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Blue Lotus Preparation: Tea, Wine, Extract & More

Nymphaea caerulea — Botanical Illustration
Nymphaea caerulea (Blue Egyptian Lotus). Plate from 'Flore des Serres et des Jardins de l'Europe', edited by Louis van Houtte, 1851–52. The blue lotus was sacred in ancient Egypt — depicted in temples, tombs, and papyri from the Old Kingdom through to the Greco-Roman period.

Part of our Blue Lotus Guide. For legal status, effects and safety, see the main guide.

Nuciferine — Structural formula
Aporphine alkaloid · Nymphaea caerulea

Nuciferine

(6aR)-1,2-dimethoxy-6-methyl-5,6,6a,7-tetrahydro-4H-dibenzo[de,g]quinoline
Molecular formula: C19H21NO2
Molecular weight: 295.4 g/mol
CAS: 475-83-2
Read more about Nuciferine

The four main preparations at a glance

Method Time Equipment Effect strength
Tea 15–20 min Teapot, strainer Gentle
Wine infusion 24 hours Glass jar Moderate
Tincture 2–4 weeks Glass jar, dropper Precise
Vaporising 5 min Vaporizer Fast, direct

1. Blue Lotus Tea

The most common and gentlest preparation. A good starting point for first-time users.

What you need

  • 2–5 g dried blue lotus flowers (whole flowers, not powder)
  • 250–400 ml water
  • Tea strainer or French press
  • Optional: lemon (small amount)

How to do it

  1. Heat water to 75–80 °C — do not boil. Higher temperatures destroy the alkaloids.
  2. Place flowers in the strainer or French press.
  3. Pour water over them, cover.
  4. Steep for 10–15 minutes.
  5. Strain and drink slowly.

Tips

  • A splash of lemon helps extract the alkaloids (mildly acidic environment).
  • Honey or agave syrup softens the slightly earthy taste.
  • Cold infusion also works — steep 4–6 hours in the fridge.

Flavour profile

  • Earthy, slightly floral
  • Milder than chamomile, no bitterness
  • Colour: pale yellow to slightly greenish

2. Traditional Wine Infusion

The historically documented preparation from ancient Egypt.

What you need

  • 5–10 g dried blue lotus flowers
  • 750 ml dry red wine (port wine as an alternative)
  • Sealable glass jar
  • 24 hours of patience

How to do it

  1. Place the flowers in the glass jar.
  2. Pour red wine over them until the flowers are covered.
  3. Seal and store in a dark, cool place.
  4. Steep for 24 hours, swirling gently now and then.
  5. Strain through a fine sieve.
  6. Enjoy in small amounts (100–150 ml).

Why wine and not water?

  • Alcohol extracts fat-soluble alkaloids better than water.
  • Historically documented — Egyptian wall paintings show precisely this preparation.
  • Alcohol + nuciferine enhance the sedative effect.

Important precautions

  • ⚠️ The alcohol effect adds to the lotus effect — start slow.
  • ⚠️ Not on an empty stomach — the combination can trigger nausea.
  • ⚠️ Do not mix with other alcohol sources.
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3. Tincture — precise and dose-controllable

For users who want clear dosing.

What you need

  • 30 g dried blue lotus flowers
  • 250 ml high-proof alcohol (vodka ≥40 %, better 50 %)
  • Sealable glass jar (dark or light-protected)
  • 2–4 weeks of time

How to do it

  1. Roughly crush the flowers (do not pulverise).
  2. Place in the glass jar, cover with alcohol.
  3. Seal and store in a dark, cool place.
  4. Shake gently daily for the first 7 days.
  5. After 2–4 weeks, strain through coffee filter or muslin cloth.
  6. Transfer to a dark dropper bottle.

Dosing

  • Typical single dose (documented): 20–30 drops
  • Sublingual use (under the tongue) — onset 10–15 minutes
  • Or in a glass of water — onset 20–30 minutes

Shelf life

Stored cool in a dark bottle: ≥12 months.


4. Vaporising — Extracts and Essential Oils

For experienced users with the right equipment.

What you need

  • Blue lotus extract (10x or 20x) or essential oil
  • Suitable vaporiser with precise temperature control
  • Optional: carrier material (hemp leaves, peppermint)

Temperature recommendations

Alkaloid / component Boiling point Recommended vaporizer temp
Nuciferine ~160 °C 155–165 °C
Aporphine alkaloids ~150 °C 145–160 °C
Essential oils 120–140 °C 130–140 °C

How to do it

  1. Apply extract to a suitable pad or liquid chamber.
  2. Set the vaporiser to the appropriate temperature.
  3. Inhale slowly.
  4. Wait for the effect (2–5 minutes) before taking more.

Why NOT smoke it?

Direct combustion destroys most of the alkaloids. If inhaling at all, vaporise with controlled temperature.


Common mistakes

❌ Water too hot

  • What happens: Alkaloids degrade above 85 °C.
  • Fix: Let water cool briefly after boiling (wait 2–3 min).

❌ Steeping too short

  • What happens: Active compounds not fully extracted.
  • Fix: At least 10 minutes, better 15.

❌ First dose too large

  • What happens: Disappointment through placebo expectation or nausea.
  • Fix: Start with 2–3 g in tea. Increase if needed.

❌ Cheap product with low alkaloid content

  • What happens: You feel nothing and think the product doesn't work.
  • Fix: Buy high-quality, lab-tested flowers — at amama.

❌ Powder instead of whole flowers

  • What happens: No quality check possible, rapid oxidation.
  • Fix: Choose whole flowers or broken fragments.

Recipe combinations

Evening relaxation tea

  • 3 g blue lotus
  • 1 tsp chamomile
  • Pinch of lavender flowers
  • 300 ml water at 75 °C, steep 12 minutes

Dream work tea (anecdotal)

  • 4 g blue lotus
  • 1 tsp Calea zacatechichi (dream herb, also legal in Germany)
  • 300 ml water at 75 °C, steep 15 minutes

More combinations and experience reports are documented in the Erowid Lotus Vault.


Storage and shelf life

Form Storage Shelf life
Dried flowers Airtight, dark, cool 12–24 months
Brewed tea Refrigerator 24 hours
Wine infusion Refrigerator, sealed 4–6 weeks
Tincture Dark dropper bottle, cool ≥12 months

Frequently asked questions

Can I combine blue lotus with other herbs?

Yes — chamomile, lavender, passionflower are documented combinations. Psychoactive combinations (cannabis, MAO inhibitors) are problematic.

Does cold infusion preserve the effects?

Yes, even better — alkaloids are heat-sensitive. Cold infusion takes longer (4–6 hours) but yields a gentler tea.

How much tea can I drink per day?

For occasional use, 1–2 cups is sufficient. No studies on long-term dosing — moderation recommended.

Can I re-infuse the flowers?

A second infusion is possible but noticeably weaker. For tincture or wine infusion, use fresh flowers.

Do I need to store the tincture away from light?

Yes — UV light degrades the alkaloids over time.

Can I smoke blue lotus?

Technically yes, but not recommended — combustion destroys most active compounds. If inhaling, vaporise instead.


Our selection

Blue Lotus

Discover our collection of blue lotus products, an ancient aquatic plant revered for its stunning beauty and rich history. Known scientifically as Nymphaea caerulea, blue lotus has been celebrated for…

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References

  1. Emboden, W. A. (1981). Transcultural use of narcotic water lilies in ancient Egyptian and Maya drug ritual. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 3(1), 39–83.
  2. Farrell, M. S., McCorvy, J. D., Huang, X. P., et al. (2016). In vitro and in vivo characterization of the alkaloid nuciferine. PLOS ONE, 11(3), e0150602. DOI
  3. Bertol, E., Fineschi, V., Karch, S. B., et al. (2004). Nymphaea cults in ancient Egypt and the New World. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine, 97(2), 84–85.
  4. Erowid Lotus / Lily Vault. erowid.org/plants/lotus
  5. Erowid Experience Vault. Blue Lotus Wine experience. Report ID 48106

Last updated: April 17, 2026 · Reviewer: Bernard — Co-Founder (Psychonaut)

The preparations described here are informational. Start with small amounts and follow the interaction notes in the *Safety Spoke*.


Further Reading

→ Nuciferine Compound Profile — chemistry & pharmacology

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