[Recipes] My Plentiful Garden Weed is Replenishing My Skin and Nourishing My Body...

in #naturalmedicine5 years ago (edited)

I'm so grateful for the Natural Medicine Wisdom Challenges for it gives me the incentive to do some research, try new recipes or dig out some old remedies. The newest challenge is a Maker Challenge - details here. This has got me moving on a project I had been thinking about for awhile.

With winter coming on, I'll need more skin lotion for my winter dry skin. I have a simple 3 ingredient lotion bar recipe and I have lots of all the ingredients. Lots of coconut oil, hemp seed oil (I want to use this up before it goes bad) and a large bar of bees wax I got at a garage sale. Plus there is one final ingredient that will really add to the lotion, making it more than your basic lotion, it'll add extra health benefits, health for your skin, that ingredient is chickweed - Stellaria media. The chickweed I am going to infuse into my hemp seed oil by simply packing a pint jar with fresh chickweed, then filling the jar with the hemp seed oil making sure all the chickweed is covered. Put the lid on the jar and shake, then put it in a cool place for a couple of weeks, shaking regularly. After a couple of weeks, use a cloth-lined strainer to strain the chickweed infused oil out and place it into storage bottles.

Chickweed - Stellaria Media

close up of chickweed in flower.JPG

Chickweed is something I have plenty of in my garden, some consider it a weed but I've become rather enamoured with it and you'll find out why if you read on further...

I knew chickweed is good for skin. On further research I found it was both a demulcent (relieves inflammation or irritation) and emollient (has the quality of softening or soothing the skin)

Also I found

Chickweed has a long history of traditional uses as an emollient for the skin, helping cases of eczema, psoriasis, ulcers, boils, and abscesses. It can be administered through poultices, compresses, baths and through its consumption!

source

Perfect for in my skin lotion!

Plus I will be using coconut oil in my lotion which is antibacterial and full of vitamin E, which will help to preserve the lotion.

3 Ingredient Skin Lotion

1 cup coconut oil
1/2 cup herb infused oil (I'm using hemp seed oil infused with chickweed)
1 cup of bees wax
Optional - 1 teaspoon vitamin E for increased shelf life.
Directions:
Put coconut oil, herb infused oil and wax into a double boiler. Or if you have an Instant Pot you can use that on the “keep warm” setting.
On a gentle heat, stirring regularly, heat until ingredients are melted.
Pour into molds (muffin tins can serve as molds if you don't have any others).
Once completely cooled remove from molds and your lotion bars are ready to use.

Variation:
Use equal parts shea butter or cocoa butter, with coconut oil and bees wax

While I was researching about chickweed, which I have an such an abundance of (did I say that already?), I found out it makes good pesto and I love Pesto!
While I'm consuming this nutrient dense plant, I'll be taking in all the minerals and vitamins it is known for - calcium, potassium, phosphorus, zinc, manganese, sodium, copper, iron, vitamins C, B6, B12, D and A plus rutin (a bioflavinoid) and silica. Bring on those added health benefits - delicious and nutritious! Check out what Wikipedia has to say about Stellaria media here or Wild Abundance here

Chickweed Pesto

Ingredients
1/2 cup pine nuts, walnuts or almonds
2-3 cloves garlic minced.
3 cups chickweed loosely packed.
1 Tbsp lemon juice.
1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil.
1/2 tsp salt.
1/4 tsp freshly ground black pepper.
1/4 cup freshly grated Parmesan cheese.
Put the ingredients in a food processor or I use a Vitamix blender and blend well. Enjoy!

This pesto can be frozen and kept for up to 4 months. Or if you don't have time to make your pesto just blend the chickweed with some olive oil and freeze that to use when you are ready to make pesto.

Chickweed Growing Abundantly in the Garden

bowl of picked chickweed in green mat of chickweed.JPG

This information came at just the right time for the chickweed was still managing to grow in our covered garden while the stuff outside was pretty much done. Just today we got about 4 inches of snow, which I expect will stay for the winter now. With the snow, the temperatures dropped too, and it is not expected to get above freezing for most of this coming week.
I managed to get in one last harvest of chickweed, enough for my lotion, for my pesto and the nice tips I saved for my salads.

Last of the Chickweed Harvested from the Now, Snow Covered Hoop House

last harvest of chickweed greens on snowy hottub by snow covered greenhouse and garden.JPG

Harvest of Chickweed for Lotion, Pesto and Salads

bowls of chickweed in the snow last harvest.JPG

A few more things about chickweed - chickens love it (thus the name!) I gave my neighbor a couple of bags full for her chickens (who's eggs I eat)

It's favored by many using permaculture as a ground cover layer. I use it in my traditional garden plot as a living mulch - just make sure to pull it away from small seedlings for it will soon cover them over.

Plus in the Japanese spring-time festival, Nanakusa-no-sekku, it is one of the ingredients of the symbolic dish for that festival.

I hope this brought to light to you what a wonderful plant chickweed can be or inspired you to make your own homemade lotion or perhaps you have something else you make that you want to share in the Natural Medicine Maker Challenge

All photos were taken with my Canon PowerShot SX 60 HS

Thanks for stopping by!


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Oh wow!! Love this. Ive been thinking of alternatives for a moisteuizer too and LOVE how the challenges push me to think along those lines. I ABSOLUTELY cannot believe it is snowing ALREADY. Is there any Steemian further north than you? And pesto... I think you and me are pesto queens of Steemit! Heres mine... kale lemon andbasiland pepita. I should do the chickweed one! Oh by the way... I cant help it so nettle slap me if I am annoying.. but ENAMOURED is one of my fave words... 😂😘

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M-m-m! I must try your kale, lemon basil pepita pesto for I still have a clump of kale growing under some row cover (I'll check to see if it is still alive or if the frost got it!)
Totally appreciate your love of words and language and I will correct my spelling error, thanks!

He he, what a horrible spelling Nazi I am!!! Sorry! xx Still can't believe you have frost already.

And 6 inches of snow!

I used to have an abundance of chickweed here, but with construction.... I'll have to see what survived next spring....

Oh I'm sure there will be some survivors - the seeds can last for a real long time and it is definitely an easy plant to introduce if all the seeds got buried!

Interesting indeed. A lot of plants have natural healing ability and writing about what you know helps to keep it alive and pass it to the next generation. Thanks for sharing your knowledge

It's great to be making good use of such an abundant 'weed' :-) I remember getting the kids to collect a load from our allotment years ago, which we ate in a salad, and made pesto from. It had a strange flavour, but no doubt really good for us :-)

Actually the chickweed this year has been really tender and succulent for it was a cool summer with lots of rain (perfect conditions for chickweed - it went rampant!). Usually I stop picking it for salads if it has been hot and drier for it gets more bitter or I will look for plants that have gotten lots of shade - they are usually bigger and better tasting!

Wow! Learned so much about chickweed from you!

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Great! I have shown Marian this as she is also into this stuff.
I just don't know if we have chickweed over here, but will do a search.
Blessings and thank you!

My chickens love my patch of this stuff, and I eat it in salads, but I had no idea it was so good for the skin. I'm trying that recipe. Thanks.
Question - I burn a lot of beeswax candles. Can I just use the drippings to make stuff with?

I imagine the drippings from your beeswax candles would be fine for it's just pure beeswax.

oh I love this post, chickweed is one of my favourite plants, I love it in salad and would love to infuse it in hemp oil, I have done it in Olive and that pesto sounds amazing xxx

A weed is only a weed if it is unwanted. Roses can be considered weeds, as can mint, especially since they know few bounds.

I've made a really nice hand scrub of 1 part brown sugar, 1 part white sugar, and 1 part coconut oil. Very simple, but it gets the job done and really cleans off the skin. It can, of course, be perfumed with additional oils - I might try mint the next time I try it out.

Hey! thanks for the hand scrub recipe! Can always use a good scrub after gardening!

Treated as an invasive plant in South Africa one cannot buy the seed to grow, never seen chickweed, nice to learn there are so many good uses for this dainty little plant.

While learning more about this fascinating "weed", here is a blog I found locally referring to similar recipes and ideas perhaps you will find interesting @porters https://inaturals.co.za/chickweed-a-star-among-weeds/

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