Skip to content
INFUSE

Signature line

Elixirs

Concentrated plant macerations. Violet Miron glass, full-spectrum extracts, small batches.

An INFUSE signature elixir is a plant brought to its most concentrated form. Most often an alcohol maceration over weeks — a hybrid between a tincture and an extract. But not always: the line also holds a resin, a sacred honey, an essential oil, a spray. What unites them isn't a shared gesture — it's the care, the small batch, the violet Miron glass that protects what light degrades.

10 elixirs in the line today — and it breathes: some plants arrive, others run out with the harvests. A few stand on their own; others are the concentrated form of a plant you already know as leaf or powder, gathered here so you can find them at a glance.

How to receive an elixir

There is no single gesture. Depending on the plant, an elixir is taken by mouth, laid on the skin, sprayed into the mouth, or dropped onto the tongue. The one rule that holds for all of them: its own page carries its preparation, its dose and its precautions — and some are never swallowed.

By mouth

The most common route — liquid elixirs and tinctures. A few drops under the tongue, or in a little warm (not hot) water. Start low, adjust over the days. The pipette is the unit, not the spoon.

On the skin · external

Some medicines are external only. Dragon’s Blood is a resin — one drop on a cut, a point of the body, the skin. It is not swallowed. Read its page before use.

Spray, honey, oil

Others carry their own form: Chilcuague is sprayed into the mouth before speaking or singing; Melipona is a sacred honey, a drop on the tongue; Cacao comes as a concentrated essential oil. Each follows its own way — never generic drops.

Each elixir page details its own preparation, dosing, and precautions. Read before opening the bottle.