Herbal Wines

Herbal Wines

Herb Wines
Der gantzen Artzenei, Dryander, 1542
Herbal Wines are basically infusions of herbs in wine. The herbs are steeped in wine for a number of days, then strained, and kept for use. In some cases white wine is preferred, in others, red wine.
Also important is the quality of the wine. A dry, astringent wine is better for looseness or leakage, and as a carrier for astringent medicines. A sweet wine is better to strengthen. Often the specific type of wine was ordered based on its qualities.
Sometimes a Herbal Wine is made by boiling a herb in water, adding sugar and ferment (yeast), and leaving it to become a wine by fermentation.
The most commonly used wines were some of the simples, especially Wormwood and Rosemary wine. There were also many recipes for Hippocras, or spiced wine.
| Simple Wines | Compound Wines |
| Wormwood Wine | Bitter Wine |
| Rosemary Wine | Hippocras |
| Eyebright Wine | Laudanum |
| Elecampane Wine | Stomach Wine |
| Marjoram Wine | Wine for Apoplexy |
| Wine for Arthritis | |
| Wine for Catarrh | |
| Wind for Catarrh of Pope Adrian | |
| Wine for Edema | |
| Wine (Potion) for Headache (Galen) | |
| Wine for Incontinence | |
| Wine for Scrophula (Renodeus) | |
| Wine of Eyebright and Fennel | |
| Wine of Sage Compound |

