For Bilious Diarrhoea, attended with Wind and Headache
Take Mountain Flax, 1 ounce.
Turkey Rhubarb, 1/4 ounce.
Ginger Root, 1 ounce.
Calumba Root, 1 ounce.
Bruise all the roots, and boil together with the Mountain Flax in one quart of water until reduced to a pint and a half, let stand till cold, and strain off.
Dose– Half a wineglassful two or three times a day according to its aperient effect, two hours after a meal.
Source: Baldwin’s Herbal Guide To Health, G. Baldwin
Filed under Remedy | Tags: aperient, baldwin, bile, bilious, bowels, calumba, calumba root, diarrhea, diarrhoea, flax, ginger, ginger root, head, headache, mountain flax, rhubarb, stomach, turkey rhubarb, wind | Comment (0)Hallett’s Gout and Bilious Cordial
Infuse in a gallon of distilled aniseed water, 3 oz. Turkey rhubarb, 4 oz. senna leaves, 4 oz. guaiacum shavings, 3 oz. elecampagne root, 1 oz. fennel seed, 14 oz. saffron, 14 oz. cochineal, 1 lb. sun raisins, 1 oz. aniseed; shake it every day for a fortnight; strain and bottle it. A table-spoonful (or two) an hour after dinner.
Source: The English Housekeeper, Anne Cobbett
Grandmother’s Family Spring Bitters
Mandrake root one ounce, dandelion root one ounce, burdock root one ounce, yellow dock root one ounce, prickly ash berries two ounces, marsh mallow one ounce, turkey rhubarb half an ounce, gentian one ounce, English camomile flowers one ounce, red clover tops two ounces.
Wash the herbs and roots; put them into an earthen vessel, pour over two quarts of water that has been boiled and cooled; let it stand over night and soak; in the morning set it on the back of the stove, and steep it five hours; it must not boil, but be nearly ready to boil. Strain it through a cloth, and add half a pint of good gin. Keep it in a cool place. Half a wine-glass taken as a dose twice a day.
This is better than all the patent blood medicines that are in the market–a superior blood purifier, and will cure almost any malignant sore, by taking according to direction, and washing the sore with a strong tea of red raspberry leaves steeped, first washing the sore with castile soap, then drying with a soft cloth.
Source: The White House Cookbook, F.L. Gillette
Filed under Remedy | Tags: bin, bitters, blood, burdock, camomile, chamomile, clover, dandelion, gentian, gin, mandrake, marsh mallow, marshmallow, prickly ash, purifier, raspberry, raspberry leaves, red clover, red raspberry, rhubarb, root, skin, sore, spring, turkey rhubarb, whitehouse, yellow dock | Comment (0)