Please note that the following is for information purposes only and that
preparing San Pedro is illegal in many countries around the world.
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Trichocereus pachanoi |
A
lot of people like to make what is a rather simple and easy process
much more difficult and time consuming than it needs to be, based solely
off of internet rumors, misinformation and conjecture. For some
reason, certain people have decided that they know better than the
traditional Andean people who have been using these plants for at least
10,000 years. The following guide is based off of the traditional method
of preparation that has been used for millennia.
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Trichocereu bridgesii |
The first
thing you will need is obviously some San Pedro, with the typical dose
being around one foot or 30 cm of a potent San Pedro cactus. Whilst
Trichocereus pachanoi is the most commonly used San Pedro cacti, there
are in fact numerous other members of the Trichocereus genus than can be
and are used as San Pedro.
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Trichocereus peruvianus |
Once you have your potent San Pedro, you need to stress the plant to increase its alkaloid levels. The best way to achieve this is by leaving the cutting in a dark place for at least a few weeks to a month. Really, the longer the better. See the following link for more information ~
Trichocereus Potency: A Basic Guide for Getting The Most Out of San Pedro.
Next
you will need a sharp knife and a chopping board. Then a large pot,
pressure cooker or slow cooker depending upon your preference. You may
also need a pair of pliers depending on which type of Trichocereus
you're actually using to remove the spines, especially with plants that
have long spines, such as Trichocereus bridgesii which is widely regarded as being the most consistently potent Trichocereus species. Now this is not strictly necessary, but does make
handling much easier.
Now, all you actually need to do is
to cut your section of San Pedro into thin slices and place them into
the pot, pressure cooker or slow cooker.
Then cover with water and boil
for at least 4-6 hours. At which time the liquid will become discolored, having extracted the active ingredients into the water.
Once you have done this, you can
strain out the solid material leaving only the remaining liquid. For
this you can use a colander, cheese cloth or even an old T-Shirt. Just
make sure that you squeeze the solid material to get out as much of the
liquid as you can.
The next step in the process is to
reduce the volume of the liquid to around a cup sized portion. Simply
keep boiling the liquid to reduce its volume. Once your San Pedro tea
has been reduced to a cup sized portion, all you have to do is allow it
to cool enough for consumption and it is ready to go.
Now, the flavor really isn't the best, but at such as small amount it really is not a problem at all to get it down. Just hold your nose and down it goes. When you hold your nose and drink the small amount quickly, you do not even taste it, but you will get a sour/bitter after taste that you can easily get rid of with a nice tasting chaser like orange juice to wash it down.
If you want to improve the taste, you can add sugar and salt to counteract the bitterness and spices like cardamon and cinnamon whilst it is boiling. Another good way to improve the flavor is to further reduce to around a half a cup portion and then mix with pineapple juice and lemonade.
You can also further reduce to a gum, roll this into balls and consume, but you will want to be very careful not to go to far and burn it whilst you're doing this. Once reduced to around a quarter cup you can place it in a shallow tray or dish and put in front of a heater or in the oven on low with the door left ajar. Or allow it to dry completely and then scrape it up and put it into capsules. Although all of this will be time consuming and quite frankly unnecessary.
A
lot of people will try to tell you that you need to remove the skin of
the plant and only use the dark green layer that is just under the skin,
discarding the white inner layer and core, but this is a huge mistake. Some people say that removing the skin and inner white layer
improves the taste, but in reality it makes no difference at all. Usually
they will say that the skin, white layer and core will cause nausea and
that removing them will reduce the nausea. That is correct in a sense,
but also extremely wasteful and completely unnecessary as I will
explain below.
The fact of the matter is that the active
ingredient in San Pedro, mescaline, itself causes nausea. Mescaline is a
non selective serotonin receptor agonist, which means that it works on
all of the serotonin receptors. Now the psychedelic experience is caused
by the serotonin receptor 5ht-2 being agonized by psychedelic substances. The feelings of nausea
that come with many psychedelic plants is caused by the serotonin
receptor 5ht-3 also being agonized. For more information on how psychedelics work in the brain, see the following link ~
Inside the Psychedelic Mind: The New Frontier for Consciousness Studies, Innovative Therapies, Micro-dosing & Creativity.
|
Chemical structure of Mescaline |
Now, contrary to popular
belief, not all of the mescaline and other alkaloids in a given San
Pedro cutting is in the outer dark green layer. Up to 45% of the total
alkaloids in a given San Pedro cutting is in the inner white layer
beneath the outer dark green layer. So when you discard the inner
section it will reduce nausea, in the sense that you're throwing away
almost half of the usable mescaline and other alkaloids. See the
following link for more information ~
Distribution of Alkaloids in Cacti, from San Pedro and Related Species by Keeper Trout.
The
problem of nausea is usually vastly overblown and is actually not
really that bad, but we all do have different systems, different numbers
of receptors and different people will react differently. If the nausea
is a problem for you, there are a number of things that you can do to
reduce the discomfort, namely use anti-nausea medication, plants or
5ht-3 antagonists. Cannabis, ginger and lemon essential oil work well in
this regard. You can also use a small amount of datura or brugmansia as
in the traditional "Cimora" San Pedro cocktails, although all due care
should be used with these plants and please do your research before
consuming them.
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Datura metel |
There are also other ways you can help
to extract the active ingredients from a San Pedro cutting, being the
freeze/thaw method, adding a weak acid such as lemon juice to the
water you use to boil the sliced San Pedro or putting it into a blender. The freeze/thaw method is
quite simply freezing and thawing your San Pedro cutting or slices a
number of times to break down the cell walls, better allowing the
alkaloids to extract into the water. The same applies to weak acids like
lemon juice and blending. Now, this is not actually needed as simply boiling the
slices for long enough will do this itself, but you can do it if you want, if
anything it will just speed up the process. Using a pressure cooker will also speed up this process. If you're worried about
extracting every last bit you can, just boil it for a longer period of
time, this is where a slow cooker is useful as it is quite forgiving if you happen to forget about it and with the lid left on the water will not boil away.
Of
course then some people will tell you that boiling San Pedro for too
long will degrade the alkaloids, this is complete nonsense. The boiling
point for mescaline is 180 degrees Celsius, where as the boiling point
for water is 100 degrees Celsius, meaning the water will boil off long
before the mescaline ever will. So, obviously keep an eye on your pot as it boils so the water does not boil off.
The last thing you need to worry about is of course what is known as "set and setting." Being the mindset taken into the experience and the place in which you take the medicine. Ideally you should be in a comfortable space, with people you trust and have prepared your mind for what is to come and have set your intention as to what exactly you hope to achieve in taking San Pedro. Information about set and setting, and the importance of intention is widely available on the internet and should obviously be taken into account.
*For more information on San Pedro and to freely discuss all aspects of the amazing plants, please join
The San Pedro / Trichocereus Group on facebook.
Just yesterday made my first tea using this method. Whole plant frozen/thawed. Then cut into stars, skin spines core left on. Boiled in two separate pots with some fresh lemon juice. Boiled fairly hard for 6 hours adding fresh water back to the pots, to original volume when required. Then strained/decanted and reduced. Approx 2 litres to 150ml. Worked like a charm ����
ReplyDeleteYou're a legend. This is great, down to earth info. I love quality content
ReplyDeleteThank you! This is an excellent, no nonsense guide that works. Great job!
ReplyDeleteThis works! Basically the same method as what I did with my cuttings. Cut into stars, freeze/thaw, blender with lemon juice, then boiled for 6 hours with a cover. Strain then boiled down. Works great!
ReplyDeleteExcellent content your blog is gold is a sea of online confusion/censorship. Really appreciate your straightforward approach to sharing your experiences with these healing Cacti. Would be interested in hearing your thoughts of working with raw material frozen green skin 100 gram fresh mature bridge smoothies (some cut it with Lemon squash?) I have heard several good reports with the ocassional nightmare nausea report. not sure if it depends on the person? That being said I wouldn't pretend to know about these mysterious plantz. Regardless I am not complaining love your posts and I hope the ball is rolling your way.Thanks you Cheers Mate!
ReplyDeleteCheers. You can do it that way, but you're wasting almost half and it probably will taste better, but you will have to drink a lot more liquid. Mescaline itself causes nausea and some will be more susceptible to it. For me, the nausea is not an issue and following the above guide, there's only a small amount of liquid to down, which really isn't difficult.
Delete