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When herbalist Rosalee de la Forêt says chamomile doesn’t get the respect it deserves, she’s speaking from firsthand experience. She once accidentally let chamomile flowers steep too long in water and discovered an exceptionally potent drink for digestive issues. Suddenly, de la Forêt understood she’d been discounting chamomile.

“I always thought it was a cute little herb that’s sold in every coffee shop, but it wasn’t like real herbal medicine,” she told The Epoch Times. “I really got schooled on it. I made a very strong batch of it and felt how dramatic it was and its effects on digestive health.



I fell in love with chamomile and cannot live without it.” Calling herself a skeptic-turned-die-hard lover of chamomile, she now recommends the herb to nearly everyone. Chamomile contains bisabolol, an oil with anti-inflammatory, analgesic, antibacterial, anticancer, antibacterial, and antiseptic properties.

Bisabolol is capable of reducing pepsin, the digestive enzyme that can cause digestive issues. This could make chamomile an alternative treatment for stomach and upper intestinal symptoms, according to the review. Chamomile’s chemical makeup contains many terpenoids, plant compounds that act as antioxidants—meaning they reduces reactive oxygen species that are linked to disease.

Terpenoids are “anticancer, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, and antiallergic,” according to the review. Published in Chronic Disease Journal in 2023, the study of 102 participants found the group taking the chamomile mixture had significant improvements in constipation, diarrhea, and mucus excretion after two weeks, and in abdominal pain, bloating, constipation, and diarrhea after four weeks. “If somebody wasn’t digesting food well because they were stressed or overwhelmed, chamomile is a very relaxing nervine,” de la Forêt said, explaining the herbal terminology for a tonic that calms the nervous system.

The review included 15 randomized controlled trials examining a range of applications—mouthwash, topical, capsule, and tincture. Researchers noted the overall benefit on quality of life, as well as gut-brain benefits of reducing depression, vomiting, and mouth ulcers. The effects are due to the anticancer, chemopreventive, and antioxidant properties of chamomile, according to the review.

While it’s generally considered a safe herb, chamomile can also cause allergic reactions—particularly for those who are allergic to ragweed or sunflowers. All three flowers are in the same family, Asteraceae. Reactions to look for include itchy eyes, sneezing, runny nose, and skin irritation.

Severe and life-threatening reactions such as anaphylaxis are rare. Be on the lookout for an itchy throat, too, said de la Forêt. Because allergic reactions tend to be mild, she said trying it a few times and gradually increasing the dosage is a reasonable approach to gauge tolerance of the plant.

Another reason to start slow is because of the effect—and taste—of stronger doses, she said. It’s an accessible herb found in a number of products and stores, de la Forêt said. You can also use dried flowers to make your own tea, tincture, or even topical ointment.

If you want a relaxing, enjoyable drink with minimal effects, she said steep a teaspoon to tablespoon of chamomile in a cup of hot water for an after-dinner tea. However, as de la Forêt put it: She wouldn’t bet on chamomile that’s only steeped for three minutes—especially for chronic GI issues. Chamomile’s power is often in longer steeping.

To make it more potent, steep a half-cup of dried flowers in a pint of hot water for 10 to 15 minutes. You may also consider a gradual increase in the time of steeping to transition your taste buds from the more pleasant aromatic to the bitterness of its stronger variation. “This brew is going to be much stronger and much more bitter, but it’s really, really potent medicine.

That really strong brew makes a difference,” de la Forêt said..

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