Back to Basics: Perfect Salve Recipe for any Herbal Remedy (2024)

Ever wish you had a standby recipe for any herbal salve? Here is an excellent basic salve recipe to serve as a base to your creative herbal remedies!

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Just a basic salve recipe.

It was all that I wanted as a budding herbalist. Just a basic salve recipe that would give me surefire results every time. I wanted, I NEEDED a recipe that delivered consistent results. A simple go-to, fool-proof basic salve recipe that allowed me to experiment with the different herbs to make unique salve creations.

My friends, I need this! This basic salve recipe that I have brought to you in collaboration with my good friends at Mountain Rose Herbs!

At its most simple level, a salve is simply an oil solidified with a wax. It is what oils that we chose and the ingredients that we add that assign each salve its therapeutic value. Every oil has potential benefits and drawbacks to consider when making a salve, from shelf life and expense as well as its own properties and textures. There is a nearly an unlimited number of herbs to choose from – each imparting their own unique benefits. Essential oils also offer full-bodied fragrance and a myriad of aromatherapeutic actions.

Once you choose your oil(s), you will want to infuse that oil with one of the methods you can use to create the perfect herb infused oil.

Basic Salve Recipe Ingredients

Let’s take a closer look at my favorite ingredient choices for this basic salve recipe:

Carrier Oils
There are so many wonderful oils to choose from for the base of your salve. I am fond of a 50/50 blend of olive oil and coconut oil. They are both relatively affordable, shelf stable, and offer a nice spreadable slip when applied to the skin. Other favorites include sesame, safflower, and sweet almond oils.

Waxes
I highly recommend the use of natural beeswax pastilles. They are so simple and easy to measure out (cause ain’t nobody got time to grate a giant bulk hunk of wax!) and have a sweet honey like fragrance that is really quite heavenly. Beeswax has great solidifying action; depending on your desired texture, you can make a looser texture by using less wax or firmer by using more. For my vegan readers, you might like to use carnauba wax!

Herbs
There are simply so many botanicals to choose from. You can infuse your chosen oils using one of the methods described this post. My favorite herbs include calendula, yarrow, arnica, lavender, rose, and comfrey – just to name a few. Oil infusions are a great way to enjoy the benefits of herbs.

Essential Oils
Anybody that has hung around this blog for a while know that I am a stickler for essential oil safety. It is not recommended to have more than 4% of any preparation as essential oil. I usually recommend 1-2% for salve needs because the herbs are already offering their goodness to the blend, however a ratio of dilution of 3-4% is still considered industry standard practice for products that are applied infrequently or to a small are of skin. This recipe produces just over eight ounces of salve, meaning that the appropriate amount of essential oil for safe dilution ratios are as follows:

  • 0.5%: 24 drops (this is the dilution ratio that I recommend for small children ages 2-6 and pregnant women)
  • 1%: 48 drops (good for body lotions and a massage oils)
  • 2%: 96 drops (excellent for salves and products that are used frequently on large areas of skin)
  • 3%: 144 drops (appropriate for small areas only)
  • 4%: 192 drops (appropriate for small area only)

Some of my favorite essential oils are lavender, ginger, lemon, clary sage, and fir needle.

Basic Salve Making Supplies

Once you settle on the ingredients for your salve, you will need a few key tools to make your salve making experience a safe and productive.

Double Boiler Set Up
For years I used a pyrex glass bowl over my 2-quart saucepan for melt the beeswax into the oil. And I was often a party to some burned fingers compliments of the steam and hot glass. Until this stainless steel double boiler showed up at my door. Love at first site. The first time making a salve with this baby was LIFE CHANGING.

Consider my glass bowl retired. My new stainless steel double boiler is my main squeeze these days!

Containers
Glass and aluminum containers offer a safe and inert (non-reactive) container for salve.

Liquid Measuring Cup
Glass measuring cups keep your measurements accurate and also serve as a great vessel to pour from into your container.

Flour Sack Clothes & Fine Mesh Sieve
I strain my infused oils through a couple layers of flour sack cloth nestled in a fine mesh sieve to ensure that I have a particulate from salve!

Silicone scraper or spatula
I find a few dedicated scraper or spatulas help me to get things mixed and keep waste to a minimum.

Basic Salve Recipe

Basic Salve Recipe

Yield: approximately four 2-ounce containers

Author: Devon Young

Ingredients

  • 1 cups base oil blend of your choice I like coconut oil and olive oil here
  • ½ cup dried herb(s) of your choice
  • 2-4 tablespoon beeswax pastilles
  • essential oil of your choice see dilution ratios in post

Instructions

  • Using the one of the infusion methods described in this post, infuse your chosen herbs into the base oils. After oil is adequately infused, strain through layers of flour sack cloth nestled in a fine mesh sieve, squeezing to extract all the oil. Compost the spent herbs.

  • Pour infused to a double boiler, add beeswax and warm until completely melted (you may want to experiment with the consistency that you want by adding the lower about of wax and dropping some of the oil/beeswax mixture into a small ramekin, wait for the salve to cool and check the consistency’ add more beeswax if desired.

  • Remove oil/beeswax mixture from heat. Add essential oils and mix thoroughly.

  • Pour into individual 2-ounce containers (approximate 4) or other similarly sized jars. Allow to cool completely before putting a lid on the container.

  • Use within one year.

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Back to Basics: Perfect Salve Recipe for any Herbal Remedy (5)

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Herbal Remedies, Herbalism

Devon Young

Devon is a writer and author on subjects of holistic and sustainable living. She has a degree in Complementary and Alternative Medicine from the American College of Healthcare Sciences, and her books, The Backyard Herbal Apothecary and The Herbalist's Healing Kitchen, were published by Page Street Publishing in Spring 2019 and Fall 2019 respectively. Her NEW book, The Homegrown Herbal Apothecary, dedicating to growing a medicinal landscape publishes March 2024. Devon's work outside of NittyGrittyLife.com can be seen at LearningHerbs.com, GrowForageCookFerment.com, AttainableSustainable.net, and in the magazine The Backwoods Home.

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Back to Basics: Perfect Salve Recipe for any Herbal Remedy (2024)

FAQs

How do you infuse herbs into salve? ›

In a dry, pint-size jar, crumble 1/2 cup dried herbs and cover with 1 cup of olive oil (ratio 1 part dried herbs : 2 parts oil). Cap and place the jar in a soup pot filled with water. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, then simmer for 1 hour. Strain the herbs from the oil with a piece of clean cloth.

Do you use fresh or dried herbs for salve? ›

John's wort, and yarrow. The first step to homemade herbal salves is to make your herb infused oil. It's best to use dried herbs rather than fresh, since the lack of moisture helps keep the salve from spoiling.

What is the shelf life of homemade salves? ›

Then pour the mixture into individually-sized, dry, sterilized glass jars or tins and allow them to cool. Finally, place the lids on the containers, label, and store in a cool, dry place. Like the herb-infused oil, salves have a shelf life of 6 months – 3 years depending on the oil used.

What is the best carrier oil for healing salve? ›

Essential oils can offer wound healing support, as well as carrier oils. Rosehip, Tamanu, Avocado, Grapeseed, and Jojoba are great choices.

What is the miracle herb for skin? ›

Calendula, an excellent herbal oil for skin, contains antifungal and antibacterial properties that treat most common skin conditions. It's also good for getting rid of bruises, cuts, scars, and sores. Calendula is safe to use on all skin types, including those with extremely dry, damaged, or sensitive skin.

How to make a simple salve? ›

Place beeswax in a double boiler and gently warm over low heat until the beeswax melts. Add herbal oils and stir over low heat until well-mixed. Remove from heat and add the essential oil(s). Quickly pour warm mixture into prepared tins, glass jars, or lip balm tubes and allow to cool completely.

What is the ratio for homemade salve? ›

Mixing Your Salve

I typically make my salve with an oil to beeswax ratio of 3:1 or 4:1, which results in a thick but still easily spreadable texture. For example, in my latest batch I had about 100 mL of melted beeswax so I added about 300 mL of oil.

What makes a good salve? ›

Salves are generally made of organic beeswax and infused herbal oils with essential oils to make a semi-solid ointment. You can use base oils such as organic coconut, olive, sesame, sunflower and sweet almond oil and also consider fats like cocoa or shea butter too.

What is the difference between a balm and a salve? ›

Salves tend to be more oily and thinner in consistency, while balms are more thick and waxy. Salves can be better for moisturizing dry skin or treating specific conditions, while balms are better at sealing in moisture and creating a barrier against environmental irritants for general skincare.

What plants are good for salves? ›

Plantain leaf is a gentle antimicrobial herb that excels at soothing bug bites, cuts, scrapes, rashes, and blisters. It also has an affinity for drawing out splinters from the skin. Paired with calendula and comfrey, it makes an excellent addition to a first aid salve.

References

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