How to make a reishi mushroom tincture

Reishi Mushroom Tinctures are an easy way to extract the medicinal benefits of these abundant wild mushrooms.  Reishi mushrooms have been shown to be Analgesic, Anti-inflammatory, Anti-bacterial, Anti-viral, Anti-oxidant, Anti-allergenic, and Anti-tumor.

The term “medicinal mushroom” used to draw snickers and knowing glances, but these days science is recognizing legitimate medicinal uses for mushrooms.  Reishi mushrooms have been used for centuries in traditional Chinese medicine, and western science is just beginning to explore their many uses.

Medicinal mushrooms such as reishi, chaga, maitake, turkey tail and shiitake contain both water-soluble components, known as polysaccharides and alcohol-soluble components known as triterpenes.  For this reason, medicines made from reishi mushrooms often include a double extraction.  This two-step process combines alcohol and water extracts to maximize the medicinal benefits.

Benefits of Reishi Mushroom Tincture

Reishi’s water-soluble polysaccharides have been shown to boost immune response, especially in relation to cancer cells.  Studies show that “The polysaccharides from G. lucidum are believed to trigger an indirect antitumor mechanism in which the host immune system is altered to target the tumor cells.”   

Specifically, a type of polysaccharide in reishi mushrooms know as beta-glucans “has the ability to induce both innate and adaptive immune responses…triggering a series of molecular pathways…which in turn, activate the host immune response for immune cell proliferation.”

Reishi’s alcohol-soluble triterpenes go a step further.  Science has found that alcohol extracts from reishi mushrooms are “the only known source of a particular group of triterpenes, also known as ganoderic acids, which have been found to have direct cancer cell cytotoxicity on a wide variety of cancer cell lines, such as murine Lewis lung carcinoma (LLC) and Meth-A, and many of them have been suggested to counter angiogenesis and metastasis.”

What does all that mean?  Water extracts boost your immune system and help your body combat cancer, while alcohol extracts combat cancer directly.  Talk about a one-two punch!

Some traditional reishi preparations involve making a decoction by simmering the mushrooms for 2 hours.  This preparation misses the benefits of the alcohol-soluble constituents.

Freshly Harvested Hemlock ReishiFreshly Harvested Hemlock Reishi

As a whole, western science has proven reishi mushroom extracts to be:

  • Analgesic
  • Anti-inflammatory
  • Anti-bacterial
  • Anti-viral
  • Anti-oxidant
  • Anti-allergenic
  • Anti-tumor

Reishi mushrooms have also been shown to reduce blood pressure, blood cholesterol, blood sugar and reduce platelet aggregation that results in blood clots.  Its effects on blood sugar were significant enough that it has been successfully used in the treatment of diabetes.  

The antioxidant activity of compounds found in reishi mushrooms seems to target free radicals responsible for aging, and reishi helped reverse the effects of aging in lab mice.  Reishi works to protect and strengthen the liver and has been successfully used for the treatment of chronic hepatitis B.  

Fresh reishi mushroom, thinly sliced to maximize surface area for tincture making.  They can be quite tough to cut, but try to slice them as thin as you can.Fresh reishi mushroom, thinly sliced to maximize surface area for tincture making. They can be quite tough to cut, but try to slice them as thin as you can.

Disclaimer: I’ve written this article based on my own research and experience, but I am not a medical professional.  Please do your own research and/or consult a healthcare professional to be sure a reishi tincture is right for you.

How to Make a Reishi Mushroom Tincture

Ingredients

  • Thinly sliced Reishi Mushroom (either purchased dried or wild foraged)
  • 80 proof alcohol, such as vodka
  • Fresh spring water (or chlorine-free water of any sort)

Equipment

Chopped fresh Reishi Mushrooms infusing in 80 proof alcohol for the first step of a reishi double extraction.Chopped fresh Reishi Mushrooms infusing in 80 proof alcohol for the first step of a reishi double extraction.

Instructions

Fill a mason jar about halfway with dried reishi mushrooms.  Dried mushrooms will expand, and need a bit of extra space.  If you’re using fresh reishi mushrooms that you were able to collect yourself, fill the jar 2/3 full.

Cover the mushrooms with 80 proof alcohol, filling the jar to within an inch of the top rim.

Three half gallon mason jars extracting reishi mushrooms in alcohol. It takes about 1 pound of fresh mushrooms to fill a 1/2 gallon mason jar for tincture.

Let the mixture extract for 4 to 6 weeks.  Ideally, it should be kept in a cool dark location like a pantry.  To maximize extraction, shake the jar as often as you remember (daily would be ideal).

After the alcohol extraction is complete, strain through a fine-mesh strainer and set the alcohol aside.  Measure how much alcohol extract you had remaining and make a note of it.

Filtering a reishi mushroom tincture through a fine-mesh strainer.

Place the strained mushrooms into a pot, and add about a half-gallon of water for every 2 cups of mushrooms.  Simmer the mushrooms on low for 2 hours, keeping an eye on the water level.  Do not let it boil dry.

The water extract should be reduced to about 1/3 of the quantity of alcohol extract.  For example, if your strained alcohol extract was a total of 24 ounces (3 cups), you’ll want to reduce your water extract to 8 ounces (1 cup).

This 3 to 1 ratio will ensure that your final extract has a high enough alcohol percentage to be shelf-stable.  Once the water extract has cooled, mix it with the alcohol extract and bottle in an amber tincture bottle.

Store in a cool, dark place.  The dosage for reishi tincture is generally 1 full dropper per day but can vary based on your particular circumstance.

Medicinal Mushroom Tinctures

The beneficial properties of medicinal mushrooms are often best preserved in tinctures, where both the alcohol and water-soluble portions are extracted at the same time.

Reminder: I’ve written this article based on my own research and experience, but I am not a medical professional.  Please do your own research and/or consult a healthcare professional to be sure a reishi tincture is right for you.

Be especially careful when working with wild mushrooms. Every year people are poisoned by eating wild mushrooms that closely resemble edible species.  Although mushroom poisonings are rare in the grand scheme of things, be aware that you are responsible for proper identification AND consulting multiple sources for your identification.

I am not a mushroom expert, nor do I claim to be.  I’ve written this based on my own research because I enjoy sharing the fruits of my own mycological journey with others.  Do not rely solely on my writings to identify mushroom types, and be sure to cross-reference anything mushroom-related with at least two (preferably more) credible sources.

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By Ashley Adamant

Thank you for visiting Practical Self Reliance!  I’m so glad you stopped by, and I hope I can help you on your journey toward self-reliant living.  Come by anytime for practical advice, encouragement and a lot of how-to.

Our ducks free ranging around the garlic bed in spring.

I’m Ashley…a homesteader, homeschooler, home-fermenter and home-body.  I love taking in a good book almost as much as I love lumberjacking, foraging and salt curing a ham.  When I’m not tending the littles you’ll most likely find me in the woods trying to identify some form of plant or fungal life.

Wild foraged alpine strawberries found in Vermont.

My goal is to help motivate and inspire you to take steps toward self-reliance today.  It doesn’t matter whether you’re living in a small apartment in the city, or out on the land in rural America.  Baby steps or big leaps, it’s your choice.

 

I live on 30 acres in rural Vermont along with my husband and two young children.  Over the years we’ve raised just about everything including goats, pigs, chickens, geese, ducks, rabbits and bees.  These days our efforts concentrate on perennial agriculture, foraging and mushrooms.

I am accepting guest posts and sponsored articles.  If you have an idea for a post, please send me a note at Ashley dot Adamant at gmail dot com.

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(Source: practicalselfreliance.com; April 26, 2025; https://tinyurl.com/2673cmru)
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