plant: Wear gloves when harvesting. Sting is painful but temporary (minutes to hours). Traditional remedy for sting: crush dock leaves (Rumex) and rub on affected area.
PEPPERMINT (Mentha × piperita)
Family: Lamiaceae (Mint)
Parts Used: Leaves (fresh or dried)
Identification
Perennial, 30-90cm tall. Stems square (mint family characteristic), often purple-tinged. Leaves opposite, oval with toothed edges, dark green above, lighter beneath. Strong characteristic mint smell when crushed. Flowers small, purple-pink, in spikes at stem tips (summer). Spreads aggressively by rhizomes.
Hybrid: Cross between watermint (M. aquatica) and spearmint (M. spicata). Usually sterile (doesn’t set seed), propagates vegetatively.
Habitat: Cultivated gardens, occasionally naturalized near water.
Constituents
Volatile oil (40-50% menthol, menthone, menthyl acetate), flavonoids, phenolic acids, tannins.
Actions
Primary: Carminative (relieves gas), antispasmodic (relaxes smooth muscle especially digestive tract), cooling, antimicrobial.
Secondary: Analgesic (pain relief—topical menthol), mild nervine, diaphoretic.
Traditional and Clinical Uses
Digestive System:
- Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS): Well-researched—enteric-coated capsules reduce symptoms significantly
- Indigestion and bloating: Relaxes digestive muscles, relieves gas
- Nausea: Smell alone can help (aromatherapy), drinking tea also effective
- Gallbladder support: Stimulates bile flow
Nervous System:
- Tension headaches: Topical peppermint oil to temples (diluted) or aromatherapy
- Mental alertness: Stimulating aroma improves concentration
Respiratory:
- Congestion: Steam inhalation opens airways (menthol effect)
- Coughs: Antispasmodic, cooling
Topical:
- Muscle pain: Cooling, mild analgesic (creams/oils)
- Itching: Cooling relief
Preparation and Dosage
Tea: 1-2 teaspoons dried leaf per cup boiling water OR small handful fresh leaves. Steep 5-10 minutes covered (preserves volatile oils). Drink 1-3 cups daily, after meals for digestion.
Tincture: Fresh leaves in 70% alcohol. Dose: 2-4ml (40-80 drops) three times daily.
Enteric-Coated Capsules (for IBS specifically): Commercial products (standardized peppermint oil). Follow product instructions—typically 0.2-0.4ml oil per capsule, taken between meals. Enteric coating prevents premature release (which can cause heartburn).
Essential Oil (topical): Never use undiluted. Dilute 2-3 drops in 1 tablespoon carrier oil. Apply to temples for headache, or larger areas for muscle pain. Can add few drops to bath.
Steam Inhalation: Add 3-5 drops essential oil to bowl of hot water. Lean over bowl with towel over head, inhale steam 5-10 minutes. Or add fresh/dried leaves to hot water.
Safety and Contraindications
Avoid:
- GERD/Acid reflux: Peppermint relaxes lower esophageal sphincter, potentially worsening reflux
- Gallstones: May trigger gallbladder contractions (rare)
- Infants: Never apply menthol/peppermint oil near face of infants/young children (can cause breathing difficulties)
- Pregnancy: Avoid therapeutic doses (relaxes uterine muscle theoretically—though evidence weak). Culinary amounts fine.
Essential Oil:
- Mucous membrane contact: Avoid contact with eyes, mucous membranes—irritating
- Skin sensitivity: Some people experience irritation—always dilute, test small area first
Generally safe as tea in normal amounts. No significant drug interactions at typical doses.
Conclusion
These six herbs—calendula, chamomile, echinacea, ginger, nettle, peppermint—form excellent foundation for home herbal practice. They represent diverse therapeutic actions, address common complaints across multiple body systems, demonstrate excellent safety profiles, and enjoy both extensive traditional use and increasingly robust scientific validation.
Master these thoroughly—identification in field, preparation methods, therapeutic applications, and safety considerations—before expanding materia medica to more specialized or potentially challenging species.