Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Click Here if you want to upgrade your account
If you were able to post but cannot do so now, send an email to admin at raypeatforum dot com and include your username and we will fix that right up for you.
freal said:Ill ask Ray Peat about safe teas.
freal said:Probably not hibiscus because of the iron and he mentioned about the oriental teas. But what about any fruit tea or rose hips tea?
freal said:Only thing thats weird is he probably does not now about all that iron in hibiscus, one cup has whooping 20mg of iron?!?!?
" http://healthyliving.azcentral.com/hibi ... 19028.html "
---The two varieties of sorrel calyces are promising sources of iron (800.67--833.00 mg/100 g)
Roselle flower tea was prepared by packing 4,000 mg of dry ground roselle flower in a tea bag and soaked with 480 ml of hot distilled water RFT ......RFT contains 0.6 mg of iron and 1.28 mg of manganese content.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16858935
Another study found about 11 mg of iron per 100 gram and 200 mg of manganese per 100 grams.
These value are close to RFT ( Rosella Flower Tea, it is also called hibiscus tea).
http://link.springer.com/article/10.138 ... 78:1-3:271
If you're in the mood for imaginary concerns, check these out:Consumers are far more judicious in their fresh produce selection than dry. For some reason people assume that dehydration holy foods regardless of their former condition; so pesticides, germs (as resistant spores for example), and defects (spoiled parts) stop being a concern after the wards.
- Contaminants of medicinal herbs and herbal products
great post, any tldr opinion you matured?You may think that finding a comprehensive list of medicinal plants and screening for terms such as 'holy' or 'sacred' would guarantee not only a remarkable therapeutic effect for your condition, but that the quality is going to be up to a the par with the purity that the name alludes: dangerous assumption, we know what should be done.
If you're in the mood for imaginary concerns, check these out:
- The Microbial Quality Aspects and Decontamination Approaches for the Herbal Medicinal Plants and Products: An in-Depth Review
- Microbial contamination of select dietary supplements
- Are dietary supplements containing plant-derived ingredients safe microbiologically?
- Microbial contamination in herbal medicines: a serious health hazard to elderly consumers
- Regulatory compliance of herbal medicines – A review
- Residues and contaminants in medicinal herbs—A review
- Quality of herbal medicines: Challenges and solutions
[Are orange blossom, rose water, saffron and hibiscus tea safe/beneficial?]Probably not hibiscus because of the iron and he mentioned about the oriental teas. But what about any fruit tea or rose hips tea?