View Full Version : [mcg] Wheatgrass????
Tigerlily
Dec 24th, 2005, 05:01 PM
Good information, that's great. :) I don't have a juicer.
VeganJohn
Dec 24th, 2005, 10:48 PM
I recently had an organic salad with a wheatgrass dressing at a restaurant. The dressing tasted very nice, a bit like balsamic vinegar in a way to my tastebuds!
mowtown
Apr 29th, 2006, 09:13 PM
Hi, new here. I am really getting into wheatrass too. Amazed with the health benifits i have experienced. I have been getting my supply from a really cool health orientated juice bar in Bristol called the big banana juice bar. Amazingly, they manage to produce it all organicaly and themselves. I have had trouble getting hold of organic wheatgrass here in bristol. They do great juices too. They have a nice website, here. (http://www.thebigbananajuicebar.co.uk) Check out their recepie for "green Bang" lime, wheatgrass and something else, really nice. I have had some poor attempts at sweetening up a shot of wheatgrass.
Question: has anybody had bad experiences with wheatgrass? have heard some pretty sceptical reviews on the web.
insubordination
Apr 30th, 2006, 09:09 AM
I refuse to eat or drink anything that I don't like the taste of.
You know, it's weird but I don't mind the taste of anything. Anyone else like that? I find wheat grass quite delicious. I used to grow my own (right in the garden- not in trays). It's very easy but now I find it too annoying because I live in a flat.
Sometimes I just sprout the wheat in water and eat it when the green shoots start to grow I put it in the sun for a few hours just prior to eating. If you get it at just the right time, it's very sweet and far easier to eat and more delicious than the grass grown in soil. Is the powdered stuff nutritious?
Wildflower
Apr 30th, 2006, 09:50 AM
Hi, new here. I am really getting into wheatrass too. Amazed with the health benifits i have experienced. Can you share what your health benefits are please? I would love to hear what it can do...
Thanks! :D
Wildflower
Apr 30th, 2006, 09:53 AM
I read somewhere about it.. it's used a lot to preserve color on dried fruits, especially banana chips, mango, etc etc.. there were some weird side effects but i can't remember them.. lol. i cant find the site though! I'll keep looking. i thought i had the site saved or something. When i find it i'll post it asap. :o
I know this is a really old post, but isn't this sulfar dioxide you are thinking of? I thought that was what was used to preserve dried fruits, and it sometimes gives people bloatin, cramping, diarreah, all that stuff.
I think silicon dioxide is used to prevent caking due to humidity - it absorbs up moisture.
I could be wrong, this is like off my memory, I should probably google. Sometimes I get all my dioxide/sulfur things mixed up and I may be using the name for mustard gas or something. LOL. :D
Hee Hee - OK, I wikipedia'ed it, and that is what it is. Sulfar dioxide does look nasty, and silicon dioxide looks quite harmless (unless inhaled) and occurs naturally in plants to help maintain cell wall structure.
Stu
Apr 30th, 2006, 10:20 AM
Question: has anybody had bad experiences with wheatgrass? have heard some pretty sceptical reviews on the web.
Me and my friend both tried a shot of wheatgrass, and we both had a negative reaction. When I think about the stuff now, it makes me feel nauseous. I won't be having it again.
catalina
Apr 30th, 2006, 10:31 AM
Stu, do you mind being a bit more specific? (Especially if it's really gross) What type of negative effects did you & your friend experience?
Stu
Apr 30th, 2006, 10:46 AM
Just kind of nausea... Feeling ill, dizzy... Wanting to spew.
insubordination
May 1st, 2006, 12:08 PM
Maybe it had gone mouldy?
Geoff
May 1st, 2006, 12:26 PM
I just purchased like 2500 wheatgrass seeds on ebay. [must.overcome.addiction...] I'm going to start taking a shot of wheatgrass every morning. I've read quite a bit about it today, and it sounds like a very good idea. Can't wait to start.
When you say 'seeds' do you mean wheat grains / berries? If you do, 2500 won't go far in terms of growing wheat grass. I just checked and found that 50 weigh about a gram so you've only bought 50 gms or so and you'll need kilos of the stuff to plant up a few trays. :)
catmogg
May 1st, 2006, 12:39 PM
Me and my friend both tried a shot of wheatgrass, and we both had a negative reaction. When I think about the stuff now, it makes me feel nauseous. I won't be having it again.
The friend was me and i confirm!! Herein ends my interest in wheatgrass, nutritious or not. It was so rancid tasting i could have thrown up. :eek:
rantipole
May 1st, 2006, 03:54 PM
Just kind of nausea... Feeling ill, dizzy... Wanting to spew.
That can happen to me if I have wheatgrass juice on an empty stomach. If I eat something beforehand, I'm fine.
Cheers,
rant
tabitha
May 1st, 2006, 05:04 PM
I had wheatgrass a couple of months ago and I had a stomach ache for quite a while. Someone told me I didnt give it a chance, but I was a bit put off after that. Shame, because Ive heard such wonderful things about it.
DianeVegan
May 2nd, 2006, 04:53 AM
I drink wheatgrass on a fairly regular basis and will say that it is an acquired taste. If it didn't make me feel energetic I probably would never drink it. You should only have one ounce (30 ml) per day to start and either drink it VERY slowly by itself or in a juice drink. It's also important to swirl it in your mouth for a bit to get the enzymes in your saliva started on digesting it. It upsets my stomach if I drink it alone so I add it to other veggies when I juice.
tipsy
May 2nd, 2006, 06:49 AM
you guys are all whimps!!!
i love wheatgrass! and i have it a few (or more) times a week.
its better than drinking a shot of espresso in the morning!!
:D
Seaside
May 2nd, 2006, 07:37 AM
:D
I have to protect my wheatgrass from the cats. They will chew it all up before I get the chance to juice it. They have their own pot of it, of course, but they want it all!
I think the people who get the most sick from it are probably the ones who need it the most, unfortunately.
Tigerlily
May 3rd, 2006, 03:56 AM
Why do you say that, Seaside?
Seaside
May 3rd, 2006, 04:35 AM
Why do you say that, Seaside?
Because when people get nauseous from drinking wheatgrass juice, it means the wheatgrass juice has helped to release stored toxic material, and its the toxins that make people nauseous. People who get "sick" when they eat lots of fruit are having the same reaction, since fruit is also cleansing. Its impossible in our presently polluted world to be completely free of all artificial substances, but we can reduce the number of stored toxins in our livers by being as careful as we can of what we eat and drink. But its a sure sign that a person can benefit from wheatgrass juice if it is making them feel unwell, if they can get past the initial bad feelings it causes. The way DianeVegan takes hers is a good way to start.
Tigerlily
May 3rd, 2006, 05:28 AM
Ahh, that makes sense now. :)
twinkle
May 3rd, 2006, 12:18 PM
I've only tried wheatgrass once, when I was at Womad (music festival) - it didn't make me feel particularly bad but it didn't really pep me up noticeably either. I guess you have to take it regularly but there's nowhere around Leicester that seems to sell shots.
DianeVegan
May 3rd, 2006, 12:53 PM
While it is a compelling idea to blame an upset stomach on the release of toxins, I would caution that there is no physiological basis for an upset stomach being caused by the release of toxins from the liver. Especially since the reaction in the stomach happens rather quickly and the liver filters substances that have entered the bloodstream. I would suspect that the stomach upset people experience may by related to enzymatic reactions or acid-base balance.
If I can locate a sound explanation for the reason wheatgrass may cause stomach upset then I will post it.:)
For all you skeptics out there, here (http://skeptico.blogs.com/skeptico/2005/04/wheatgrass_madn.html) is an interesting link:rolleyes: . Also keep in mind that Andrew Weil, MD thinks there is no benefit gained by drinking wheatgrass (if you really care about what he says).
Here is a book (http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1878736973/ref=ase_shirlswellncafen/102-9443791-3079342?s=books&v=glance&n=283155&tagActionCode=shirlswellncafen)that looks to answer lots of questions.
Seaside
May 4th, 2006, 03:46 AM
If I can locate a sound explanation for the reason wheatgrass may cause stomach upset then I will post it.:)
Good luck. :rolleyes:
For all you skeptics out there, here (http://skeptico.blogs.com/skeptico/2005/04/wheatgrass_madn.html) is a great link.
Nice unbiased by the medical establishment opinions there.
Gabriel Cousins is a good source for learning of the value of natural foods including wheatgrass juice (not "liquified wheatgrass") in maintaining health and preventing illness. However, his opinions, and the opinions of other people in the natural health professions, are not backed by pharmaceutical companies and standard medical practitioners because there is no billion dollar profit to be made from keeping people healthy, and his reported success in healing people who visit his retreats is based on testimonials from healed patients rather than experimentation upon animals, so he may be considered "unsound" and ineligible for the certified registered nurse anesthetists' stamp of approval. It is always best to examine the motivations behind any recommendation, rather than allowing ourselves to be intimidated by the false authority of the modern medical establishment.
DianeVegan
May 4th, 2006, 06:46 AM
While you have certainly stated your disdain for any opinion other than the "natural health professions," I fail to see where this explains nausea caused by wheatgrass ingestion. I did locate the wheatgrass book which I linked to and the author states that it is enzymatic reactions that cause the nausea. I believe that is a sound, physiological explanation. The same author also goes into the research that has been done with wheatgrass - interestingly, the first study used animals. There have not been many studies done on wheatgrass and none that specifically mentions nausea related to it's ingestion. He also mentions the reason that so little research has been done - mostly because pharmacuetical companies haven't figured out a way to make money off of it. (Although the supplement industry has with all the wheatgrass and barley grass extracts and powders out there. Actually, he does mention that all the research was done with powdered wheatgrass, not fresh juice.)
Here is a link to the American Cancer Society (http://www.cancer.org/docroot/ETO/content/ETO_5_3X_Wheatgrass.asp?sitearea=ETO) and their page on wheatgrass.
Seaside
May 4th, 2006, 07:17 AM
I have read the information on wheatgrass and associated nausea in the books of Cousins, which is why I suggested his name to people interested in finding out. I cannot quote them directly as most of my books are in storage, and I do not wish to go by memory, nor do I wish to recommend online sources for this kind of info.
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