A spring time story
Dandelion Tea Facts and Information
A Woman's Best Friend?
Why drinking dandelion tea can help you beat water
retention, cut down on caffeine consumption and can serve as a herbal detox.
Dandelion tea has a long history of human usage. Chinese
medicinal practitioners used dandelion to treat digestive disorders,
appendicitis, and breast problems (such as inflammation or lack of milk flow).
The early American colonial settlers loved the common
weed and taught the Native American Indians how to use it. The Indian tribes
created their own ways to use dandelion:
·
The Iroquois
Indians ate boiled dandelion leaves along with fatty meats to avoid
indigestion.
·
When the Ojibwas
had heartburn, they drank dandelion root tea.
·
The Kiowa women
mixed dandelion blossoms with pennyroyal as a cure for cramps and PMS.
·
The Mohegans drank
dandelion leaf tea daily as a tonic to keep their energy levels high and to
stay free of stomach aches and constipation.
·
Other Indian
tribes collected the young leaves in the spring and ate them with other leafy
vegetables.
And even now, it is not considered old-fashioned to use
dandelion root, leaves or extract for common ailments.
Now you may ask: Given its widespread herbal usage, what
does modern science have to say about its health benefits? You can find the
answer at Dandelion Health
Benefits - Healing Herb or Folklore?
Drink Too Much Coffee?
If you are trying to give up coffee, dandelion root can
be an excellent substitute in the morning. It can give you a “grounded” type of
energy without the side effects of caffeine.
Put one teaspoon of dandelion root in a cup of boiling
water and add a touch of agave nectar to make your own beverage just as quickly
as you make a cup of coffee.
Dandelion coffee is usually made from dandelion roots
that are slightly roasted and ground ready to use. The powder is said to be
almost indistinguishable from real coffee, and is claimed to be better than
lower quality coffee, which has often been adulterated.
Dandelion Uses
- Replace Coffee and Lose Weight
Beat Water Retention
Dandelion leaf is a natural diuretic that increases urine
production by promoting the excretion of salts and water from the kidney.
It may be used for a wide range of conditions requiring
mild diuretic treatment, such as poor digestion, liver disorders, and high
blood pressure. One advantage of dandelion is that dandelion is a source of
potassium, a nutrient often lost through the use of other natural and synthetic
diuretics.
Fitness guru Gillian Michaels famously drank dandelion to
help lose water weight fast. You can learn about her recipe in Dandelion Diuretic Benefits.
Herbal Detox
Dandelion tea can be used as an herbal detox to help
cleanse your liver and kidneys. It can be taken on its own, or in combination
with other herbs.
According to Margaret Grieve, author of the excellent
herbal encyclopedia A Modern Herbal, dandelion is "diuretic, tonic
and slightly aperient. It is a general stimulant to the system, but especially
to the urinary organs, and is chiefly used in kidney and liver disorders".
This page will summarize what she said about dandelion
herbal remedy recipes.
Dandelion Recipes
- Homemade Herbal Remedies
Which One to Buy?
There are at least three different types of dandelion tea
- those made from dandelion roots, those made from dandelion leaves, and those
made from dandelion flowers.
Dandelion flower is used mainly to make dandelion wine.
Traditionally, it is known to be "an excellent tonic, extremely good for
the blood". You can make dandelion flower tea by infusing the blossoms in
hot water.
You can make dandelion tea by infusing 1 to 2 teaspoonful
of dried dandelion leaves in hot water. Drink up to 3 times daily. The cut leaf
form of the herb can be brewed inside a stainless steel tea ball or inside a
wicker tea cup basket.
Compared to dandelion flowers and leaves, dandelion root
is the part of the plant used most often for medicinal purposes, and which
provides the most health benefits.
Dandelion root tea is available in teabags, dried powder
form, or in capsules. The best tea, of course, is found fresh from your own
garden - since the dandelion "weed" is literally everywhere. As with
other herbs and foods, organic or wildcrafted is always your best choice.
- See more at:
http://www.amazing-green-tea.com/dandelion-tea.html#sthash.zaM4BL9Q.dpuf
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