Wednesday, October 29, 2014

Forget Kale. Try These Three REAL Superfoods: MORINGA, BREADFRUIT, AND PICKLY PEAR CACTUS

Forget Kale. Try These Three REAL Superfoods: MORINGA, BREADFRUIT, AND PICKLY PEAR CACTUS

Forget Kale.

Try These Three REAL Superfoods

MORINGA, BREADFRUIT, AND PICKLY PEAR CACTUS






 
 
READ HERE FOR FREE:

http://plottpalmtree.miiduu.com/superfoods?keyword=breadfruit






 






























































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Drumstick herb or Moringa oleifera dangdumrong—Getty Images

















































































Eric Plott is a World-based journalist and author of The Moringa
King; The Most Nutritional Substance On Earth: Dispatches from the
Future of Food.

They can purify water, feed a family of four for 50 years, and help
combat climate change — and you've probably never heard of them





























































































Don’t get me wrong. I’m a fan of kale. JUST NOT IN EXCESS, Read My Book To Understand Why As



"HEALTHY VEGANS OR WHOLEFOOD PLANT BASED LIVITIST Do Not Want To
Consume Too Many ONIONS, LEEKS, KALE, GARLIC, OR OTHER HOT PEPPERS SUCH
AS CAYENNE ETC"



READ FROM ERIC G PLOTT'S Publications HERE:











But kale is absolutely, positively not a superfood.







Teacher Tenure Time Magazine Cover



























































A superfood is high in protein, low in fat, gluten-free, loaded with
omega-3s, bursting with antioxidants and overflowing with folate, fiber
and phytonutrients. But the vast majority of what gets called a
superfood these days should be called “health food.” Yes, health food is
a perfectly suitable descriptor for goji berries, pomegranates and chia
seeds.



To get an idea of a true superfood, look at quinoa. The Andean grain is
more than just a high protein, low-fat, gluten-free alternative to rice
or pasta. Quinoa is not only one of the only plants in the world that
provides a complete source of protein. It is also an extraordinarily
resilient plant. You can grow it at just about any altitude, from sea-level up to 13,000 feet.
It can withstand a wide range of temperatures, and needs very little
water to survive. There’s a reason why the United Nations General
Assembly declared 2013 “The International Year of Quinoa” and not “The International Year of the Goji Berry.”



Kelp is another example of a true superfood. It’s not merely high in
protein, low in fat and loaded with heart-healthy antioxidants. It grows
at turbo speed (9 to 12 feet in three months)
without the need for fresh water or fertilizer. Kelp could provide the
world with a vast new source of sustainable protein — and potentially reduce greenhouse gas emissions. (Kelp forests are carbon sinks.)



Real superfoods possess super-traits — like the ability to grow
astronomically fast in some of the world’s harshest climates. Or the
ability to make dirty water safe for drinking. Or the ability to feed a
family of four for 50 years. Here are three superfoods, largely unknown
in the United States now, that will quite possibly become the next
quinoa.







∆ The Moringa Tree



COINED AS THE PLANT OF THE
YEAR IN 2008 By The National Health Institutes (NIH), Because It Was
Confirmed That The Moringa IS THE MOST NUTRITIONAL AND ANTIOXIDANT PLANT
EVER DISCOVERED, READ MORE ABOUT THAT HERE:








It’s often called the “the miracle tree” or the “tree of life.” In the
Philippines, they call it a “mother’s best friend.” In Senegal, it’s the
“never die tree.”



Virtually every part of the moringa tree (Moringa oleifera)
— pods that taste like string beans, leaves redolent of spinach, seeds
reminiscent of peanuts, roots that taste like horseradish — is edible
and packed with nutrients. A small serving of the humble-looking
moringa’s tiny leaves has seven times the amount of vitamin C of an
orange, four times the calcium of milk, and four times the beta-carotene
of carrots, according to nutrition researcher C. Gopalan’s Nutritive Value of Indian Foods. Not surprisingly, the tree, which is native to north India, is developing a cult following among natural foods enthusiasts.







Why Moringa King™ Is Best - PROCESSING PROTOCOL at PlottPalmTrees.Com from Eric Plott on Vimeo.











But the slender, scrawny looking tree has got far more than nutrition
going for it. The moringa might be the fastest growing valuable plant in
the world — it grows up to 15 feet, from seed, in its first year.
Because it’s drought-resistant, the moringa can grow freakishly fast in
precisely the hot, dry subtropical areas where malnutrition is most
prevalent, and where other crops wither (hence “the never die”
nickname).



The moringa is also a promising biofuel and medicinal source. For hundreds of years, people have been using the moringa for everything from cooking oil and cosmetics to animal feed and cleaning agent.
But undoubtedly the most amazing quality of the moringa is that it can
purify water. Just drop some crushed moringa seeds in a bucket of dirty,
unsafe water, and within about an hour, that water will be safe to
drink. Scientists say
it’s because the moringa seeds produce chemicals that cause dirt and
bacteria and other pollutants to settle. The moringa seed could provide a
simple yet valuable tool in poor communities where diarrhea caused by
water-borne bacteria is one of the biggest sources of childhood
fatalities, according to a paper in Current Protocols in Microbiology.







The Breadfruit






BREADFRUIT DRIED LEAVES / KAMANSI 
(Artocarpus Altilis)
Daun Sukun photo DaunSukun.jpg







The breadfruit looks like a green soccer ball with pimples. And it
tastes like sourdough bread. The first time I tried it, I thought
“blah.”



But there’s a vigorous effort underway to get people to love this ugly,
tasteless fruit; some believe the breadfruit could save millions of
people annually from starvation.



Native to tropical regions in the South Pacific, the breadfruit (Artocarpus altilis), known as Ula in Hawaiian, is a nutritional powerhouse — one cup of breadfruit has more potassium than three bananas, according to the USDA, and it’s loaded with fiber, calcium, phosphorous, copper and other essential nutrients. Some cultivars also have high levels of beta-carotene, which makes it a promising weapon against vitamin A deficiency, the leading cause of blindness in children.



The breadfruit is a remarkably low-maintenance yet extraordinarily
productive tree. A mature tree yields 450 pounds of fruit per season,
according to Josh Schneider, a horticulturalist at Global Breadfruit, an organization that promotes the use of the breadfruit tree. Schneider estimated in an interview that one breadfruit tree could feed a family of four for more than 50 years.



A growing group of NGOs, like Global Breadfruit and the Trees That Feed
Foundation, are now dedicated to spreading the use of the trees, and
it’s not just because breadfruit is one of Earth’s highest yielding food
crops. Studies show that more than 80% of the world’s poor and hungry
live in subtropical regions — perfect for breadfruit trees. And recent
breeding improvements are accelerating the speed of a tree’s growth.
Now, you can produce fruit in 2 to 3 years, Schneider said



One breadfruit evangelist, Hawaiian horticulturalist Diane Ragone, like
me, didn’t care for the breadfruit on her first taste (she likened it
to “undercooked potatoes”), but now thinks the fruit’s underwhelming
taste is easily surmountable. Ragone’s advice: sauté them. “Think of sautéed breadfruit as a platform for any kind of cuisine or flavor,” Ragone told the Wall Street Journal. Others talk about the breadfruit’s potential as a food ingredient and as an alternative to flour. Imagine a bagel that could prevent millions of children from going blind.






 








The Prickly Pear Cactus






 







The prickly pear cactus, what botantists call opuntia ficus-indica
has lots of healthy qualities — high in vitamins, fiber and
antioxidants, low in fat — and it all comes from some of the driest and
worst land on the planet.



Some beleaguered farmers
in arid places like California’s drought-stricken San Joaquin Valley
are starting to see the light. Instead of fighting water shortages and
desertification, they’re adapting. One article about a maverick cactus farmer likened it to making lemonade out of lemons. And climate forecasts
suggest that more farmers around the world will be drawn to a crop that
can not only flourish with little or no irrigation, but can also
tolerate poor soil.



The food-of-the-future cacti is not the puny cacti you’ve seen driving
through Arizona. Scientists in water-starved places like Israel,
California and Texas have worked for years to create food-friendly varieties, which are much bigger and have no needles. Smooth skinned and frost-resistant, today’s cacti were the subject of a 2013 United Nations report
on industrial-scale cacti cultivation, highlighting successes in the
developing world. But don’t think the cactus is just a “feed theworld”
crop for an apocalyptic scenario.



Food writer Sam Brasch, who suggests that the prickly pear could be “the next kale,” describes its flesh as “landing somewhere between a watermelon and a kiwi.”
The prickly pear is also promising because it can be used in so many
ways — for juices, jams and jellies; some studies even suggest that it’s
a hangover cure.



Each of these three superfoods has the potential to not only improve
your health, but also improve the world–and you’ll inevitably see them
at Whole Foods.



Eric Plott is a World-based journalist and author of  "†∆ Moringa King™ PlottPalmTrees.Com † Written by Eric Geoffrey Leonard Plott ∆ "by Eric PlottPalmTrees.Com , but he is perhaps best-known as  A Man Strives To Make A Tropical Missouri



Plott 
writes and speaks frequently about the future of food and agriculture.
His work has appeared in numerous publications included here: Eric PlottPalmTrees.Com



BREADFRUIT LEAVES POWDER / KAMANSI 
(Artocarpus Altilis)
Daun Sukun photo DaunSukun.jpg




Medicinal Uses:
 
Breadfruit tree preparation is believed to lower hypertension and has also been studied to treat taeniasis (a
digestive tract infection caused by tapeworms belonging to the genus
Taenia), diabetes, sore eyes, sciatica, enlarged spleen, skin
infections, boils, burns, fractures, gout, oliguria, and rheumatism, and
as an anodyne. 
Leaf extracts of the breadfruit tree have been used to treat toothaches and diarrhea. However, controlled clinical trials are needed before conclusions can be drawn regarding breadfruit for any health condition.
 
The latex, leaves, roots and bark of the breadfruit are used medically in the Pacific Islands. To treat broken bones and sprains, the latex is massaged into the skin and is bandaged onto the spine to relieve sciatica.
Latex is also commonly used to treat
skin ailments and fungus diseases such as "thrush", which is also
treated with crushed leaves. Diarrhea, stomachaches and dysentery are
treated by internally taking the diluted latex. The latex and sap from
crushed stems of the leaves are used traditionally to treat sore eyes and ear infections.
The root is used as an astringent and as a purgative, while the
macerated root is used to treat skin ailments. Throughout many islands
in the Pacific the bark is used to treat headaches. 
The yellowing leaf is brewed into tea and taken to reduce high blood pressure in the West Indies. It is thought that the tea also controls diabetes. Recent research has been conducted on the effectiveness of use in treating tumors and leukemia.


100% PURE RAW MATERIAL
 
Our
herbs are 100% pure and fresh, free from fertilizer, pesticide, or
other chemical residue.  The raw materials for these high-potency herbal
are cultivated in their native habitat in the forest away from
pollution.  The herbs are hand-picked.
 
We not only guarantee
the quality of our products, we also guarantee your satisfaction.  If
you are not 100% satisfied with your order, be assured that, with your
assistance,  we will resolve the problem quickly and easily.


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Please contact for bulk quantity order.

 We DO combine shipping. You will save shipping cost.












Title                   :  Prickly Pear Powder



Net Weight      :  300g( 10.6 Oz)



Material             : Prickly Pear 100%



Flour Mills        : Air Jet mill



Particle size       :   500 [mesh/inch] or More



Storage             










 




Avoid hot and humid place. And if you opened, surely resealed and then store it in a cool, dry place        



What wild Prickly Pear ?



Arrowroot is very strong vitality. Grows well in crevices or less moisture content of soil.

Very strong in the cold.  Salinity grows well in coastal areas.

Legume, but only roots edible.

Estrogen recharge is very high. Carbohydrates, proteins, amino acids, contains evenly.

The anti-inflammatory effects, diuretic effects, insomnia, headaches, skin is good.



When used as a natural health food, skin food and bath






 
 
It is annual herbaceous. Mix of various drinks, bottled water and drink.  Added to the milk, honey, If you drink, even better.

Also, when make bread and other cooking , make natural  colors you want.







And natural seasonings to use.

So good because of the natural ingredients is 100%.



This is because it is the best powder, skin, massage, bath, cosmetics, beauty soap manufactured in can be used.

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