Lion's Mane is one of the most recognisable functional mushrooms, and one of the most over-claimed. This page does the opposite: it describes what Lion's Mane actually is, where it grows, the compounds it contains, the form and dose we use, and what published human research has investigated, without attaching a benefit we are not allowed to make.
Lion's Mane (Hericium erinaceus) is a striking edible mushroom that grows in shaggy white cascades on hardwood trees across the northern hemisphere. Instead of a cap and gills it forms long, soft spines, which is where its common names, lion's mane, bearded tooth, and the Japanese yamabushitake, come from. It has a long history as both a culinary mushroom and a traditional preparation in East Asia.
It belongs to the same broad family as the other functional mushrooms in Thunder Honey Daylight, and like them it keeps its compounds behind a chitin cell wall. That is why it is used as a dual-extract rather than raw powder, the topic of our dual-extracted mushrooms page.
The two compound groups researchers most associate with Lion's Mane are hericenones, found mainly in the fruiting body, and erinacines, found mainly in the mycelium. These are the molecules laboratory and clinical studies tend to focus on. Naming them is a factual description of the mushroom's chemistry.
Thunder Honey Daylight uses 1,000 mg of a 5:1 dual-extracted Lion's Mane fruiting body per serving. Three things in that sentence are worth unpacking, because they are exactly where mushroom products differ from one another.
Fruiting body, not mycelium-on-grain. We use the mushroom itself, not mycelium grown on a grain substrate and milled with the grain attached. Dual-extracted means both water-soluble and alcohol-soluble compounds are captured, not just one. And 1,000 mg of the extract is the amount of concentrated extract actually in the scoop, not a raw-weight figure printed on the front of the pack. Every active and its exact dose is on the label.
These are the human trials most often cited for Lion's Mane. We list what each one studied and in whom. We do not translate them into a benefit claim for our product, for the reason set out in the note below.
Phytotherapy Research. 30 Japanese adults aged 50–80 with mild cognitive impairment took 3,000 mg/day of dried fruiting-body powder for 16 weeks. The study reported higher cognitive-scale scores than placebo during dosing, which declined again after stopping. PMID 18844328 · dose 3× ours
Frontiers in Aging Neuroscience. 41 people with mild Alzheimer's took ~1,050 mg/day of an erinacine-A-enriched mycelium extract for 49 weeks. The study reported improvements on cognitive and daily-living scales versus placebo. PMID 32581767 · specialised standardised extract
Honest reading of the evidence. The human trials are real but small (around 30–41 people), were run in older adults with diagnosed cognitive impairment rather than healthy users, and used either a higher dose or a specialised standardised extract. The nerve-growth-factor mechanism people often cite for Lion's Mane comes from laboratory and animal work, not human trials. That is an honest picture of where the research stands, not a claim about what the product will do for you.
In the EU, any statement that suggests or implies a health benefit may only be used if it appears on the authorised EFSA register. Lion's Mane is a fungus; its claims sit on the frozen "on-hold" list and, after the Court of Justice ruling of 30 April 2025, should be treated as not usable. Crucially, citing a study does not legalise a claim, linking research to a benefit is still making that claim. So we name the mushroom, state the form and dose, and describe what the studies investigated. We do not tell you it sharpens focus or supports cognition, because that wording is not authorised for us to use.
The rest of the Learn library, all cited the same honest way.
This page describes what Lion's Mane is and what the cited studies investigated. It is not medical advice. The cited studies are individual research findings, often in small or specific groups, and do not mean Thunder Honey Daylight will produce the same result for you. Thunder Honey Daylight is a food supplement, not a medicine.
Food supplement. Do not exceed the recommended daily dose. A food supplement is not a substitute for a varied and balanced diet and a healthy lifestyle. Keep out of reach of young children. These statements have not been evaluated by a medicines regulator. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease. If you are pregnant, breastfeeding, taking medication, or managing a health condition, talk to a qualified healthcare professional first. Developed in Sweden and third-party tested by Eurofins.
Lion's Mane at a real dose, alongside ten other actives, in one daily ritual.
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