Formulations · Avaleha

Chyawanprash

च्यवनप्राश
Classical avaleha · the great rejuvenating jam, built on Amalaki

The most celebrated rasayana in all of Ayurveda — a dark, fragrant jam of some forty herbs around a heart of Amla, taken for centuries to build strength, steady the breath, and meet the years with grace. Where Triphala clears, this one nourishes.

Reading time · ~14 min Reviewed by OmAyurved Vaidya Board Updated 1 Jun 2026

At a glance

TypeAvaleha (herbal jam) · polyherbal rasayana
SanskritChyawanprash च्यवनप्राश · “Chyavana’s confection”
TraditionClassical — the first rasayana of the Charaka Samhita
Also known asChyavanaprasha, Chyavanaprasham, Chyawanprash avaleha
IngredientsAmalaki base + ~40–50 herbs, ghee, sesame oil, honey, sugar
Rasa · tasteAll six tastes present — chiefly sweet & sour
Virya · potencyGently warming overall
Vipaka · after-effectSweet (madhura)
Qualities · gunaUnctuous, heavy (nourishing)
Effect on dosha↓ Vata↓ Pitta↑ Kapha in excess
Key actionsRasayana · immunity · respiratory tonic · strength
Traditionally forImmunity, the lungs & breath, vitality, graceful aging

The sage’s confectionच्यवनप्राश

Chyawanprash is the great rejuvenating jam of Ayurveda — a dark, aromatic confection, built on the Amla fruit and carrying, by tradition, some forty or more herbs. Of all the rasayanas, it is the most famous, and the one most likely to be found in a kitchen cupboard.

Its name carries a story. In the old telling, the sage Chyavana had grown frail and aged; the Ashvini twins — the celestial physicians — are said to have restored his youth and vigour with this very preparation. So it became Chyavana-prasha, “the confection of Chyavana.” Charaka places it first among the rasayanas, the very head of the chapter on rejuvenation. We tell the legend as the tradition tells it — as a story of restoration, not a medical promise.

It is an avaleha (अवलेह) — an herbal jam, or electuary — the form Ayurveda reserves for its richest, most nourishing tonics. A decoction of many herbs is cooked down with ghee and sweeteners to a spoonable paste, then finished off the heat with honey and fine aromatic powders. Where Triphala is light and clears, Chyawanprash is unctuous and builds — two faces of the same tradition.

What’s insideघटक द्रव्य

Chyawanprash is a true polyherbal: the classical recipe carries roughly forty to fifty herbs, and recipes vary from house to house. Yet the architecture is simple to read — one fruit at the heart, a circle of supporting herbs around it, a grounding decoction beneath, and three carriers that bind it all into something delicious and deeply absorbed.

Beneath these sits the Dashamula (दशमूल), the “ten roots” — a grounding, strengthening decoction that forms the herbal base of the jam. Around them gather supporting rasayana and respiratory herbs (such as Bala, Shatavari, Punarnava, Pushkarmula and others, by recipe), and a sheaf of aromatic prakshepa powders — cinnamon, tejpatra, nagkeshar, bamboo manna — folded in at the very end.

Three carriers complete it: ghee and sesame oil (the sneha, which carry the fat-loving herbs), sugar or jaggery (the sweet base that makes a jam), and honey — always folded in off the heat, never cooked, exactly as the tradition insists.

The synergyGhee and honey together are the classic yogavahi — “carriers” said to drive the herbs into the deepest tissues. So Chyawanprash is not simply many herbs in a sweet base: it is an Amla rasayana amplified — its virtues opened by warming spices, grounded by the ten roots, and ferried inward by ghee and honey. The whole is built to nourish rather than to cleanse.

How Ayurveda reads itरस · वीर्य · विपाक

Read as a whole, the energetics of Chyawanprash explain its nourishing, building character:

  • Rasa (taste): famously, all six tastes are present — but it is led by sweet and sour, from the Amla and the sweeteners, which is why it tastes rich and tangy at once.
  • Virya (potency): gently warming overall — the cooling Amla base is carried by warming spices (Pippali, cinnamon, cardamom), so the finished jam leans mildly warm, well suited to cooler seasons and a sluggish appetite.
  • Vipaka (post-digestive effect): sweet — the signature of a true rasayana: building, nourishing, and replenishing rather than depleting (see Agni & vipaka).
  • Guna (qualities): unctuous (snigdha) and heavy (guru) — the very opposite of Triphala’s light dryness, and the reason it is taken in small spoonfuls (see the gunas).

Its effect on the doshas is to settle Vata and Pitta especially, while its sweet heaviness can increase Kapha if taken in excess or by those with weak digestion. Its defining gift — its prabhava — is to build ojas, the subtle essence behind immunity, strength, and lustre, and to act as a tonic to the channels of breath (the pranavaha srotas).

Traditional actions & usesकर्म

The classics give Chyawanprash a cluster of building, protective actions:

Rasayana रसायनBalya बल्यVrishya वृष्यMedhya मेध्यKasahara कासहर

In traditional practice, it is turned to above all to:

  • Build immunity and resilience (rasayana) — taken over weeks to nourish the tissues and strengthen ojas, the body’s reserve of vitality;
  • Support the lungs and breath — classically a tonic for the chest, the voice, and easy breathing, especially at the turn of the seasons;
  • Strengthen and rebuild (balya) — for convalescence, low energy, and rebuilding after illness or exertion;
  • Nourish vitality across the ages (vrishya) — long taken as an all-ages family tonic, in amounts suited to the person;
  • Steady the mind and senses (medhya) — supporting memory, focus, and a clear, settled mind.
Its essential characterIf Triphala is the household cleanser, Chyawanprash is the household tonic. It is the remedy a family reaches for not to fix a problem but to build a foundation — a daily spoonful of strength, breath, and resilience, taken season after season.

What it’s used forcommon concerns

Chyawanprash is most often turned to for a handful of related concerns — each of which will have its own full guide in this encyclopedia:

  • Immunity & seasonal resilience — its signature use, as a daily rasayana to build reserves.
  • Respiratory health — the lungs, the breath, the voice, and the easy clearing of the chest.
  • Energy, strength & convalescence — rebuilding after illness, fatigue, or a depleting season.
  • Graceful aging & vitality — the rasayana ideal of meeting the years with strength intact.
  • Skin & complexion — the outward lustre that Ayurveda reads as a sign of healthy ojas.

Full concern guides — with the doshic picture and the range of supporting herbs and practices — are on their way to this section.

A note on modern researchan honest view

What the science does & doesn’t say

Chyawanprash is among the most-studied classical tonics. Modern work has looked at immune markers, antioxidant capacity (its Amla base is naturally rich in vitamin C and polyphenols), respiratory wellbeing, and general vitality, and interest continues to grow.

As ever, the evidence is still developing: many studies are small, short, or preliminary, and a forty-herb jam is far harder to study than a single compound. Traditional use and emerging research are encouraging, but neither replaces personalised advice from a qualified professional.

OmAyurved’s view is to honour the depth of the classical tradition while describing modern findings honestly — neither overstating them nor dismissing them.

How to take itअनुपान

Chyawanprash is taken in a few traditional and modern forms:

  • The classical jam (avaleha) — the traditional form, a sweet, jaggery- or sugar-based confection taken by the spoonful;
  • Sugar-free preparations — modern versions sweetened differently, for those watching their sugar;
  • “Special” or enriched versions — some houses add saffron, extra rasayana herbs, or other refinements.

The traditional way

Most classically, a teaspoon or two is taken in the morning on an empty stomach, on its own and followed by a cup of warm milk or warm water. It is especially favoured in the cooler months and at the change of seasons, when the body’s reserves are most worth building. The vehicle (anupana) shapes its action: warm milk leans into its building, strengthening side; warm water gives a lighter effect; in summer or for a Kapha constitution, both the amount and the milk are reduced.

On dosageBegin with a small spoonful. The right amount depends on age, constitution, the season, and the strength of your digestion — children take far less than adults, and Kapha types or anyone with sluggish digestion take less still. Follow the guidance on a quality product or, better, a qualified practitioner.

Safety & cautionsimportant

Please read before use
  • Blood sugar & diabetes: the classical jam is sweet (a sugar or jaggery base) — if you are diabetic or watching blood sugar, take care, prefer a genuine sugar-free preparation, and seek professional advice.
  • Weak digestion & Kapha: its richness can feel heavy or cloying and may worsen congestion, a coated tongue, or sluggishness — take a smaller amount, or pause, if so.
  • Infants: because it contains honey, it is not suitable for children under one year; for older children, choose an age-appropriate product and check the amount with a practitioner.
  • Pregnancy & nursing: it is generally considered nourishing, but recipes vary and some contain heating or strong herbs — use only on professional advice.
  • Allergens & quality: it contains many herbs, ghee (dairy), honey, and sometimes sesame — check the label; and because some products are heavily sweetened or poorly sourced, choose a brand that is independently tested.

This is general guidance, not a complete list. Always consult a qualified practitioner or doctor before starting any remedy, especially if you are pregnant or nursing, taking medication, managing diabetes, or caring for a young child.

Bring it homefrom knowledge to remedy

When you’re ready to bring Chyawanprash into your daily ritual, it will be offered in the forms it has taken for centuries — prepared, sourced, and tested to a standard worthy of the tradition.

The OmAyurved standard
Single-origin & ethically sourcedSun-ripened Amla and herbs traced to their growers, gathered in the right season for true potency.
Prepared by classical methodThe full traditional herb list, slow-cooked the long way — and the honey folded in off the heat, as the texts require.
Independently testedEvery batch verified for purity, heavy metals, and an honest, declared sugar content.
Nothing added, nothing hiddenReal herbs in real proportions — no colours, no synthetic flavours, and a label you can read.
Coming soon
Chyawanprash · Classical
Traditional jam · jaggery base

The full classical recipe — the complete herb list around a heart of Amla, slow-cooked the long way for the traditional morning spoonful.

  • Full classical herb list
  • Honey folded in off the heat
  • Heavy-metal tested
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Coming soon
Chyawanprash · Sugar-Free
Same herbs · gently sweetened

The same classical herb list in a sugar-free base — for those watching their blood sugar who still want the daily rasayana ritual.

  • No added cane sugar
  • Full classical herb list
  • Independently tested
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Coming soon
Amalaki
The hero fruit, on its own

The Amla at the heart of Chyawanprash, as a simple single-fruit powder — the purest, simplest way to take the great rasayana.

  • Whole fruit, no isolates
  • Sun-dried, stone-milled
  • Lab-tested for purity
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Pairs well with

Classical sources

  • Charaka Samhita (Chikitsa Sthana, Rasayana chapter) — Chyawanprash described first among the great rasayana formulations, with the story of the sage Chyavana.
  • Ashtanga Hridaya & Ashtanga Sangraha — the rasayana and respiratory-tonic context of the preparation.
  • Sharangadhara Samhita & Bhaishajya Ratnavali — the pharmacy texts giving the method, the avaleha technique, and the proportions.
  • Bhavaprakasha Nighantu — the properties of Amalaki and the supporting herbs that compose it.

Recipes vary widely — from roughly forty to over fifty herbs — by tradition, region, and house. OmAyurved presents the widely taught architecture rather than any single proprietary formula. Modern research is summarised in general terms and is not a clinical endorsement.

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