Part of our Blue Lotus Guide. For legal status, effects and safety, see the main guide.
Aporphine alkaloid · Nymphaea caeruleaNuciferine
(6aR)-1,2-dimethoxy-6-methyl-5,6,6a,7-tetrahydro-4H-dibenzo[de,g]quinolineMolecular formula: C19H21NO2Molecular weight: 295.4 g/molCAS: 475-83-2Read 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
- Heat water to 75–80 °C — do not boil. Higher temperatures destroy the alkaloids.
- Place flowers in the strainer or French press.
- Pour water over them, cover.
- Steep for 10–15 minutes.
- 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
- Place the flowers in the glass jar.
- Pour red wine over them until the flowers are covered.
- Seal and store in a dark, cool place.
- Steep for 24 hours, swirling gently now and then.
- Strain through a fine sieve.
- 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.
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
- Roughly crush the flowers (do not pulverise).
- Place in the glass jar, cover with alcohol.
- Seal and store in a dark, cool place.
- Shake gently daily for the first 7 days.
- After 2–4 weeks, strain through coffee filter or muslin cloth.
- 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
- Apply extract to a suitable pad or liquid chamber.
- Set the vaporiser to the appropriate temperature.
- Inhale slowly.
- 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.
Back to the guide
- → Blue Lotus Guide (Pillar)
- → Is Blue Lotus Legal?
- → Blue Lotus Effects
- → Is Blue Lotus Safe?
- Blue Lotus Collection
References
- Emboden, W. A. (1981). Transcultural use of narcotic water lilies in ancient Egyptian and Maya drug ritual. Journal of Ethnopharmacology, 3(1), 39–83.
- 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
- 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.
- Erowid Lotus / Lily Vault. erowid.org/plants/lotus
- 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
- The Ultimate Guide to Blue Lotus (Nymphaea caerulea)
- Blue Lotus Effects: Alkaloids, Pharmacology & Experience
- Is Blue Lotus Safe? Side Effects & Contraindications
→ Nuciferine Compound Profile — chemistry & pharmacology

