Alchemy Labs | Inflame | 90 Capsules
SKU: 83376143409

Alchemy Labs | Inflame | 90 Capsules

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Description

Alchemy Labs | Inflame | 90 Capsules1,000mg arachidonic acid with transparent pump support that delivers Alchemy Labs Inflame is a targeted, stim free supplement for building muscle. It focuses on making your weight training hit harder as an anabolic trigger. No fluff like vitamins or weak claims here. It's a mix of arachidonic acid, agmatine sulfate, L norvaline, epicatechin, and BioPerine to boost workout intensity, blood flow to cells, and the inflammation signals that drive gains

1,000mg arachidonic acid with transparent pump support that delivers

Alchemy Labs Inflame is a targeted, stim-free supplement for building muscle. It focuses on making your weight training hit harder as an anabolic trigger. No fluff like vitamins or weak claims here. It's a mix of arachidonic acid, agmatine sulfate, L-norvaline, epicatechin, and BioPerine® to boost workout intensity, blood flow to cells, and the inflammation signals that drive gains from heavy lifts.

The star is arachidonic acid at 1,000 mg per serving. This omega-6 fatty acid sits in your cell membranes and gets released during tough workouts, helping create eicosanoids—those are signaling molecules—and ramping up inflammation from exercise. In supplements, it amps up the local signals from resistance training. Muscle growth isn't just food and protein; it's about how loud your workout tells your body to build. 1,000 mg is a strong dose that makes this a real muscle-builder, not some basic health pill.

You get AgmaPure® agmatine sulfate at 750 mg. Agmatine comes from arginine and is popular for pumps, getting nutrients to muscles, and that full feeling during sets. It works in complex ways, but you'll notice better muscle fullness and how contractions feel. 750 mg is a solid amount that should stand out, especially since capsules often skimp on doses.

L-norvaline is at 100 mg. The science is thin here, and we're straight about that. It's thought to block arginase, the enzyme that breaks down arginine, which might keep nitric oxide precursors around longer and help agmatine keep the blood flow going. That's more theory than proven fact

Alchemy Labs Inflame by Alchemy Labs contains 1000mg Arachidonic Acid (Std. to 10%), a clinical dose for muscle recovery and growth.

Key Highlights

  • 1,000 mg arachidonic acid per serving— that's the heart of this supplement and why it's in the muscle-building zone, not just pre-workout. It boosts the inflammation signals from your lifts, which is key for adapting and growing muscle.
  • 750 mg AgmaPure® agmatine sulfate— a good, solid dose from a trusted brand. Agmatine helps with pumps, making muscles feel full, and improving how your workouts feel through better nitric oxide and blood vessel support.
  • 100 mg L-norvaline— a specific add-in for nitric oxide management. It's believed to slow down arginase, which breaks down arginine, helping the pump from agmatine last longer.
  • 300 mg Camellia sinensis extract with 10% epicatechin— this adds vascular help with okay evidence for flavanols. It gives about 30 mg epicatechin, which supports blood flow to muscles during workouts.
  • 5 mg BioPerine® black pepper extract— this is a real absorption booster, not just filler. Piperine helps your body take in the ingredients better, which is smart for a capsule product.
  • Everything on the label is clear—no prop blends or hidden amounts. That's huge in this space where muscle-builders often hide how much arachidonic acid or other stuff you're really getting.
  • No stims at all— it's made for muscle support, not energy blasts. Easy to use for night workouts or stack with your own pre if you want.
  • Hits training from two angles— arachidonic acid ramps up anabolic signals from workouts, while agmatine, epicatechin, and L-norvaline handle pumps and blood flow. Makes it more than just plain arachidonic acid pills.

Alchemy Labs Inflame by Alchemy Labs contains 1000mg Arachidonic Acid (Std. to 10%), a clinical dose for muscle recovery and growth.

Who Is This For?

  • Bodybuilders grinding hypertrophy who want more than basic pump pre's. 1,000 mg arachidonic acid boosts signals from hard training for gains, while agmatine and epicatechin make sessions feel fuller and more on point.
  • Intermediate guys in a lean bulk with diet and workouts locked in. This works best when you get that arachidonic acid pairs with training and recovery, not replaces them.
  • Folks sensitive to stims but craving real workout boosts. No typical stim load here, so it's for chasing pumps, better contractions, and growth signals without jitters or messed-up sleep.
  • Physique athletes off-season, hitting volume and mind-muscle focus. 750 mg agmatine sulfate delivers workout fullness, and the setup suits deliberate lifting over plain energy.
  • Advanced lifters with protein and creatine covered, adding something specialized. Layer this in for serious muscle phases when basics are handled.
  • Night owls avoiding high-stim pre's but wanting performance help. Stim-free fits late lifts better than caffeine bombs.

How to Use

Take 3 capsules with water 30-45 minutes before lifting. That gives time for the capsules to dissolve and lines up the agmatine blood flow with your workout. Stim-free means no need to half-dose for tolerance, but if you're cautious, start with 1-2 to check stomach feel and response. Fine with a small pre-meal, but a big fatty one might slow it down and make benefits hit later. When stacking with a stim pre, check for duplicate nitric oxide stuff to keep it smart. Goes well with creatine, pre-workout carbs, and staying hydrated. Use daily through a training block for best results, since arachidonic acid isn't just for quick feels. Keep it cool and dry, bottle sealed to maintain the capsules.

What to Expect

Minutes 0-15: capsules take time to kick in—no big stim rush or tingles right away. Minutes 20-45: if you're tuned into pumps, you might feel muscles getting fuller and contractions improving, especially with good carbs and water. Minutes 45-90: this is the sweet spot, where agmatine and nitric oxide support make sessions feel denser and more pumped. Days 1-7: mostly about immediate pump and workout feel, not huge body changes yet. Weeks 2-4: arachidonic acid steps up as hard workouts add up, making those muscle signals matter more. It's built for the long game with some short-term perks, so keep at it.

Key Ingredients

  • Arachidonic Acid — 1000 mg — Amplifies the training signal that drives muscle adaptation
  • AgmaPure® Agmatine Sulfate — 750 mg — Supports denser pumps and sharper contraction quality
  • L-Norvaline — 100 mg — Supports nitric oxide by limiting arginine breakdown
  • Epicatechin (Camellia sinensis) Leaf Extract — 300 mg extract (10% epicatechin) — Enhances vascular function for better muscle perfusion

Alchemy Labs Inflame by Alchemy Labs contains 1000mg Arachidonic Acid (Std. to 10%), a clinical dose for muscle recovery and growth.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is Inflame by Alchemy Labs designed to do?

Inflame is a stim-free muscle-building support formula centered on 1,000 mg arachidonic acid. It is designed to amplify the training signal from hard resistance exercise while also supporting pumps and workout quality through 750 mg AgmaPure® agmatine sulfate, 100 mg L-norvaline, and epicatechin-containing green tea extract.

How much arachidonic acid is in Inflame?

Each full serving of 3 capsules provides 1,000 mg of arachidonic acid. That is an assertive category dose and is the main reason this product is positioned as a specialized muscle-builder rather than a generic wellness capsule.

Does Inflame contain caffeine or stimulants?

No conventional stimulants are disclosed in the verified formula, and the product functions as a stim-free capsule. That makes it easier to use for evening training or to stack alongside a separate pre-workout if desired.

What does AgmaPure® agmatine sulfate do in this formula?

AgmaPure® agmatine sulfate is included at 750 mg to support nitric oxide modulation, blood flow, and muscle fullness during training. In practical terms, it helps make workouts feel denser and more pumped rather than simply more energized.

Is the epicatechin dose in Inflame high?

The label lists 300 mg of Camellia sinensis extract standardized to 10%, which yields about 30 mg epicatechin. That is a meaningful inclusion for vascular support, but it is not an ultra-high standalone epicatechin dose once standardization is accounted for.

Why is L-norvaline in Inflame?

L-norvaline is included at 100 mg as a support ingredient for nitric oxide efficiency. It is theorized to inhibit arginase, the enzyme that breaks down arginine, which may help extend the blood flow effects of the rest of the pump complex, though human evidence remains limited.

Can I stack Inflame with a pre-workout?

Yes. Because Inflame is stim-free, it can be paired with a caffeinated or non-stim pre-workout depending on your goals. Just review overlapping pump ingredients so you avoid unnecessary redundancy if your pre-workout already contains high-dose citrulline, nitrates, or agmatine.

How long does Inflame take to work?

Agmatine-related workout fullness can be noticed from the first few sessions, especially when taken pre-workout with good hydration and carbs. The arachidonic acid component is more cumulative and makes the most sense over 2-4 weeks of consistent hard training.

Should I take Inflame on rest days?

Most users center it around training days because that is when the pump support and session-specific benefits are most relevant. However, some athletes prefer daily use during a dedicated muscle-building block to keep intake consistent, especially when treating arachidonic acid as a longer-cycle tool.

Is Inflame beginner-friendly?

Not really. While it is stim-free, the formula itself is niche and best suited to intermediate or advanced lifters who understand how arachidonic acid fits into a serious resistance training phase.

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The book is an attempt, Keller writes, to connect a person's Christian faith with the desire to help people in need and do justice in all aspects of one's life. He is writing for four groups of people, he says. These are: -- Those, especially the young, who are active in volunteering and want to help the poor but their concern does not affect how they spend money or plan their careers. -- Those who don't see, as Jonathan Edwards said, that when the Spirit enables us to understand what Christ has done for us, "the result is a life poured out in deeds of justice and compassion for the poor." -- Younger evangelicals who have expanded their mission to include social justice along with evangelism. -- People like the atheist Christopher Hitchins who believe that religion "poisons everything." This book, Keller writes, is for "the orthodox (Christian) to see how central to the Scripture's message is justice for the poor and marginalized. I also want to challenge those who do not believe in Christianity to see the Bible not as a repressive text, but as the basis for the modern understanding of human rights." Keller spends the early parts of his book discussing how justice for the poor, the immigrant, the widow and orphan was central to the concept of mercy (in Hebrew, chesedh), justice (mishpat) and righteousness (tzadeqah). Mercy has to do with aligning our attitude with that of a merciful God. Justice is aligning our actions -- equitable dealings with people -- with a just God's. Righteousness in the Hebrew context has more to do with right relationships than obeying a set of rules, as modern Christians often think of it. Someone who is "right with God (is) therefore committed to putting right all other relationships in life." (Alec Motyer) Righteousness is "day to day living in which a person conducts all relationships in family and society with fairness.While tzadeqah is primarily about being in a right relationship with God, the righteous life that results is profoundly social. (See Job 29:12-17, 31-13-28. Keller details the Hebrew law's provision for exercising justice. These are: -- Shemitta, or release. The practice of the Sabbath year, every seventh year releasing people from debts or servitude. Deut. 15:1-2 -- Gleanings. The practice of not harvesting fields to their borders. Keller suggests that modern businesses could imitate this practice by not maximizing profits, thus giving price relief to their customers, and not paying workers the lowest possible wages. Leviticus 19:9-10, 23:22 -- Tithing for the priests and the upkeep of the temple. Every third year the tithe was put in public storehouses for the poor, "the aliens, the fatherless, and the widows." Deut. 14:28-29. This makes me think that churches should practice this in some form by systematically committing a portion of its receipts to serving the poor and needy. -- Year of Jubilee. The practice of every 49th or 50th year of forgiving debts and returning land to its ancestral owner. Leviticus 25:10, 23, 27:21. These practices helped meet the needs of the poor and helped prevent permanent cycles of poverty. The three causes of poverty, according to the Law are oppression, calamity and personal moral failure. The biblical emphasis is usually on the larger structural factors -- corruption, oppressive economic systems and natural disasters. The exercise of justice, however, never distinguishes between the three. That is, no matter why a person is poor, the righteous person should care for him. Well, that's the Old Testament,, some might say. But Jesus showed the same concern for the poor and disadvantaged, if not more so. 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What are we doing in obedience to God's commands to serve the poor, the widow, the orphan, the prisoner, the hungry? There is a lot here to reflect on and for a small group(s) to discuss and apply. Unfortunately, I contacted the publisher and there is no accompanying study guide. Keller is pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church in New York City.
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