Main page content
Rosehips are the fruit of the rose plant (Rosa canina and related species) — small, round, red or orange berries that remain on the bush after the flower petals fall. As one of the richest natural sources of Vitamin C in the plant kingdom (containing up to 20 times more Vitamin C than oranges), Rosehips have been used as a medicinal and nutritional food for thousands of years across Europe, Asia, and Native American traditions. During World War II, the British government organized mass collection of rosehips to produce a Vitamin C syrup for children when citrus imports were cut off. Beyond Vitamin C, rosehips contain bioflavonoids, carotenoids (beta-carotene, lycopene), and a specific galactolipid called GOPO, studied for joint health and anti-inflammatory effects.
Key Benefits of Rosehips
- Extraordinarily rich in Vitamin C — 20× more than oranges by weight
- GOPO (galactolipid) — anti-inflammatory compound studied for osteoarthritis
- Beta-carotene, lycopene, and lutein — antioxidants for skin and immune health
- Immune system support via combined Vitamin C and flavonoids
- Supports collagen synthesis for skin, joint, and connective tissue health
- Reduces risk of chronic inflammation-related disease
- Mild diuretic and digestive tonic
Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) Perspective
Méi Guī Guǒ (玫瑰果) — Rosehips are related to the TCM herb Jīn Yīng Zǐ (金樱子 — Cherokee Rose Fruit), a classical Kidney astringent, and Méi Guī Huā (玫瑰花 — Rose Flower), a Liver Qi-regulating herb. Rosehips combine elements of both.
- Chinese Name: Méi Guī Guǒ (玫瑰果) — Rose Hip / Rose Fruit; Related: Jīn Yīng Zǐ (金樱子)
- Nature & Flavor: Cool; Sour, Sweet
- Meridians Entered: Liver, Kidney, Lung
- Key TCM Actions: Nourishes Liver Blood and Kidney Yin (through sour-cooling action); astringes and holds Jing (Kidney essence); clears mild Liver Heat; nourishes Body Fluids and Yin through high Vitamin C content; anti-inflammatory via antioxidant flavonoids; supports joint health through GOPO compound.
The sour flavor is the signature of Liver-entering, Yin-nourishing herbs in TCM — sour "enters the Liver" and "astringes." Rosehips' sour-sweet combination nourishes without stagnating, astringes without drying — a balanced tonic action. The extraordinary Vitamin C content supports what TCM calls Ying Qi (Nutritive Qi) — the deep nutritive energy derived from food that nourishes tissues and builds Blood. In TCM cosmetic medicine, rose preparations are among the primary "beauty herbs" — reflecting the understanding that outer radiance is the expression of nourished Liver Blood and Kidney Essence.
Rosehip Vitamin C Immune Tea: Simmer 2 tbsp dried rosehips in 3 cups water for 20 minutes. Strain, add honey. Drink 2 cups daily. As a tincture: 2 ml, 2–3 times daily. Rosehip syrup: simmer and strain rosehips, combine liquid with equal weight honey, add lemon juice. Take 1 tbsp daily as a preventive immune tonic throughout winter.
Before you use this: Generally very safe. High doses of Vitamin C may cause loose stools. Remove seeds and fine inner hairs before preparation — the hairs can cause irritation. May slightly increase iron absorption — monitor if you have hemochromatosis. May interact with blood thinners at very high doses. Safe for children.