Ortave
— Formulation Catalogue / 83 Entries

The Range.
Documented Formulations.

Eighty-three formulations across five categories, each entry comprising a full ingredient profile, sourcing documentation, compositional rationale, and third-party verification status. Browse by category or review individual entries for detailed breakdown.

Catalogue Index
Mineral Complexes 22 entries
Plant-Based Blends 19 entries
Adaptogen Profiles 18 entries
Whole-Food Concentrates 14 entries
Daily Composite Blends 10 entries
Ingredient Transparency/// Batch-Tested Quality/// Third-Party Verified/// Whole-Food Sourced/// Mineral Complex/// Adaptogen Blend/// Active Lifestyle Focus/// Nutrient-Dense Formulation/// Ingredient Transparency/// Batch-Tested Quality/// Third-Party Verified/// Whole-Food Sourced///
Category 01

Mineral Complexes

22 entries
Array of mineral-rich natural ingredient samples — zinc oxide, magnesium citrate, and selenium yeast powders arranged in small glass vessels on a white laboratory surface
Entry Group A

Zinc-Magnesium Foundations

Formulations combining zinc and magnesium in complementary ratios, assessed for elemental sourcing and dissolution profile. Coverage includes oxide, citrate, bisglycinate, and malate forms. Each entry documents the bioavailability rationale for the chosen mineral salt.

Zinc: supports normal cognitive function and immune health
Magnesium: contributes to normal energy metabolism and reduces tiredness
Dried selenium-rich Brazil nut halves and iodine kelp flakes laid on a textured linen surface in natural daylight for ingredient reference photography
Entry Group B

Trace Element Profiles

Selenium, manganese, chromium, and iodine formulations catalogued individually and in multi-trace blends. Entries note the sourcing form — yeast-bound, amino acid chelate, or inorganic salt — alongside the documented compositional rationale for inclusion at the stated concentration.

Selenium: contributes to protection of cells from oxidative stress
Iron: contributes to normal oxygen transport in the body
Vitamin D3 cholecalciferol and K2 menaquinone raw ingredient portions in clear specimen containers under controlled workspace lighting
Entry Group C

D3 / K2 Combination Entries

Vitamin D3 formulations catalogued both as single-ingredient entries and in combination with K2 (MK-7 and MK-4 variants). Entries cover cholecalciferol concentration per daily serving, sourcing origin (lanolin vs. lichen), and co-factor rationale where stated by the formulator.

Vitamin D3: supports normal function of the immune system
Vitamin K2: supports normal bone maintenance
Category 02

Plant-Based Blends

19 entries
Assortment of dried green supergrass powders including spirulina, chlorella, and wheatgrass in small open kraft pouches on a natural stone surface
Entry Group D

Green Concentrate Formulations

Catalogue entries for spirulina, chlorella, barley grass, and wheatgrass concentrates. Each entry records the drying method, concentration ratio, and declared nutrient density per standard serving. Vitamin C content noted: supports the normal function of the immune system.

Whole dried elderberries, bilberries, and acerola cherry powder spread across a white ceramic surface for natural ingredient reference photography
Entry Group E

Berry and Fruit Extracts

Polyphenol-rich berry extracts assessed for standardisation ratio — the extract-to-raw-material ratio that governs active compound concentration. Entries note the flavonoid or anthocyanin profile where disclosed by the manufacturer.

Dried turmeric root cross-sections and black pepper corns arranged in a studied flat-lay pattern for formulation reference on linen background
Entry Group F

Curcumin and Bioavailability Enhancers

Turmeric extract entries focus on curcuminoid concentration and the co-formulation approach used to support absorption — piperine (black pepper extract), phospholipid complex, or micellar delivery. The chosen approach and its documented rationale are recorded per entry.

Close-up cross-section photograph of a green tea leaf alongside dried matcha powder and polyphenol-rich oolong tea specimens on a light surface
Entry Group G

Polyphenol Concentration Profiles

Green tea, pomegranate, and grape seed extract entries with attention to EGCG, ellagitannin, and proanthocyanidin concentrations respectively. Entries distinguish between standardised extracts and full-spectrum preparations where the formulator has disclosed the distinction.

Category 03

Adaptogen Blend Profiles

18 entries
Dried ashwagandha root pieces and KSM-66 root extract powder in botanical specimen arrangement on aged paper documentation
Entry Ref. A-001 — A-006

Ashwagandha Formulations

Six ashwagandha entries covering whole-root powder, KSM-66 standardised extract, and Sensoril (ashwagandha leaf and root concentrate). Active withanolide content, root-to-extract ratio, and any co-formulated nutrients are recorded per entry.

Whole dried lion's mane mushroom Hericium erinaceus fruiting bodies and mycelium powder portioned in glass specimen jars on a wooden surface
Entry Ref. A-007 — A-013

Functional Mushroom Entries

Reishi, lion's mane, cordyceps, and chaga entries distinguishing between fruiting-body and mycelium-on-grain preparations. Beta-glucan content and the extraction method used (hot water, alcohol, or dual extraction) are the primary recorded variables.

Dried rhodiola rosea root cross-sections and eleuthero root bark specimens labelled with handwritten batch codes on a clean research desk
Entry Ref. A-014 — A-018

Rhodiola and Eleuthero Profiles

Rhodiola rosea entries note rosavin and salidroside ratios alongside the 3:1 standardisation benchmark common in published nutritional research. Eleuthero (Siberian ginseng) entries focus on eleutherosides B and E as the primary documented active compounds.

Category 04

Whole-Food Concentrates

14 entries

Whole-food sourced formulations in which the nutritional matrix is derived from recognisable food sources rather than isolated active compounds. Catalogue entries identify the base food, the concentration method employed, and the resulting nutrient density relative to the whole food.

Group H-1

Cruciferous vegetable concentrates (broccoli, kale, and cabbage powders) with sulforaphane precursor documentation where available.

Group H-2

Fermented food extracts — fermented barley, kefir powder, and fermented green tea — documented for prebiotic fibre content and fermentation substrate.

Group H-3

Dried organ and glandular food concentrates, documented for their naturally occurring vitamin B12: contributes to normal energy production.

Category 05

Daily Composite Blends

10 entries

Multi-ingredient formulations designed to serve as a single daily serving covering multiple nutritional categories simultaneously. Entries assess the internal compositional logic — whether the included ingredients complement or duplicate one another — and note any potential nutrient interactions documented in published nutritional research.

Group I-1

B-complex dominant composites with CoQ10: involved in cellular energy production — a common co-inclusion in active-lifestyle formulations.

Group I-2

Omega-3 plus fat-soluble vitamin composites, noting the EPA:DHA ratio and the molecular form of the accompanying fat-soluble vitamins (retinyl palmitate vs. beta-carotene for vitamin A).

Group I-3

Probiotic-inclusive daily blends with documented CFU counts, strain identification to species level, and shelf-life stability data where disclosed by the manufacturer.

Catalogue Reference

Frequently Asked Questions

Formulations are assessed based on documented ingredient sourcing, compositional transparency (fully disclosed ingredient list with stated quantities), available batch-verification data, and relevance to active men's daily nutritional requirements. Commercial relationships do not influence inclusion.
An entry marked batch-tested indicates that the manufacturer provides independently verified certificates of analysis for production batches, confirming the declared ingredient profile matches the actual composition. Where such certificates are publicly accessible, they are cited in the entry record.
No. The catalogue is a compositional reference resource, not a guide to individual supplementation decisions. We recommend speaking with a qualified wellness or nutrition professional before introducing any supplement to your daily routine, particularly if you have specific dietary requirements.
Entries are reviewed when a formulation's ingredient profile changes, when new batch verification data becomes available, or when published nutritional research shifts materially with respect to a documented ingredient. Each entry displays its last revision date. Active revision cycles occur approximately quarterly.
Catalogue expansion requests can be submitted via the contact form. Assessment is subject to the standard four-week review period and requires that the formulation meets the minimum documentation threshold — a fully disclosed ingredient list with stated quantities and available sourcing data.