Tao Ren Single Herb Extract 100 grams
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Classical Pearls Single Herb Extracts
In Stock
Clinic Approval Needed
100 Grams
5:1
Traditional Growing Location: Burma (wild-crafted)
Traditional Preparation: Made from Burmese amomum species (favored by the Fire Spirit School of Chinese herbalism); husks are removed, then traditionally processed by frying in high quality sea salt (increases the effect of drawing qi downward to the lower burner).
Excipient: Organic, soluble quinoa powder
The food grade herb Sharen (Amomum) is one of the most common ingredients in Chinese herbal prescriptions designed to treat symptoms of poor digestion, i.e. poor appetite, nausea, bloating, diarrhea, and other signs of middle burner weakness. Since it is a common spice in the cuisines of Southeast Asia, it is considered especially safe for children and pregnant women.
The flavor of the medicinal pod of the plant is complex and highly aromatic, and has been classified through the ages as pungent, bitter, sour or salty by different classical herb primers. The herb's major function is to warm Spleen cold, transform Spleen damp, and descend counterflow in the Stomach, making it a primary choice for everyday digestive discomfort caused, for instance, by food stagnation or alcohol poisoning.
Li Shizhen, author of the authoritative 17th century materia medica Bencao gangmu, pointed out another important aspect of the herb's medicinal function that has become almost forgotten in modern times: "Sharen has the capacity to draw the ingredients of a formula into the lower Dantian... When producing Kidney tonics such as Dihuang Wan, therefore, a small amount of Sharen is customarily added during the steaming process, so that the remedy's effect may be more forcefully directed to the lower regions of the body." The fact that certain species of Amomum have the potential to not only regulate qi flow in the upper and middle burners, but also connect the middle and lower burners was later expanded upon by the 19th century scholar physician Zheng Qin'an, founder of the Fire Spirit School of Sichuan herbalism. Qianyang Dan (Submerge the Yang Pellet), one of his best-known remedies, utilizes Sharen not in its regular role as an aromatic digestive, but as a minister herb enhancing the downward momentum and the Dantian warming properties of the lead medicinal Fuzi. Zheng pointed out, however, that only a unique variety of Sharen processed in a specific way has this effect: Xi Sharen fried in salt.
The Amomum pod has been cultivated for centuries in Guangdong province, a variety referred to as Yangchun Sharen (Sharen from Yangchun; Amomum villosum) by herb traders. In addition, the spice pod has also been wild-crafted in the dense tropical forests connecting the Southwest Chinese province of Yunnan, Burma, Laos, and North Vietnam. The wild variety represents the fruit of a slightly different species, which is called Lüqiao Sharen (Green Shell Sharen; Amomum xanthioides) or Xi Sharen (Western Sharen), the name used by Zheng Qin'an. Until 30 years ago, this variety was highly valued by Sichuan herb traders, who sent buyers to the Xishuangbana region of Yunnan at harvest time in August. In recent years, however, laboratory tests have shown that certain essential oils are more concentrated in the cultivated Yangchun Sharen from Guangdong, driving up prices for this variety. This economic development prompted Cantonese entrepreneurs to plant their cultivated variety in the lush jungle terrain of the wild growing Lüqiao Sharen in Southern Yunnan, an area best known in the West as the origin of premium Pu'er tea. As a result, local peasants have not only stopped collecting the Lüqiao variety, but have begun to actively destroy wild plants when they come across them—for fear that the native variety may be cross-pollinating the cultivated variety from Guangdong, which now fetches a higher price on the market.
In addition, the natural environment in Southern Yunnan has seen dramatic changes in recent years, prompting the commissioning of an official scientific inquiry by the Chinese government. The report notes that a dramatic increase in air pollution, climate change, decreasing rainfall and deforestation for advancing banana plantations has greatly deteriorated growing conditions for native Sharen. Therefore, the wild variety of Xi Sharen, still valued by doctors of the Fire Spirit School lineage for its "salty" quality and the associated "Dantian effect, " now needs to be imported from the comparatively healthy forest regions across the border in Burma, Laos, and North Vietnam.
Classical Pearls is pleased to offer genuine wild-crafted Xi Sharen extract from the forests of Northern Burma.
Processing follows traditional instructions, by first roasting the fruit in front of a wood fire to bring out the characteristic aroma and medicinal property of the herb. Secondly, the shell of the fruit is removed, which comprises 50% of its weight and still contains some essential oils, which prompts most modern herb traders to break with tradition and leave it on. Finally, the fruit kernels are being fried in water from Tibetan salt lakes to increase the herb's potential to draw energy down into the lower Dantian.
Amomum villosum (from Burma)