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Draksharishta

Drākṣāriṣṭa · ARISHTA

Raisin-based classical fermented wine traditionally used for weakness, chronic cough, cardiac debility, anorexia, and convalescence.

10
Ingredients
5
Traditional Uses
4
FAQs
Sharangdhar Samhita
Classical Source

About Draksharishta

Draksharishta, documented in Sharangdhar Samhita and Bhaishajya Ratnavali, is a self-generated (swayam-jata) herbal wine prepared from dried black raisins (draksha / Vitis vinifera) fermented with pippali, cardamom, cinnamon, tejpatra and madhuka. Typical ABV 5–10%.

Among the gentlest classical arishtas — sweet-sour taste, pitta-pacifying, and rarely contraindicated. Traditionally used for hridya (cardiac support), shosha (wasting / TB convalescence), daurbalya (debility), chronic dry cough, anorexia, and as a general tonic after fever or prolonged illness. Often prescribed in elderly for appetite and strength.

Because it is fermented, it is absorbed rapidly and does not require strong digestive fire — ideal for depleted constitutions where churnas and tablets pass through undigested.

Classical Reference

Sharangdhar Samhita — Madhyam Khanda, Sandhana Kalpana

Dosha Effect

Vata
Pitta
Kapha

Ingredients (10)

IngredientRoleProportion
Draksha (Black raisins) chief ingredient — madhura, hridya, brimhana 12.288 kg
Water for decoction solvent 49.152 L
Sharkara (sugar) fermentation substrate 4.8 kg
Madhu (honey, post-fermentation) anupana + mellowing 2.4 kg
Pippali deepana, rasayana 48 g
Ela aromatic, tridoshic 48 g
Tvak (cinnamon) aromatic 48 g
Tejpatra aromatic carminative 48 g
Nagkesara aromatic, pitta-shamaka 48 g
Madhuka (Yashtimadhu) soothing, sweetening 48 g

Preparation Method

Raisins are decocted in water, reduced to one-fourth, strained. Sugar dissolved, cooled. Honey and powdered herbs added. Sealed in earthen jars in a dhanyarashi (grain heap) for 30–60 days to self-ferment (no external yeast). Strained, matured for 3 months.

Traditional Uses

Cardiac support

Hridya — mild positive inotrope, soothing palpitations.

Anorexia, convalescence

Post-illness appetite restoration, weakness recovery.

Chronic dry cough

Unctuous, demulcent action on respiratory tract.

Anemia, debility

Rakta-vardhaka and brimhana properties.

Elderly tonic

Gentle rasayana where strong medicines are poorly tolerated.

Dosage Guidelines

FormAmountTiming
Adults15–30 mlTwice daily after meals, diluted with equal water
Children (>12)5–10 mlAfter meals, diluted

Anupana (Recommended Carriers)

  • Equal water — Dilute 1:1 before consumption

Contraindications & Interactions

Avoid or use with caution in:

  • Pregnancy
  • Active alcoholism / recovery
  • Severe liver disease
  • Children under 12
  • Diabetes (contains sugars — check glycemic response)

Drug interactions:

  • All CNS depressants (minor ABV)
  • Metronidazole (disulfiram reaction risk)
  • Disulfiram

Contains 5–10% self-generated alcohol. Not a "wine" in the recreational sense — used therapeutically in small divided doses. Check labeling for actual ABV — some formulations exceed 10% and require Schedule E(1) compliance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does Draksharishta contain alcohol?

Yes — 5–10% ABV generated through natural fermentation. The alcohol acts as a carrier and preservative; it is not added.

Can children take it?

Generally avoided in children under 12. Pediatric Ayurveda uses alcohol-free alternatives like Ashtamangala ghrita or Saraswatarishta (mildly) under supervision only.

Good for weakness after fever?

Yes — one of the most prescribed arishtas for post-febrile daurbalya and jirna-jvara convalescence.

Is it safe in diabetes?

It contains jaggery/sugar from fermentation. Diabetics should use sugar-free variants or prefer non-sweet alternatives like Arjunarishta.

Related Formulations

🍷 Ashwagandharishta🍶 Dashmularishta🧠 Saraswatarishta