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charlottealvina

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Category Archives: Uncategorized

My Favorite Natural Cold Remedies

26 Thursday Apr 2012

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cold care, natural remedies

I woke up this morning with a terrible sore throat, the kind that signals a week or more of misery as the first symptom of a common-but-nasty cold. But over the years I’ve found a handful of home remedies that are truly effective, at least for me. So this evening I’m feeling much better – not 100% but also not in the sorry state that sore throat was foreshadowing.

I hope this post finds you well. But if you’re experiencing the unfortunate early symptoms for a cold, I hope these home remedies will ease your suffering and speed your recovery as they did for me.

Oil of Oregano: My friend shared this with me last year – I’d never heard of it before but it’s amazing…and quite an experience. You can find it at grocery stores like Whole Foods or Metropolitan Market (a local chain here in the Seattle area). The one I have is Origanum vulgare in extra virgin olive oil standardized to 70% carvacrol. It comes in tiny bottles of .5 fluid ounces with a dropper top. Put 4 to 6 drops on your tongue and swallow, every 4 hours throughout the day. It burns. Do this in private as you will likely make some noises you won’t be proud of.

Echinacea & Licorice Tea: Most people, I think, have heard of Echinacea – it gives a short-term boost to the immune system, to be used at the very beginning of a cold and only for a couple days. I prefer to take mine as tea so I’m also getting lots of fluids. I mix it with licorice tea for the throat-coating effect and also because licorice is a natural sweetener. You can add a third bag of regular tea like Earl Grey for flavor. I make a big pot and drink all day.

Fenugreek Tea: Fenugreek seed is an ingredient in Indian cuisine like curry and can also be sprouted for salads, etc. It’s said to support lactation, relieve arthritis and increase libido. But my parents always gave it to me when I had a cough so to me it’s a respiratory savior. You can sometimes find it in teabags but I just put fenugreek seeds directly into boiling water and strain them out before drinking. I am prone to bronchial infections which inevitably require antibiotics, so I use this when a cold is threatening to settle in my chest as a preventative measure. It’s also helpful to suppress an existing cough, like the kind that can keep you up all night, when mixed with lemon juice and honey. Fair warning: you may smell like fenugreek for several days after drinking.

Exercise: If I can, I try to do a lighter version of my regular routine when I’m feeling under the weather – at least some cardio and stretching. The goal is to sweat and support the circulation of the lymphatic system, which doesn’t have anything like a heart pumping fluids around so requires body movement. Jumping on a trampoline is supposed to be especially effective for lymph flow.

Bourbon, Lemon and Honey: And finally, my very favorite cold remedy of all…booze. Starting sometime in the afternoon, I add a second glass right alongside my steady dose of herbal tea. That glass has the juice of one lemon, an equal part of bourbon, and a teaspoon or so of honey mixed in well. The trick is taking tiny little sips and letting them coat my throat (and only refilling once). This also supports my other favorite home remedy: a really good night sleep.

Of course it goes without saying that I’m not a doctor and none of these statements have been evaluated by the FDA. I would love to hear your success stories with home remedies. Please share and be healthy!

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The Dirty Dozen & Clean 15

26 Monday Mar 2012

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clean15, dirtydozen, organic

Certain kinds of produce carry a heavy toxic load if they are grown with conventional methods that include pesticides. Others, for different reasons in how they are raised or what kind of skin/rind they form, do not. This PBS article has more detail but here are the two lists for quick reference.

We should only buy these “Dirty Dozen” organic:

  • celery
  • peaches
  • strawberries
  • apples
  • domestic blueberries
  • nectarines
  • sweet bell peppers
  • spinach, kale and collard greens
  • cherries
  • potatoes
  • imported grapes
  • lettuce

These “Clean 15” are safe to consume conventionally:

  • onions
  • avocados
  • sweet corn
  • pineapples
  • mango
  • sweet peas
  • asparagus
  • kiwi fruit
  • cabbage
  • eggplant
  • cantaloupe
  • watermelon
  • grapefruit
  • sweet potatoes
  • sweet onions

Besides the direct toxic effects of pesticides on our bodies, there are plenty of other reasons to support balanced organic farming. But if we’re looking for a place to start, this list is a great one!

Blueberry Tea

17 Friday Feb 2012

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cocktail, recipes

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Blueberry Tea is one of my favorite winter beverages – no better way to relax and warm up after a chilly day. It is also excellent for a sore throat.

Combine the following in a brandy snifter:

  • 1 oz. Grand Marnier
  • 1 oz. Amaretto
  • 2-3 oz. Hot Black Tea

This combination of liqueurs and tea will create a fruity, almost blueberry-like flavor. Start will less black tea and adjust to your taste.

By the way, if you see this recipe somewhere else that calls for Orange pekoe tea, that’s just a designation of black tea – not actually an orange flavored tea. You can also try Earl Grey tea or other.

Cheers!

Power Plants!

17 Friday Feb 2012

Posted by charlottealvina in Uncategorized

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Tags

environment, inspiration, vegan, vegetarian

We have an energy crisis.

There’s our addiction to oil, to be sure, but I’m talking about another addiction that contributes to our wasteful use of natural resources and a decline in our overall wellbeing. Food is energy, and I’m talking about our addiction to meat.

Several years ago, in an effort to lose weight and generally feel healthier, I started learning about the impact that my food choices have on my physical and emotional health. I read a lot, but I also tried a lot of different things to figure out what would work for my body. I didn’t set out to be a vegetarian or pescatarian (I occasionally eat seafood). But that’s where I ended up.

It wasn’t until later that I learned about how my food choices affect my community – local and global. So for me, the environmental effects of a meat-free diet just help to reinforce a decision I already made. But for someone else, it might be the spark that lights a new path. Or it might be a reason to add meat-free days into your week.*

For all of us, it’s important to know that some of the foods we eat every day are substantially, even shockingly, less energy efficient than others:

  • Cattle consume 16 pounds of grain for every pound of meat they yield.
  • Producing a single pound of beef also uses the same amount of water that an average person uses showering for an entire year (approx. 5200 gallons for both). A pound of produce requires around 25 gallons to grow.
  • It takes 11 times the amount of fossil fuel to create one calorie of animal protein versus plant protein.
  • Livestock contributes 18% of the greenhouse gases that cause global warming, which outweighs all forms of transportation combined.
  • Grains and vegetables are a vastly more productive use of land compared with meat. The same acreage can produce beef to feed one person or wheat to feed 15, chicken to feed one or potatoes to feed 11. Yet 30% of the earth’s land mass is now used to raise animals for food, at the sacrifice of hundreds of millions of acres of forest.

You may have heard that switching to a meat-free diet is better for the environment than trading in an SUV for a Prius. You can see why: eating higher on the food chain is hugely inefficient. Plants are literally nature’s power plants, converting dirt and sunlight into life that we can consume. Fruits and nuts and seeds are batteries, storing that energy for future use. Meat is the middle man, and meat is greedy.

Unlike a Prius, there’s unfortunately no gas gauge or price at the pump to give us measurable insight into what we’re saving with a meat-free diet. But you can definitely count on your good choices making a positive difference for the environment – and on feeling an even bigger payoff in your own health and wellbeing.

*If giving up meat completely is too high a hurdle, but you want your diet choices to support positive change, there are two other issues around food and energy use to put on the table: organic production and localizing your diet.

Barbara Kingsolver’s Animal, Vegetable, Miracle is a great read and covers both of these in the context of her personal journey living as a locavore for a year. Her husband offers technical sidebars throughout with tidbits like this:

“If every U.S. citizen ate just one meal a week (any meal) composed of locally and organically raised meat and produce, we would reduce our country’s oil consumption by over 1.1 million barrels of oil every week.”

We don’t need to drill more, we need to grill less…meat. Grilled vegetables are delicious 🙂

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