Saturday, January 17, 2009

The latest Informaiton on Natural Healing

2009 food trends - Morganton News Herald

Fri, 16 Jan 2009 20:16:27 GMT

Morganton News Herald

2009 food trends
Morganton News Herald, NC - Jan 16, 2009
Goji berries come from China and Mongolia and also are a rich source of antioxidants, especially carotenoids which may be beneficial to the health of your ...


Apple, ginger and goji juice - Times Online

Fri, 02 Jan 2009 10:46:05 GMT

Apple, ginger and goji juice
Times Online, UK - Jan 2, 2009
It'll keep your liver clear - the doctor will stay away - and the gojis of Tibet will get you spiritually through your day. Juice the apples with the ginger ...
Salmon superfood salad Times Online
all 3 news articles


8 Natural Methods to Enhance Fertility

Fri, 12 Sep 2008 15:18:06 EDT
Before rushing off to an In Vitro Fertilization Clinic if you cannot conceive there are natural ways to increase your chances of having a baby. IVF procedures can be costly and there are no guarantees...

Contact us if you have any questions
or if you would like a commercial relationship using our API.

Our thoughts on GojiHealth Products By Ailment



SAMPLE MENU I
View this site for more News on...
Health Products By Ailment

Influenza/Flu



The studies being conducted at the University of Florida have determined that the Brazilian berry destroys cultured leukemia cancer cells. This study was not intended to show whether acai berries could prevent leukemia in people as it was only a cell-culture model. This is not a unique effect as other fruits such as grapes, guavas and mangoes contained antioxidant products that also destroyed cultured cancer cells. A lot of claims are being made but research has just started on the acai berry. Another study is underway to investigate the effects of acai's antioxidants on human subjects.

The acai berry is a small dark blue fruit, similar in size to a blueberry or small grape but with less pulp, that grows in clusters or panicles of approximately 800 berries on Acai palm trees. The tribes of the Amazon knew of the health properties of this fruit for centuries and traditionally pulped it to make wine. The berries contain a thin layer of edible pulp surrounding a large seed. These palms are extremely prevalent in the floodplain areas of the Amazon River and are easy to cultivate as a replacement tree in areas where the rain forest has been destroyed. The slender palms grow from 40 to 80 feet tall and have leaves up to 10 feet long. Each palm can produce more than 50 pounds of berries annually. The harvesting of this powerful antioxidant rich product has become a major industry in Brazil and employs up to 30,000 people on a daily basis to harvest and process the product. Unfortunately the fruit deteriorates rapidly after harvesting (active properties can disappear after 24 hours) and so it is restricted to being eaten in the growing region or being processed and shipped as juice or frozen pulp. This industry has become an economic and environmentally-friendly alternative to unsustainable harvesting of hearts of palm, logging and conversion of the rain forest to farming or ranching. During the last decade in Brazil, acai has become a major food fad and Brazilians consume the frozen pulp alone or in yogurt, ice cream, smoothies, drinks, fruit or as a cereal topping. The frozen pulp tastes like a blueberry sorbet or ice cream with a hint of chocolate.
View this site for more News on...
Influenza/Flu

Organic Peat Free Compost



8. They give you the result you want. That's the most revitalising aspect of hiring an online personal trainer
Visit this site for more News on...
Organic Peat Free Compost

|

Labels:

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home