Tarragon

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Asteraceae

Tarragon

Artemisia dracunculus
⚠ Use with Caution Caution in Pregnancy
Native to: Central Asia, Siberia
Also known as: French Tarragon, Dragon Herb, Estragon, Little Dragon
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

Leaf

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Digestive complaints (flatulence, dyspepsia), insomnia (mild sedative effect), blood sugar modulation, toothache (topical anesthetic), antimicrobial culinary herb.


Herbal Actions

Carminative, antispasmodic, digestive stimulant, mild hypnotic, antidiabetic (modest), mild analgesic

🔬 Active Constituents

Volatile oil (estragole — up to 70%, methyl chavicol, ocimene), coumarins, flavonoids (quercetin, luteolin), phenolic acids, polyacetylenes

⚗️ Preparation Methods

☕ Herbal Tea🏺 Tincture

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal Tea1 tsp fresh or dried per 250ml, steep 5 min, 2–3x daily
Tincture1–3 ml (1:5, 45% ethanol), 3x daily
NotesFrench tarragon (sterile hybrid) preferred for culinary and medicinal use. Russian tarragon (fertile) less aromatic. Estragole content — limit long-term therapeutic use. Culinary use safe indefinitely.

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ⚠ Use with Caution
Pregnancy Caution in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions None known

Contraindications: High estragole content — potential carcinogen with very heavy chronic use. Avoid high medicinal doses in pregnancy. Culinary use safe. Avoid with Asteraceae allergy.

Side Effects: Estragole: potential genotoxic at high chronic doses. Generally safe at culinary and short-term medicinal use. Allergic reactions.

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