Methods for Maximum Extract Potency

Published on 20 March 2020 at 11:31

Whether a mushroom extract powder should be extracted with water or alcohol or both is a question that comes up often.

Hot water is a very traditional mushroom extraction process and is the most common. Pure alcohol is rarely used when making extract powders. When both water and alcohol are used, this is called a dual extract.

It is important to make sure the correct solvent is used since many mushrooms do not need dual extraction and may potentially be negatively impacted. Not only that, in many cases, non-water-soluble compounds can be preserved without the need for alcohol extraction.

Note: This is addressing commercial mushroom extract powders where the liquid has been removed. If you are making your own tinctures this generally does not apply unless you are precipitating out a portion of the alcohol (see Dual Extract with Less Beta-glucans).

What is a mushroom extract?

In general, an extract is defined as "a substance made by extracting a part of a raw material, often by using a solvent such as ethanol or water. Extracts may be sold as tinctures or in powder form."

In this case of a mushroom extract, the raw material is mushrooms and the solvents are water and alcohol (typically ethanol). The solvents may be removed to leave behind a powder, or may be left behind to create a liquid tincture.

The reason for mushroom extraction is to make the natural compounds more readily available to our bodies. The fungal cell wall is made up of chitin, which is the same tough substance that crustaceans make their shells from. Our bodies typically lack the chitinase enzyme to digest chitin so much of the mushrooms we eat as food end up as insoluble fiber which is great food for our gut but the compounds we want end up locked inside this chitin cell wall.

This is where mushroom extraction comes into play. By using common extraction techniques, we can break down this chitin and give our bodies easier access to the important compounds.

How is a Hot Water Extract Made?

It might not be obvious, but most people consume some kind of hot water extract daily—common hot water extracts are coffee, tea, bone broth or soup stock. In these cases, the solvent (hot water) remains behind to be consumed along with the compounds that were extracted from raw material.

The raw materials could be tea leaves, mushrooms, vegetables, or beef bones. These get cooked in hot water for a set period of time. Once the cooking is finished, the liquid is drained off and preserved while the solids are thrown away.

Cooking with hot water will extract out any water soluble compounds, and some of the insolubles, from our raw material. These will now be contained in our extraction liquid. Some compounds that are not soluble in water will be left in the solids that get thrown away at the end of the cooking period.

Important Note: a commercial mushroom extract is a bit more complex than this in terms of pressure, temperature, and surface area of raw materials, but the example above is a good general simplification.

Now, our final liquid can either be consumed as a liquid or in the case of an extract powder, this liquid is removed (usually by a spray dryer which evaporates all the water), leaving you with a dry powder.

For mushrooms, the primary water-soluble compounds are polysaccharides like beta-glucans.

What is Dual Extraction?

If we want our extract to contain all the non-water-soluble compounds, we will need to extract the raw materials with something other than water. This is where the alcohol comes in. The alcohol will extract the non-water-soluble compounds into our liquid.

With the leftover solids from our hot water extraction, we will now add them to a mixture of alcohol and water and continue to cook the solids for a set period of time. Once the cooking is done we will separate the liquid from the solids and add this liquid to our first hot water extract liquid.

Voila! A Dual Extract.

This is all and well but was it really necessary?

Non-Water-Soluble Compounds in Mushrooms

There's a lot of talk specifically about the need to use dual extracts to get a "full-spectrum" of compounds available in the mushroom.

But the question is: what are these compounds?

In a reishi double mushroom extraction, we have triterpenes like ganoderic acids, many of which are non-water soluble.2,3 These are an important component of reishi which should be present in any high quality reishi product. Triterpenes give reishi its bitter flavor and this bitterness is a good quality indicator for reishi. Reishi products that aren’t bitter can be assumed to have negligible amounts of triterpenes.

A chaga double extraction will help to isolate triterpenes and sterols like inotodiol, trametenolic acid, and betulinic acid. These are primarily non-water soluble.

For other mushrooms like cordyceps, lion's mane, turkey tail, shiitake and maitake there isn't any primary non-water soluble compounds of note.

For these reasons, we recommend dual extracts of reishi and chaga like we have in our 5MUSHROOMS MEDINCINAL MUSHROOM EXTRACT However, for the other mushrooms, it's not entirely necessary and potentially detrimental to employ dual extraction.

A number of compounds in mushroom stimulates the immune function and inhibits tumor growth. The main compounds observed were polysaccharides. They play a huge role in the body.

Extraction is definitely a must for medicinal mushrooms, in order to make their bioactive compounds more bioavailable for our bodies.

The perfect blend of functional mushrooms is here to fortify your overall wellbeing.
This product is versatile and easy to incorporate into your coffee, tea, hot chocolate and smoothies.

  • ACTIVE INGREDIENTS: > 30% EXTRACT POLYSACCHARIDES
  • CERTIFICATIONS: ISO / Kosher / Halal / ORGANIC
  • APPEARANCE: 3.5 oz (100 gr) Brown Fine Powder
  • PART: 100% FRUIT BODY
  • MAIN FUNCTION: Inhibit the growth of tumors,Nourish Skin & Hair. Supports immune system & body detoxification.

Measuring Medicinal Compounds in Mushroom Extracts

The other issue with many of these non-water soluble compounds is the ability to measure them. Many of them currently cannot be measured at commercial laboratories so we don't even know if they are present in the final product.

We can measure the triterpenes in Reishi using HPLC and guarantee them, like in our Reishi.

Inotodiol in Chaga can be measured, although very few labs can perform this test.

The measurement of these compounds adds an additional layer of quality. This is why we recommend that any product you choose have measured levels of beta-glucans and not polysaccharides.

It's great to say "this is a dual extract" but without any analysis of the compounds that are supposed to be present, you have no proof if they are actually there.

Maybe the raw materials were of low quality?

Was it a poor extraction?

Maybe fillers like starch and grain were added?

Is it being called a dual extract when it's only a hot water extract?

The term "dual extract" or "hot water extract" for that matter don't provide any real context without the analysis of the compounds they are meant to extract.

The Downside of Dual Extraction

We have seen test results of dual extracts that actually have fewer beta-glucans (one of the key medicinal compounds in mushrooms) than their hot water extract counterparts. This is due to the fact that polysaccharides precipitate out in alcohol and are removed from the final liquid in the filtration process. This essentially removes many of the beta-glucans.

Herbalist and traditional medicine specialist, Subhuti Dharmananda Ph.D., has said the following in regards to alcohol extractions for:

In some cases, such as the immune-enhancing polysaccharides of astragalus, lonicera, medicinal mushrooms, and other herbs, alcohol is actually a poor medium for extraction because it causes the desired components to condense out of the liquid (thus none is left in the finished product).

So for mushrooms that have few non-water soluble compounds, a hot water extract is a more valid method of extraction. For our MEDICINAL MUSHROOM EXTRACT 100 grams, our shiitake extracts are all hot water extracts. This keeps the levels of beta-glucans high.

The Takeaway

It may be simplistic to say that everything needs to be dual extracted.

Extraction is definitely a must for medicinal mushrooms but as we’ve seen above. Not all mushrooms need to be dual extracted and in some cases, it’s actually detrimental. Plus, without analysis to back up that mushroom extraction, it gives no guarantee of quality.

5MUSHROOMS continues to stay on the forefront of mushroom research and we will always look for ways to advance our products. As mushroom extraction methods and testing methodology improves, we can continue to adjust and optimize our products.

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