Tamarindus Indica · Puliyam Pattai / Imli Bark · Dried Tree Bark · Raw · 100g / 250g / 450g
The Bark of India’s Most Familiar Tree — With Traditional Uses Most People Have Never Heard Of
Everyone knows tamarind — the sour, tangy fruit that’s essential to South Indian cooking, chutneys, rasam, and sambar. But almost nobody outside traditional medicine circles knows about the bark. Tamarind tree bark (Puliyam Pattai in Tamil, Imli ki Chhaal in Hindi) has been used in Siddha, Ayurveda, and folk medicine across India for centuries — for purposes that have nothing to do with cooking. The bark is extraordinarily rich in tannins, polyphenols, and flavonoids — the same class of antioxidant compounds found in green tea, red wine, and dark chocolate — and has been traditionally used for blood sugar management, digestive health, wound healing, oral care, and soothing baths. It’s one of Moolihai’s most popular dried herbs — a product that people discover through traditional practitioners, try once, and then reorder because it works. This is 100% natural tamarind tree bark — sun-dried without chemical treatment, ready for decoction, paste preparation, or bath infusion.
Traditional Siddha & Ayurvedic Herb
100% Natural · No Additives
Rich in Tannins & Polyphenols
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The Other Side of India’s Most Famous Tree
The tamarind tree (Tamarindus indica) is one of the most recognisable and culturally significant trees in India — a massive, long-lived tropical hardwood found in virtually every village, temple compound, and roadside across South India. While the fruit is a kitchen staple known worldwide, the bark has a parallel life as a traditional medicine. Tamarind bark is harvested from the trunk and major branches of mature trees, sun-dried, and used in decoction, paste, and bath preparations. The bark’s medicinal profile is driven by its exceptionally high tannin content — tannins are polyphenolic compounds with powerful astringent, antimicrobial, anti-inflammatory, and antioxidant properties. The same astringent action that makes strong black tea “dry” your mouth operates in tamarind bark at a much higher concentration: the tannins bind to proteins in tissues, tightening and protecting mucosal surfaces, reducing inflammation, and creating an inhospitable environment for bacteria and fungi. Published research on Tamarindus indica bark has documented hypoglycaemic (blood-sugar-lowering), hepatoprotective (liver-protecting), wound-healing, and antimicrobial activities. The bark also contains minerals naturally present in the tree: magnesium, potassium, iron, calcium, and B-vitamins (thiamin, riboflavin, niacin) — absorbed from the soil by the tree’s deep root system over decades of growth.
What Traditional Practitioners Use It For
Blood Sugar Support
The most prominent traditional use — and the one highlighted in the product listing. In Siddha and Ayurvedic practice, tamarind bark decoction has been prescribed for people with elevated blood sugar for generations. Published research supports this traditional use: studies on Tamarindus indica bark extract have demonstrated hypoglycaemic effects in animal models, likely through alpha-amylase and alpha-glucosidase inhibition (slowing carbohydrate digestion and glucose absorption in the intestine — the same mechanism used by the pharmaceutical drug acarbose) and possible insulin-sensitising effects. The high polyphenol content also provides antioxidant protection for pancreatic beta cells. For people managing Type 2 diabetes or pre-diabetes, tamarind bark decoction may provide complementary blood sugar support alongside diet, exercise, and prescribed medication. Moolihai also offers Insulin Leaf Powder for more targeted blood sugar management.
Digestive Health
Tamarind bark’s astringent tannins make it a traditional remedy for digestive complaints — particularly diarrhoea, dysentery, and intestinal inflammation. The tannins bind to the intestinal mucosa, reducing excessive fluid secretion and tightening the mucosal lining. This is the same astringent-antidiarrhoeal mechanism that makes blackberry leaf tea and oak bark decoction traditional diarrhoea remedies in European herbal medicine. For chronic digestive inflammation (colitis, irritable bowel), the anti-inflammatory polyphenols reduce the immune-mediated tissue damage that perpetuates these conditions. The bark decoction also has mild carminative properties — reducing gas and bloating.
Wound Healing & Skin Applications
Applied topically as a paste or wash (decoction applied with clean cloth), tamarind bark provides antimicrobial protection and wound-healing support. The tannins precipitate proteins at the wound surface, forming a protective layer that shields the wound from bacteria while reducing oozing and inflammation. The polyphenols accelerate tissue regeneration by promoting fibroblast activity and collagen synthesis. Traditional uses include treatment of skin sores, boils, rashes, minor burns, and chronic wounds. For a tamarind bark bath (a traditional South Indian remedy for skin conditions and post-partum recovery), add a generous handful of bark to a pot of boiling water, steep for 20 minutes, strain, and add the infused water to your bath.
Oral Health & Gum Care
The astringent and antimicrobial properties of tamarind bark make it an effective natural mouthwash ingredient. Boil a small piece of bark in water, cool, and use as a mouth rinse — the tannins tighten swollen gums (beneficial for gingivitis), the antimicrobial compounds kill oral bacteria (reducing plaque and bad breath), and the astringent action stops bleeding gums. In South Indian villages, tamarind bark has traditionally been used alongside neem twigs as part of daily oral hygiene. The mineral content (calcium, magnesium) in the bark decoction may also provide supplementary support for tooth enamel remineralisation.
Liver & Detoxification Support
Published research on Tamarindus indica has documented hepatoprotective (liver-protecting) effects. The bark’s polyphenols protect liver cells from oxidative damage — the kind of damage caused by alcohol, environmental toxins, medications, and metabolic waste. In Ayurveda, the liver (Yakrit) is considered the seat of Pitta (metabolic fire) and the primary organ of blood purification. Tamarind bark’s traditional use as a “blood purifier” (Rakta Shodhaka) aligns with modern understanding of liver-mediated detoxification. For people concerned about liver health — particularly those exposed to environmental toxins, alcohol, or long-term medication use — tamarind bark decoction provides gentle, ongoing hepatoprotective support.
Herbal Bath & Post-Partum Recovery
In Tamil Nadu, a tamarind bark bath is a traditional post-partum practice for new mothers. The bark-infused bathwater provides antimicrobial protection for the healing body, the astringent tannins tighten and tone skin that has stretched during pregnancy, and the warm herbal bath itself provides soothing relief for the aches and fatigue of new motherhood. Beyond post-partum use, tamarind bark baths are traditionally recommended for general skin health, joint stiffness, and as a seasonal wellness practice. The bark infusion gives the bathwater a light amber colour and a subtle, earthy aroma. Combine with Moolihai’s Baby Herbal Bath Powder for the mother’s bath alongside the baby’s traditional herbal bathing ritual.
Traditional Preparation Methods
Decoction — For Internal Use
Take 5–10 grams of dried tamarind bark, crush or break into smaller pieces, and add to 250ml of water. Boil on medium heat for 10–15 minutes (longer than most herbal decoctions, because bark requires more time to release its tannins than leaves or flowers). Strain and drink warm. The taste is mildly bitter and strongly astringent — you’ll feel a dry, tightening sensation in your mouth, which is the tannins at work. Add Moolihai’s Marthandam Honey if the astringency is too intense. For blood sugar support: take once daily on an empty stomach, 30 minutes before your first meal. For digestive complaints: take after meals. Consistency matters — take daily for at least 2–4 weeks to assess cumulative benefit.
Mouthwash — For Oral Health
Prepare a decoction as above (5g bark boiled in 250ml water for 10–15 minutes), strain, and let cool to a comfortable temperature. Use as a mouthwash — swish around your mouth for 30–60 seconds, ensuring the liquid contacts all gum surfaces and teeth. Spit out (don’t swallow the mouthwash). The astringent effect is immediately noticeable: gums feel tighter and firmer. For bleeding gums or gingivitis, use twice daily after brushing. For general oral hygiene and fresh breath, use once daily. This natural mouthwash contains no alcohol, no synthetic chemicals, and no artificial colours — just bark-infused water rich in tannins and antimicrobial polyphenols.
Herbal Bath — For Skin & Post-Partum
Add 30–50 grams of tamarind bark to a large pot of water. Boil for 15–20 minutes until the water turns a rich amber colour. Strain out the bark pieces and add the infused water to your bath. For a more concentrated treatment, pour the warm decoction directly over affected skin areas (rashes, wounds, post-surgical sites) as a wash. The tannin-rich water provides antimicrobial protection, reduces inflammation, and promotes healing. For post-partum recovery, traditional practice recommends daily tamarind bark baths for 30–40 days after delivery — the astringent action helps the body recover its pre-pregnancy tone while the antimicrobial properties protect against infection during the healing period.
Topical Paste — For Wounds & Skin
Grind or powder a small amount of dried bark and mix with water (or Moolihai’s Marthandam Honey for enhanced antimicrobial and wound-healing properties) to form a paste. Apply directly to skin boils, sores, minor wounds, rashes, or inflamed areas. The tannin paste creates a protective, antimicrobial barrier over the wound while the polyphenols stimulate tissue repair. Leave for 30–60 minutes and wash off with clean water. For chronic skin conditions, apply daily until improvement is observed. For insect bites and minor burns, immediate application of the paste provides cooling relief and reduces swelling.
Names Across India
Tamil
புளியம் பட்டை (Puliyam Pattai)
Hindi
इमली (Imli) / Imli ki Chhaal
Malayalam
മധുരപ്പുളി (Madhurappuli)
Telugu
చింతపండు (Chintapandu) / Amlika
Sanskrit
Tintidika / Amli
English
Tamarind Tree Bark / Indian Date
Botanical
Tamarindus indica
Key Compounds
Tannins, Polyphenols, Flavonoids
What You’re Getting
100g / 250g / 450g
Three size options
Raw Dried Bark
Sun-dried, naturally harvested
India
Origin
Tamarindus Indica
Botanical species
No Additives
Pure bark, nothing added
Tannin-Rich
High polyphenol content
Multi-Use
Decoction, mouthwash, bath, paste
0.25 kg
Product weight
Ships Worldwide
USA
5–7 Days
FREE OVER $99
UK
5–7 Days
FREE OVER $99
Canada
5–7 Days
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Common Questions
No — this is the bark of the tamarind tree, not the fruit. Tamarind fruit (the sour, tangy pulp used in sambar, rasam, chutneys, and sauces worldwide) comes from the seed pods of the tree. Tamarind bark comes from the trunk and branches. They’re from the same tree but have completely different compositions and uses. The fruit is primarily used in cooking for its sour flavour (tartaric acid). The bark is used in traditional medicine for its high tannin and polyphenol content — it has a bitter-astringent taste, not the sour taste of the fruit. You would not use tamarind bark in cooking, and you would not use tamarind fruit pulp as a medicinal decoction. They’re as different as apple fruit and apple tree bark — same tree, completely different products.
Tamarind bark has been traditionally used for blood sugar management in Siddha and Ayurvedic practice, and published research has documented hypoglycaemic effects in laboratory studies. However, diabetes is a serious chronic condition that requires professional medical management. Tamarind bark decoction should be considered a complementary support — not a replacement for prescribed diabetes medication, diet management, or blood sugar monitoring. If you want to explore tamarind bark for blood sugar support, inform your doctor, monitor your blood sugar more frequently during the first 2 weeks (to check for additive hypoglycaemic effects with your medication), and never adjust your medication without medical guidance. For more targeted blood sugar support, Moolihai’s Insulin Leaf Powder is a dedicated product with stronger customer-reported blood sugar effects.
The dominant taste is astringent — a dry, mouth-puckering sensation similar to very strong unsweetened black tea or unripe persimmon. There’s also a mild bitterness. It does NOT taste sour like tamarind fruit — the bark has a completely different flavour profile. The astringent sensation is the tannins binding to proteins in your saliva, and it’s actually a sign of potency. If you find it challenging, add a teaspoon of Moolihai’s Marthandam Honey — honey is the traditional Ayurvedic companion for astringent medicines, smoothing the taste while adding its own antimicrobial properties. Over time, most regular users find the taste becomes familiar and unremarkable — similar to how strong green tea tastes “normal” to daily tea drinkers.
Tamarind bark baths are a traditional post-partum practice — meaning they’re used AFTER delivery, not during pregnancy. For internal use (decoction) during pregnancy, consult your obstetrician. The high tannin content and potential blood-sugar-lowering effects warrant medical clearance before use during pregnancy. For the post-partum period (after delivery), tamarind bark baths are considered a safe, well-established traditional practice in Tamil Nadu — the external application provides antimicrobial and astringent benefits without systemic absorption of significant quantities. For breastfeeding mothers, topical/bath use is safe; internal decoction use should be discussed with your doctor.
Usage varies significantly by application. For daily decoction (5–10g per day): the 100g pack lasts 10–20 days. For mouthwash use (5g per session, once daily): 100g lasts approximately 20 days. For herbal baths (30–50g per bath, 1–2 times per week): 100g provides 2–3 baths — bath users should consider the 250g or 450g sizes. For combined use (daily decoction + weekly bath): the 450g size provides the best value for a 1-month supply. The dried bark stores well for 12–24 months in an airtight container — buying the larger size and storing it is more economical than multiple small-pack purchases.
Dried bark is naturally shelf-stable — it’s one of the most forgiving herbal products to store. Keep in an airtight container (glass jar or sealed bag) in a cool, dry place away from humidity and direct sunlight. Humidity is the only real risk — if moisture reaches the bark, it can develop surface mould. As long as you keep it dry, tamarind bark retains its tannin content and medicinal potency for 12–24 months without any degradation. You’ll know it’s still potent when a small piece boiled in water produces a dark amber decoction with a strong astringent taste. If the decoction is pale and the taste is weak, the tannins have degraded — time for a fresh pack. Break or crush bark only as needed for each preparation — intact bark pieces preserve their compounds better than pre-ground material.
*Disclaimer: Tamarind Tree Bark (Tamarindus indica) is a traditional herbal product used in Siddha, Ayurvedic, and folk medicine practices. The uses described are based on traditional knowledge and published research on Tamarindus indica. This product has not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. Diabetes is a serious condition requiring professional medical management — do not use this product as a substitute for prescribed medication. Consult a healthcare provider before use, especially if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, taking medication (particularly diabetes or blood-thinning medication), or have a medical condition. For external application, perform a patch test before applying to large skin areas. Individual results may vary.



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