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Product Description
The Divine Nectar Creeper of Immunity & Rejuvenation
Stem | Traditionally Harvested & Naturally Dried
Tinospora cordifolia | Menispermaceae
गुडूची • Guduchi • Amrita • Giloy
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Attribute |
Details |
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Sanskrit Name |
गुडूची (Guduchi) • अमृता (Amrita) |
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Botanical Name |
Tinospora cordifolia |
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Plant Family |
Menispermaceae |
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Part Used |
Stem (Mature Creeper) |
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Ayurvedic Category |
रसायन (Rasayana) • मेध्य (Medhya) • दीपन (Deepana) • त्रिदोषशामक (Tridoshashamaka) |
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Taste (Rasa) |
Tikta (Bitter) • Kashaya (Astringent) |
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Quality (Guna) |
Laghu (Light) • Snigdha (Unctuous) |
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Potency (Virya) |
Ushna (Warm) |
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Post-Digestive Effect |
Madhura (Sweet) |
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Dosha Action |
Tridosha Shamaka — balances all three |
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Origin |
Traditionally Cultivated & Wild Regions of Bharat |
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Shelf Life |
24 months from date of processing |
The Herb
Among the entire Ayurvedic materia medica, only a handful of botanicals were granted the name Amrita — the divine nectar of immortality. Guduchi is the foremost among them.
The classical physicians observed something unusual in this humble climbing creeper. It did not merely address a single imbalance. It restored the body's own intelligence — its capacity to recognise, resist, and recover.
Where other herbs pacified one dosha and aggravated another, Guduchi balanced all three. This rarest of qualities — Tridosha Shamaka — placed it in a category occupied by very few botanicals in the entire classical tradition.
Ayurveda especially revered Guduchi wherever the body's resilience had been compromised: during recovery, during seasonal transition, during periods of prolonged strain, and wherever Ama — the residue of incomplete digestion — clouded the tissues.
Its bitter taste and warming potency kindled Agni, the digestive fire. Its sweet post-digestive effect nourished rather than depleted. This is the classical signature of a true Rasayana — a herb that cleanses and rebuilds in the same movement.
Ancient physicians noted that Guduchi grown upon the Neem tree carried heightened potency, absorbing the bitter virtue of its host — an observation preserved across centuries of traditional practice.
ASLI AYURVEDA offers Guduchi in its most authentic form — mature stems, carefully harvested, naturally dried, and preserved without additives or artificial enhancement.
This is not merely an immunity herb.
This is Ayurveda's understanding that true resilience is built, not borrowed.
What the Ancient Texts Say
Charaka Samhita
Charaka places Guduchi within the Vayasthapana Mahakashaya — the group of ten botanicals specifically understood to stabilise vitality across the passage of years. He places it again within the Triptighna group.
More significantly still, Charaka names Guduchi among the four Medhya Rasayana — the select botanicals held to nourish the intellect itself. Very few dravyas in the entire canon carry both designations.
In Sutra Sthana 25.40, Charaka attributes to Guduchi the actions of Sangrahi (retentive), Vatahara (Vata-pacifying), Agnideepana (kindling of digestive fire), and Shleshma-Shonita-Prashamana (pacification of Kapha and blood).
Sushruta Samhita
Sushruta grants Guduchi the rarest of classical honours: an entire gana bears its name. The Guduchyadi Gana — the group beginning with Guduchi — is named for this herb, a distinction reserved for dravyas of foundational importance.
Bhavaprakasha Nighantu
Bhavamishra places Guduchi at the head of the Guduchyadi Varga, the section of the Nighantu devoted to climbing and weak-stemmed plants, again naming an entire classification after it.
A Note on the Classical Record
The rasapanchaka of Guduchi is consistent across the texts in its essentials — Tikta and Kashaya rasa, Ushna virya, Madhura vipaka, Tridoshahara action. On guna, the texts differ: some record Laghu (light), others Guru (heavy). ASLI AYURVEDA notes this divergence rather than concealing it. The classical tradition was a living scholarship, not a fixed catalogue.
Ayurvedic Classical Understanding
Across Ayurvedic literature and traditional practice, Guduchi is associated with:
Immunity and resilience traditions (Vyadhikshamatva)
Tridosha balance
Digestive fire (Agni) support
Ama clearance and metabolic cleansing
Medhya — nourishment of the intellect
Rejuvenative wellness
Seasonal wellness support
Sustained vitality across years (Vayasthapana)
Its enduring place within Ayurveda reflects the ancient understanding that immunity is not a defence built at the moment of need — it is a foundation cultivated over time.
Benefits
Ayurvedic Benefits
Revered as a classical Rasayana & Amrita herb traditionally associated with immunity and longevity
Named by Charaka among the four Medhya Rasayana — botanicals traditionally associated with nourishment of the intellect
Traditionally linked with balancing all three doshas — Vata, Pitta, and Kapha
Associated with kindling Agni and supporting Ama clearance
Placed within Charaka's Vayasthapana group — traditionally associated with sustaining vitality across years
Traditionally valued during recovery and convalescence
Considered cleansing, strengthening, and balancing according to Ayurvedic understanding
Wellness Benefits
May support the body's natural immune resilience
Traditionally associated with maintaining healthy digestion and metabolism
May support seasonal wellness during transitions of climate
Traditionally linked with skin clarity and internal purity
May support mental clarity and focus, reflecting its classical Medhya designation
Traditionally associated with maintaining balanced energy and recovery
Ritual Wellness Benefits
Revered as Amrita — the divine nectar — across Bharat's wellness traditions
Traditionally incorporated into daily immunity and rejuvenative regimens
Supports Ayurveda's philosophy that resilience arises from balance, not force
Historically valued in seasonal cleansing and restorative rituals
How to Use Your Guduchi
Guduchi Kwatha — The Classical Immunity Ritual
Simmer 3–5 grams of dried Guduchi stem in 2 cups of water over a low flame until reduced to half.
Strain and consume warm, preferably on an empty stomach.
Traditionally used in immunity-focused and rejuvenative wellness routines.
Traditional Powder Preparation
Freshly grind dried Guduchi stem into a fine powder using a stone grinder or high-powered grinder.
Traditionally consumed with warm water, honey, or ghee according to constitutional suitability and practitioner guidance.
Classical Rejuvenative Blend
Guduchi has historically been combined with Amalaki, Haritaki, Ashwagandha, and Pippali in traditional Ayurvedic Rasayana formulations.
Seasonal Immunity Ritual
Warm Guduchi preparations have traditionally been incorporated into wellness regimens observed at the turning of seasons, when the body's balance is most tested.
Seasonal Wisdom
Monsoon (Varsha Ritu): Peak season for Guduchi — traditionally valued when Ama and dosha aggravation are heightened.
Autumn (Sharada Ritu): Traditionally used during Pitta-balancing and purification regimens.
Winter (Hemanta Ritu): Combined with warming herbs to support resilience and digestive fire.
Summer (Grishma Ritu): Traditionally used in cooling preparations with due regard to constitution.
Purity & Sourcing
ASLI AYURVEDA's Guduchi is sourced from traditionally cultivated and naturally thriving ecosystems across Bharat, where fertile soil, ecological harmony, and time-honoured harvesting practices produce potent and nutrient-rich botanical material of exceptional Ayurvedic quality.
Only mature stems are selected — the portion the classical tradition itself regarded as most potent. The herb is carefully harvested, naturally dried, and preserved without chemical fumigation, synthetic enhancement, or artificial colouring to maintain its authentic Ayurvedic integrity.
Processing takes place within our Z Gold Certified Greenroom Infrastructure — a spiritually aligned Ayurvedic wellness sanctum where Vedic chants resonate continuously, preserving the atmosphere and sanctity of classical herbal preparation.
No additives.
No preservatives.
No synthetic enhancement.
No compromise with authenticity.
What you receive is Guduchi in the same honest form revered by generations of Ayurvedic physicians — cleansing, balancing, and deeply traditional.
This is the Power of Pure.




