Elderberry cure. (Country conversation & feedback).COUNTRYSIDE: Ten years ago or more, Haddasah School of Medicine, Hebrew University Hebrew University of Jerusalem, at Mt. Scopus, Givat Ram, Ein Karem, and Rehovot, Israel; coeducational. First proposed in 1882, formally opened 1925. It is the world's largest Jewish university and is noted for its work on the Dead Sea Scrolls. , Israel, discovered that elderberries will cure any virus, 90% of the time in three days. All my friends swear by it. A 10-year-old was cured from mononucleosis mononucleosis /mono·nu·cle·o·sis/ (-noo?kle-o´sis) excess of mononuclear leukocytes (monocytes) in the blood. chronic mononucleosis chronic fatigue syndrome. in three days. A cup of elderberry elderberry, n Latin names: Sambucus nigra, Sambucus canadensis; parts used: buds, fruit; uses: common cold, toothaches, headaches, diaphoresis, hay fever, sinus infections, epidermal irritations, lacerations, liver disorders, inflammation; tea every day should keep you well all winter, but if you do get sick, drink a cup three times a day. Note: The leaves and stems are poisonous. Just use the flowers or berries. The berries can be dried and used as tea, 1/2 teaspoon per cup, or washed and put in a fruit jar and covered with brandy. In that case, use 1/2 to one teaspoon mixed in a glass of juice or water. I have smashed the berries and put them in ice cube trays and used one ice cube to make a glass of juice, to be divided into thirds for the day. Or make wine, or juice, or jam/jelly, anyway to get it in.--Yvonne Hursh; sometyme@iland.net According to Steve Meyerowitz in Power Juices Super Drinks (Kensington Publishing Corp., 2000), "Elderberry has remarkable properties that actually stop the flu virus from replicating, and the lentinan content of the shiitake mushroom Noun 1. shiitake mushroom - edible east Asian mushroom having a golden or dark brown to blackish cap and an inedible stipe Chinese black mushroom, golden oak mushroom, Lentinus edodes, Oriental black mushroom, shiitake stimulates the production of the valuable immune protein interferon." Shibuya, N. Journal of Biological Chemistry The Journal of Biological Chemistry (often abbreviated JBC) is a scientific journal founded in 1905 and published since 1925 by the American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology. . 262(4), 1987. |
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