Sue Goetz

The Herb Lover's Spa Book


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TABLE OF CONTENTS ■

       INTRODUCTION

       SPA: A LITTLE HISTORY AND LORE

       SURROUND The garden as sanctuary and spa retreat ■ Creating serene spa surroundings in your home

       GROW Deciphering botanical plant names ■ Natural herbal skin care ■ Sourcing your plants ■ 19 favorite herbs to grow, from aloe vera to witch hazel ■ Designing and growing: 4 seasons of herbs in the garden and containers ■ Harvesting, drying, freezing

       CREATE Homemade notes: All about your herbal spa ingredients and how to prepare them ■ The recipes: Your spa compendium, with 11 themed recipe groups, 50-plus recipes and DIY projects

       GLOSSARY

       RESOURCES

       RECIPES LIST

       REFERENCES

       INDEX

       ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

       ABOUT THE AUTHOR

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      ■ INTRODUCTION ■

      I am an herb lover, but I am also a spa lover.

      When you put the two together, you have the start of

      a journey of delight.

      “SPA” CONJURES UP SPECIFIC IMAGES FOR ME. A destination resort with fluffy white towels, relaxing massage, luxurious skin treatments and maybe even a fun drink with an umbrella in it. Search online for the word spa and you’ll likely find an alluring image of a well-stacked pile of polished black stones next to a candle and a woman with an exotic flower in her hair. Pretty much as expected. But, as I got deeper into writing this book, I become highly aware (with maybe too much sensitivity) of how the word spa is being used for a variety of other commercial purposes – a hot tub company, a pedicure salon, and much more. Recently, I was at a hotel and on the bathroom counter was a row of tiny bottles, each one labeled as a “spa” shampoo, soap, conditioner, bath gel – each one containing a white, silky liquid with no color, no texture. I wondered if it was all the same stuff. I took a picture of the items in the dish and started writing a paragraph in my head with the notion that I needed to debunk this idea of a spa. How dare they? I thought, climbing on my high horse. Of course, I didn’t actually use the picture because have no wish to defame the company that packaged them as “spa” products. But it served as a reminder to me of how generic the word has become.

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      What is your image of a spa? In the sense of this book, I would like you to visualize the word as a way to nurture and heal. Think of it as a mindset of wellness.

      It is all about relaxation in your own surroundings and using herbs from your garden to create a pleasurable, deeply beneficia experience. (Note to those of us who have been treated to a day spa: Creating the spa experience in your own home brings a speda degree of relaxation because you don’t have to get in the car after your spa day and then drive home afterward. You simply relax, go to bed, meditate or spend moments with renewed energy in your own space. What could be better than that?)

      LESSONS FROM MY GARDEN

      My herbal journey began many years ago,

      not as a book, but as

       lessons from the garden.

      Much of my garden learning was in a high mountain desert garden in Idaho. It was in zone 4, and I couldn’t grow every herb I wanted to; but oh how I tried! In between killing frosts (usually June and early September) I would grow, gather and preserve as much as possible. In that challenging gardening climate, I used to say if I couldn’t make something from the plants, I wouldn’t spend my time planting it! I experimented and made many things from the garden; it wasn’t always about food, it was also about fragrance and healing.

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      As a garden designer, knowing plants and gardening is what drives my work. I do know that not every plant can be harvested to make something; when I first moved to Washington State, I used to joke about what the heck I can do with a Rhododendron. My work is creating beauty with ornamental plants, but my personal garden passion is all about what the garden gives back.

      As a garden speaker, many of my talks are about encouraging people to make discoveries in their own gardens. In recent years, my most requested lectures are about herbs. People are captivated by their fragrance and flavor and all the ways to use them. In 1997, I taught a popular class at the local community college called “Herbal Lotions and Potions.” The topic has evolved over time, in both seminar form and as a hands-on workshop – all about growing herbs and using them for skin care.

      Then came a discussion with Paul Kelly of St. Lynn’s Press and all those lessons, workshops and herbal experiments became the findings for a spa book for herb lovers. During the creation of the book there was an oversized piece of paper posted on the wall of my workspace. In big, black marker I had written the words that I wanted to keep in my thoughts every day:

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      I knew the herbs and recipes by heart, but I wanted to express more, beyond simply making sure you have all the information needed – from the measurement of ingredients to the basics of mixing and blending. I wanted to always find descriptive ways to invite your senses into this herbal journey so you could feel the words, smell the aromas of fresh cut herbs, and anticipate having the comfort of warm healing water touching your skin. I wanted to celebrate the silky feel of herb-infused grapeseed oil on your hands, and the aroma of just-harvested lemon verbena that elevates your mood just by its fresh fragrance. Do words exist that truly describe the way mint tingles? My answer to myself was: Try as I might to tease and entice, there are just no words that can do full justice to the herbal spa experience itself.

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      And so I give you my heartfelt invitation to discover for yourself the beyond-words gifts from the herbal garden – your garden – to immerse yourself in the healing qualities of herbs, to care for your body and engage your senses.

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       What’s Inside

      The book is presented in three parts: Surround, Grow and Create.

      ■ Surround helps you envision a setting that says ahhh to your soul, much the way a great destination spa can do. This is not about replacing that luxurious experience, it is about capturing it. The destination spa for most of us is a quiet moment in the bathtub. Now go beyond that. Let this part of the book inspire you to create your own personal spa environment – its design, colors and textures – whether it’s a private corner of your garden or a place of retreat