Product Description
Root | Traditionally Harvested & Naturally Dried
Asparagus racemosus | Asparagaceae
शतावरी • Shatavari • Shatamuli • Narayani • Bahusuta
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Attribute |
Details |
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Sanskrit Name |
शतावरी (Shatavari) • शतमूली (Shatamuli) • नारायणी (Narayani) |
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Botanical Name |
Asparagus racemosus Willd. |
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Plant Family |
Asparagaceae (formerly Liliaceae) |
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Part Used |
Tuberous Root |
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Ayurvedic Category |
रसायन (Rasayana) • बल्य (Balya) • वयःस्थापन (Vayasthapana) • स्तन्यजनन (Stanyajanana) |
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Taste (Rasa) |
Madhura (Sweet) • Tikta (Bitter) |
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Quality (Guna) |
Guru (Heavy) • Snigdha (Unctuous) |
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Potency (Virya) |
Sheeta (Cooling) |
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Post-Digestive Effect |
Madhura (Sweet) |
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Dosha Action |
Vata-Pitta Shamaka │ May increase Kapha |
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Origin |
Tropical & Subtropical Bharat — Traditionally Harvested |
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Shelf Life |
24 months from date of processing |
The Herb
The name has two readings, and the tradition kept both.
Shatamuli — she of a hundred roots. Pull the plant and you find a cluster of pale tuberous roots, dozens of them, radiating from a single crown. The name is literal.
Shatavari — she who possesses a hundred husbands. This is not literal, and the classical writers knew it was not. It is a way of saying: she who restores what a woman's body spends.
Narayani. Bahusuta — she of many children. Pivari — the well-nourished. Shatapadi. Shataveerya — of a hundred potencies.
Where Ashwagandha is warm, Shatavari is cool. Where Ashwagandha is light, Shatavari is Guru — heavy. Both are Snigdha, unctuous, and both are Brimhana.
They are a pair, and Ayurveda used them as one. Ashwagandha for what has been depleted by strain; Shatavari for what has been depleted by heat.
Charaka places Shatavari within Balya, Vayasthapana, and Madhura Skandha. Sushruta places it within Vidarigandhadi and the Kantaka Panchamoola — the same group of five thorny roots where Himsra stands.
Its rasa is sweet and bitter. Its virya is cooling. Its vipaka is sweet. It pacifies Vata through unctuousness, and Pitta through coolness. Kapha may rise, and we say so.
ASLI AYURVEDA offers Shatavari root in its most authentic form — carefully harvested, naturally dried, preserved without additives or artificial enhancement.
This is not a women's supplement.
It is the classical counterweight to heat and depletion, and Ayurveda gave it to whoever needed it.
What the Ancient Texts Say
Charaka Samhita
Charaka places Shatavari within three classifications:
Balya — the ten dravyas that promote strength
Vayasthapana — the ten that sustain vitality across years
Madhura Skandha — the sweet-tasting group
Charaka discusses Shatavari in Chikitsa Sthana 1.3, within the Rasayana chapter, among the dravyas balancing Vata and Pitta.
Sushruta Samhita
Sushruta places Shatavari within Vidarigandhadi Gana, and within the Kantaka Panchamoola — the five thorny roots, alongside Karamarda, Gokshura, Saireyaka, and Gridhranakhi.
He records it among the Pitta Shamaka dravyas.
Ashtanga Hridaya
Vagbhata places Shatavari within Vidarigandhadi Gana, recording it as Madhura and Tikta in rasa, Guru and Snigdha in guna, Sheeta in virya.
Sharangadhara Samhita
Sharangadhara, in Purva Khanda 5, names Shatavari among the Shukrala dravyas — alongside Ashwagandha and Musali. The same passage that carries Ashwagandha's later attribution carries Shatavari's.
Bhavaprakasha Nighantu
Bhavamishra records Shatavari among the Madhura, cooling, Balya dravyas.
Rasapanchaka
Madhura and Tikta rasa; Guru and Snigdha guna; Sheeta virya; Madhura vipaka; Vata-Pitta Shamaka karma. Kapha may be increased.
The pharmacology is coherent. Snigdha and Madhura pacify Vata. Sheeta and Tikta pacify Pitta. Guru and Snigdha together will build Kapha in a constitution already heavy — the texts do not conceal this, and neither do we.
Ayurvedic Classical Understanding
Across Ayurvedic literature and traditional practice, Shatavari root is associated with:
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Rasayana — rejuvenative wellness
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Balya — the promotion of strength
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Vayasthapana — sustaining vitality across years
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Stanyajanana — the classical lactation tradition
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Medhya — nourishment of the intellect
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Chakshushya — traditional support for the eyes
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Shukrala — as attributed by Sharangadhara
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Vata and Pitta pacification through cooling, unctuous, sweet qualities
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Traditional application across every phase of a woman's life
Its enduring place within Ayurveda reflects a tradition that understood coolness as a form of nourishment.
Benefits
Ayurvedic Benefits
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Placed by Charaka within Balya, Vayasthapana, and Madhura Skandha
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Discussed by Charaka in the Rasayana chapter, Chikitsa Sthana 1.3
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Placed by Sushruta within Vidarigandhadi and the Kantaka Panchamoola
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Traditionally attributed Stanyajanana — the classical lactation tradition
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Named Shatamuli — she of a hundred roots — for the cluster from which it grows
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Traditionally attributed Medhya and Chakshushya
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Shukrala action attributed by Sharangadhara alongside Ashwagandha and Musali
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The classical cooling counterweight to warming Brimhana dravyas
Wellness Benefits
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May support women's wellness across the phases of life
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Traditionally associated with the body's response to heat and depletion
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May support comfortable digestion and the lining of the digestive passage
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Traditionally linked with calm and settled states
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May support nourishment and healthy tissue building
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Traditionally associated with cooling an over-heated constitution
Ritual Wellness Benefits
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Traditionally taken with warm milk — the classical anupana
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Paired with Ashwagandha in classical practice: the cool and the warm together
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Supports the Ayurvedic understanding that nourishment is not always heating
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Historically valued in summer and Pitta-season regimens
How to Use Your Shatavari
The Classical Preparation — With Milk
Warm milk is the classical anupana for Shatavari. Approximately 3–5 grams of root powder, stirred into warm milk, taken once daily.
The unctuous, sweet, cooling character of the root and the milk together are the classical pairing.
Traditional Powder Preparation
Freshly grind dried Shatavari root into a fine powder. Traditionally consumed with warm milk, warm water, honey, or ghee, according to constitutional suitability and practitioner guidance.
The Cooling Ritual
In warm weather, or where the constitution runs hot, Shatavari has traditionally been taken in cool water or with ghee — never combined with warming dravyas that would defeat its Sheeta virya.
Classical Companions
Shatavari has historically been combined with Ashwagandha (the warm to its cool), Yashtimadhu, Amalaki, and Musali. Sharangadhara names Shatavari, Ashwagandha, and Musali together.
A Word on Restraint
Shatavari is Guru and Snigdha — heavy and unctuous. It may increase Kapha.
Where the constitution is already heavy, damp, or congested, use sparingly. Where Agni — the digestive fire — is weak, the heaviness may not be well received.
Seasonal Wisdom
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Summer (Grishma Ritu): Peak suitability — the cooling virya is aligned with the season.
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Autumn (Sharada Ritu): Traditionally valued during Pitta-balancing regimens, when accumulated heat releases.
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Winter (Hemanta & Shishira): Take with warming anupana — warm milk, a touch of ginger — to offset the cooling potency.
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Spring (Vasanta Ritu): Used sparingly. The Kapha season and the Kapha-building dravya do not serve one another.
Purity & Sourcing
ASLI AYURVEDA's Shatavari is harvested across tropical and subtropical Bharat, where the climbing vine grows in gravelly, well-drained soils.
We supply tuberous root. Older plants carry thicker, longer roots; the young root is thin and poor. We select mature material. The roots are carefully cleaned, naturally dried, and preserved without chemical fumigation, synthetic enhancement, or artificial colouring.
Wild-harvest pressure on Asparagus racemosus is real. We source from cultivated and managed stands wherever these exist.
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 flow agents.
No synthetic enhancement.
What you receive is Shatavari in the honest form Charaka placed among the Vayasthapana ten — sweet, cooling, and deeply nourishing.
This is the Power of Pure.




