My Personal Commercial for Goji Berries
Goji berries are the most amazing little fruits. I am a huge fan of them and suggest their use often.
They have an ORAC rating of 25,300 per 100 grams. The ORAC is Oxygen Radical Absorbance capacity. This measures the total antioxidant potency of foods.
Plums for example have a ORAC units per 100 grams of 949. Blueberries have 2,400 .
So this gives you an idea of the free radical destroying or neutralizing power of the Goji Berries.
They don't taste wonderful, but they don't taste bad. Its really a rather neutral taste.
It is said they are good for.....
Supporting the Liver
Helps with sleep
Improve immune response
Improve digestion
Improve Memory
Supports Kidney health
Supports a Stronger heart
Combat lethargy
Supports healthy blood pressure levels
Supports healthy cholesterol levels
Support and balance healthy blood sugar levels
Enhance libido
Helps reduce stress and anxiety
Supports a healthy mood
Combat inflammation and joint problems
I can tell you personally about how it helps support weight loss.
this site has the goji plants for sale so you can grow your own. http://www.timpanogosnursery.com/
this was some information I have found on line at http://www.kitchendoctor.com/foodandrecipes/goji_berries.html
and I can tell you they sure make you feel healthy.
The Goji Berry
These little Tibetan goji berries are plumper than the Chinese ones, and they taste much better to me. I have been feasting on them for a week now, and losing about half a pound a day! The taste is a little hard to describe. It's not quite as sweet as a raisin and not as tart as a dried cranberry. They are pleasing to most people. In Tibet and Mongolia, people love these berries so much that they devote two weeks a year to celebrating the berries, probably something like wine fests in Europe in past times. The most commonly cited side effect of eating too many berries is that they might cause you to laugh more. It is said that a handful in the morning will make you happy all day.
They are a very rich source of vitamin C, having 500 times more vitamin C per ounce than oranges, actually more almost any fruit you could name. They are also a superb source of vitamin A, not surprising because they are a really pretty red color. Goji berries also have vitamins B1, B2, B6, and E; they are becoming a famous antioxidant. They are also a rich source of both selenium and germanium and have hence been used in a number of clinical trials involving cancer patients. When given to patients undergoing chemotherapy, the berries conferred significant protection for the liver. In Oriental medicine, they are said to correct chi deficiency, meaning that people with low energy, insomnia, heart palpitations, and even anxiety are more comfortable after consuming goji berries.
The therapeutic dosage is 10-30 grams per day, and the berries may be taken at any time and in any form, from liquid to a snack food. The berries have 18 amino acids (higher than bee pollen) and 21 trace minerals, linoleic acid, and more beta carotene than carrots.
In vitro studies suggest that goji berries kill many kinds of cancer cells. The mechanism whereby this happens is believed to involve some factor that inhibits the ability of the cell to divide, thus lowering its reproductive capacity. A large study in Japan suggested that tumor growth was inhibited by 58% among the patients eating goji berries as compared to the control groups. A study in Mongolia showed that patients eating the goji berries had a significant increase in lymphocyte activity and that their blood began to resemble that of much younger persons.
Obviously, I will continue to look for studies involving the goji berries, but I am certain that anything one has determined about the medicinal properties of lycium berries would be as true of goji berries. If my enthusiasm seems a bit exaggerated and insufferable, blame it on the little berries that cause so much bliss!
Copyright by Ingrid Naiman 2003
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