Cinnamon & Honey

Michael.

Senior Member
Location
UK (Surrey)
.

I guess there is no harm in trying this combination.

We brought back some fresh cinnamon from our last trip abroad
and we mix a little with our tea daily.


Cinnamon & Honey.jpg

.​
 

Cinnamon and honey are super foods, but eat the right stuff.
Raw honey from a bee farm, and organic ceylon cinnamon are the best; not the general grocery store brands.
 
Although I like Cinnamon and it has a high ORAC score which can stop free radical damage that will cause cancer and probably help it but to use the word cure I am a skeptic. The food that cancer loves is sugar and honey is sugar.
 

Cinnamon and honey are super foods, but eat the right stuff.
Raw honey from a bee farm, and organic ceylon cinnamon are the best; not the general grocery store brands.

But if you are low-income to no income like me, you get what you can. It's still a start in the right direction of nutrition;) Don't "not" try these things if all you can afford is Schilling, or less expensive. Also, if you have allergies, honey is great if you can get locally gathered;) Again, high-prices on some, but I get bumblebee if nothing else. And I cannot say enough about Gelatin, and the difference it's making in my life already;)
 
The food that cancer loves is sugar and honey is sugar.

First, honey is a whole food and sucrose is not. Honey isn't sugar .... the following link tells you more than you want to know about the difference:

http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/why-you-should-ditch-sugar-favor-honey


And for people with allergies .......

Raw honey contains enzymes and probiotics which are destroyed when heated or used in cooking applications. These compounds are of no small significance and contribute directly or indirectly to honey's many well-known health benefits. Take the active starch-digesting enzyme amylase, for instance, found only in the raw form of honey in a form known as diastase, which is believed to contribute to clearing antigen-antibody immune complexes associated with allergies to pollens, while also reducing mast cell degranulation associated with histamine, and related inflammatory hormone, release linked to allergic symptoms. Also, if it is local honey, it will pick up small amount of local pollen which may help to "immunize," or desensitize an overly active immune response to these environmental triggers. There is also the enzyme in raw honey known as glucose oxidase, which produces hydrogen peroxide and gluconic acid from glucose. The hydrogen peroxide formed as a result of this enzyme is associated with honey's well-known wound sterilizing and healing properties.
 
First, honey is a whole food and sucrose is not. Honey isn't sugar .... the following link tells you more than you want to know about the difference:

http://www.greenmedinfo.com/blog/why-you-should-ditch-sugar-favor-honey


And for people with allergies .......

Raw honey contains enzymes and probiotics which are destroyed when heated or used in cooking applications. These compounds are of no small significance and contribute directly or indirectly to honey's many well-known health benefits. Take the active starch-digesting enzyme amylase, for instance, found only in the raw form of honey in a form known as diastase, which is believed to contribute to clearing antigen-antibody immune complexes associated with allergies to pollens, while also reducing mast cell degranulation associated with histamine, and related inflammatory hormone, release linked to allergic symptoms. Also, if it is local honey, it will pick up small amount of local pollen which may help to "immunize," or desensitize an overly active immune response to these environmental triggers. There is also the enzyme in raw honey known as glucose oxidase, which produces hydrogen peroxide and gluconic acid from glucose. The hydrogen peroxide formed as a result of this enzyme is associated with honey's well-known wound sterilizing and healing properties.

I am wrong about honey after checking farther I find it is a real good thing
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3385631/
 

Back
Top