Allium Sativum, also known as garlic, is one of the best selling herbal supplements in America and has been the subject of thousands of medical, pharmacological, and chemical studies. A variant of the lily family, it has a rich history of medicinal use. Its popularity as a healer is recorded as far back as the Egyptians, who fed it to the pyramid builders to keep them healthy. In 1550 B.C. in the Ebers Codex there are 22 Egyptian medicinal recipes involving garlic. Hippocrates (460 B.C.) prescribed garlic to treat pneumonia, digestive disorders, and to regulate menstrual flow. In 1858, Biologist Louis Pastuer, chemist and microbiologist known for his medical breakthroughs, tested garlic by putting it into a petri dish filled with bacteria only to discover that the garlic could kill harmful microorganisms. During both world wars, when antibiotics were often unavailable, garlic was used on the battlefield to prevent gangrene and treat battle wounds. Most recently garlic is proven to be toxic to some tumor cells and is being researched by the National Cancer Institute for its cancer inhibiting properties.
Garlic cloves contain the amino acid alliin, which reacts with a naturally occuring enzyme allinase. When a clove is crushed or damaged, Allinase then acts as a catalyst and allicin is formed. Allicin is the major medicinal compound rich in antifungal, antiviral, and antibiotic properties. This means garlic strengthens your immune system, helps fight infections, and even treats athletes foot! Garlic lowers blood pressure by relaxing vein and artery walls and increases blood flow, therefore reducing the risks of stroke and heart attack, and it is good for your cholesterol by lowering low-density lipoproteins (bad cholesterol) and increasing high-density lipoproteins (good cholesterol). Garlic’s versatile resume also includes metabolic stimulant, a digestive aid and gas relief, and having a historical reputation for maintaining a healthy respiratory system, as well as a relief for phlegm.
To maintain health and use garlic as a preventative measure, it is recommended to consume 1-3 cloves a day. Obviously fresh is best, but 500 to 900 milligrams of dried garlic powder is also effective. You can also find it in capsule form or as an extract though it is recommended that if you take it as an extract you follow it with peppermint extract, for reasons that are more social than medicinal. You can also put a few drops of garlic oil in the ear to aid in an earache.
Excess of any good thing can cause it to be harmful, and as much as I know you are all dying to rush out and eat as many raw garlic cloves as you can lay your fingers on, eating ten or more raw cloves can be toxic and trigger allergic reaction. So try to limit it to 1-3. Also garlic should not be consumed by women breast-feeding because it can pass into the breast milk and cause colic in infants.
Cure Athlete’s foot with Garlic!
- Soak a few cloves of chopped garlic in rubbing alcohol overnight. Strain the garlic cloves. Fill a basin with warm water and add the rubbing alcohol. Soak your feet for 30 minutes or so.
- It if also said to be effective if you dust your feet with garlic powder twice a day.
- A Chinese remedy is to soak cloves of chopped garlic in olive oil for a couple days and then strain out the garlic pieces. You can then apply the oil topically.
Cold Concoction
- 1 cup of unfiltered Apple Cider Vinegar
- 1 cup of unpasteurized honey
- 8 garlic cloves
Mix ingredients in blender on high for 60 seconds
Add 2 tsp. to pineapple or orange juice daily during cold and a few days after symptoms disappear.
Store in sealed container in fridge for up to 4 weeks
It is best to ingest garlic raw! My favorite method is to make vinaigrette to toss in a salad, or sauté vegetables in olive oil and then drizzle with the garlic vinaigrette.
Honey Garlic Vinaigrette
- 1 cup of vegetable oil
- 1/3 cup of apple cider vinegar
- 3 tablespoons honey
- 2 cloves of chopped garlic
Mix vinegar, honey, and garlic. Whisk as you slowly pour in oil. Set aside for 45 minutes to allow flavors to blend
Garlic Basil Vinaigrette
- 1/2 cup fresh basil leaves, chopped
- 2 tablespoons chopped fresh garlic
- 1/4 cup balsamic vinegar
- 3 tablespoons grated Parmesan cheese
- 2/3 cup olive oil
- 1/2 teaspoon black pepper
Combine the basil, garlic, balsamic vinegar, and Parmesan cheese in a blender. Blend until ingredients form a paste. Slowly pour olive oil into the mixture and continue to blend until smooth.
Add pepper to taste