1

1

1

1

adBrite

Motigo

geovisite

Acne alternative remedies

Written By variety on Tuesday, January 24, 2012 | 10:56 AM

Acne alternative remedies

Acne is a common inflammatory skin disease characterized by pimples on the face, chest, and back. It occurs when the pores of the skin become clogged with oil, dead skin cells, and/or bacteria

Description:
Acne vulgaris, the medical term for common acne, s the most common skin disease. It affects nearly 17 illion people in the United States. While acne can arise t any age, it usually begins at puberty and worsens during dolescence. Nearly 85% of people develop acne ome time between the ages of 12 and 25 years old. Up o 20% of women develop mild acne. It is also found in ome newborns.

10:56 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Almond soup Recipes

Written By هشام يونس on Monday, June 20, 2011 | 9:15 AM

Almond soup Recipes

Serves 4
Ingredients:
225g/8oz blanched almonds, minced
3 egg yolks, hard-boiled
1.2 litres/2pt chicken stock
25g/1oz butter, softened
25g/1oz plain flour
125ml/4fl oz single cream salt and freshly ground black pepper

9:15 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Macrobiotic diet steep by steep

Macrobiotic diet steep by steep

A macrobiotic diet is part of a philosophy of life that incorporates the ancient Oriental concept or theory of yin and yang. The diet itself consists mainly of brown rice, other whole grains, and vegetables. It requires foods to be cooked over a flame, rather than by electricity or microwave.

Origins:
The term macrobiotics comes from two Greek words; macro (great) and bios (life). The macrobiotic diet is believed to have originated in nineteenth century Japan, with the teachings of Sagen Ishizuka, a natural healer. George Ohsawa (1893–1966), a Japanese teacher and writer, introduced macrobiotics to Europeans in the 1920s. Ohsawa claims to have cured himself of tuberculosis by eating Ishizuka’s diet of brown rice, soup, and vegetables. The diet did not attract much attention in the United States until the mid-1960s, when Ohsawa’s book Zen Macrobiotics was published and became a best seller, especially among the 1960s counterculture. The diet’s popularity heightened in the 1970s when the macrobiotic philosophy was embraced by former Beatle John Lennon (1940–1980) and his wife,Yoko Ono (1933– ).

9:15 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Bad breath Diagnosis to the Treatment with alternative medicine

Bad breath Diagnosis to the Treatment with alternative medicine

Bad breath, also called halitosis, is an unpleasant odor of the breath. Usually it is due to poor hygiene, but it can be an indication of underlying health problems.
Bad breath is likely to be experienced by most adults and many children, at least occasionally. Some people are strongly convinced that bad breath is present when it is not. Bad breath can have a significant impact on a person’s social and professional life.

9:14 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Dance therapy as kind of alternative medicine and remedies

Dance therapy as kind of alternative medicine and remedies

Dance therapy is a type of psychotherapy that uses movement to further the social, cognitive, emotional, and physical development of the individual. Dance therapists work with people who have many kinds of emotional problems, intellectual deficits, and life-threatening illnesses.
They are employed in psychiatric hospitals, day care centers, mental health centers, prisons, special schools, and private practice. They work with people of all ages in both group and individual therapy.
Some also engage in research.
Dance therapists try to help people develop communication skills, a positive self-image, and emotional stability.

9:12 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Balm of Gilead's remedies in alternative medicine

Written By variety on Sunday, June 19, 2011 | 5:15 PM

Balm of Gilead's remedies in alternative medicine

Balm of Gilead (Cammiphora opobalsamum, known as Populus candicans in the United States) is a substance used in perfumes that is derived from the resinous juices of the balsam poplar tree. The tree is a member of the Bursera family. The variety that is native to the continents of Africa and Asia is a small tree of 10–12 ft (3-3.6 m)in height. The cultivated North American variety can grow to heights of 100 ft (30 m).
The herb’s name derives from the ancient region of Gilead in Palestine, known for the great healing powers of its balm. Balm of Gilead is mentioned several times in the Bible (e.g., Jeremiah 8:22). The writings of Pliny the Elder indicate that the tree was brought to Rome in the first century A.D. The historian Josephus recorded that the Queen of Sheba made a gift of balm of Gilead to King Solomon.

5:15 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Baked mushrooms Recipes

Baked mushrooms Recipes

Ingredients:
8 large flat mushrooms, wiped with damp kitchen paper
2 tablespoons olive oil
250g/9oz Taleggio or Brie cheese, thickly sliced
1 bunch of fresh lemon thyme, leaves only salt and freshly ground black pepper

• Preheat the oven to 200°C/ 400°F/Gas mark 6.
• Trim the stalks from the mushrooms.
Put the mushrooms, rounded cap side down, in a medium roasting dish.
Season with salt and pepper
• Pour the olive oil over the mushrooms. Place the cheese slices on top, and finally sprinkle with the lemon thyme. Bake in the oven for 20–25 minutes until the cheese has melted. Serve hot.
5:14 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Hangover: remedies and most successful alternative medicine

Hangover: remedies and most successful alternative medicine

Hangover is the collection of physical and mental symptoms that occur after a person drinks excessive amounts of alcohol.
Hangovers have probably been experienced since prehistoric time when alcohol was first discovered.
A survey found that about 75% of the persons who drank enough to be intoxicated (drunk) sometimes experienced hangover. Although very prevalent, hangovers have not been extensively studied. It is known that ethanol is the primary chemical component of alcohol to produce the effects associated with drinking.
Whether hangover affects complex mental tasks and the performance of simple tasks is unclear. Studies on these areas have yielded conflicting results, presumably due to differences in methods. Clearly, alcohol consumption can affect sleep, and sleep deprivation is known to affect performance.

5:13 PM | 0 comments | Read More

The Jet lag remedies with alternative medicine

The Jet lag remedies with alternative medicine

Jet lag is a condition marked by fatigue, insomnia, and irritability that is caused by air travel through changing time zones. It is commonplace: a 2002 study of international business travelers (IBTs) found that jet lag was one of the most common health problems reported, affecting as many as 74% of IBTs.
Living organisms are accustomed to periods of night and day alternating at set intervals.
Most of the human body’s regulating hormones follow this cycle, known as circadian rhythm. The word circadian comes from the Latin, circa, meaning about, and dies, meaning day.

5:13 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Spinach, feta & pear salad Recipes

Spinach, feta & pear salad Recipes

Ingredients
2 dessert pears such as Comice, peeled, cored and sliced
4 tablespoons walnut oil
100g/4oz baby spinach leaves
175g/6oz feta cheese, diced
75g/3oz walnut pieces
1 teaspoon freshly squeezed lemon juice
Freshly ground black pepper

5:12 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Kampo medicine remedies: Origins, Precautions and Benefits

Kampo medicine remedies: Origins, Precautions and Benefits

Kampo (sometimes spelled kanpo) is a Japanese variant of Chinese traditional medicine that involves the extensive use of herbs. The name is derived from the
Japanese symbols kan, which means China and po, which means medicine. Kampo treatment has become very much integrated in the Japanese health care system.
It is widely available from hospitals and physicians there, and is the most popular form of complementary health care in contemporary Japan. Kampo herbal preparations are sold by many Japanese pharmacies.
The World Health Organization (WHO) reports that Japan has the highest per capita consumption of herbal medicine in the world. In addition to herbal treatments, Kampo practitioners may also administer acupuncture, moxibustion, and manipulative therapy.

5:12 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Lachesis remedies in alternative medicine

Lachesis remedies in alternative medicine

Not all products used in alternative healing come from plants. Lachesis is the venom of the bushmaster snake, Lachesis mutus. It is used in homeopathic medicine.
L. mutus is a tropical snake that lives in the jungles of Central and South America, growing to a length of 12 feet (3.6 m). It is the largest poisonous pit viper in the Western hemisphere, and second in size in the world only to the king cobra. L. mutus is related to the familiar North American rattlesnake.
A large bushmaster can have fangs more than 1 in (2.5 cm) long. Its venom is deadly and kills rapidly by inhibiting nervous impulses or slowly by interfering with blood clotting and accelerating the destruction of red blood cells. The bushmaster is also called the surucucu (sometimes spelled surukuku).

5:11 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Crispy cheese balls Recipes

Crispy cheese balls Recipes

Ingredients
250ml/8fl oz milk
250g/9oz plain flour
75g/3oz butter
250g/9oz Cheddar cheese, grated
1 teaspoon cayenne pepper
3 eggs, beaten
Salt
Vegetable oil for deep-frying

Serves 6

5:11 PM | 0 comments | Read More

Ignatia remedies for physical or sexual abuse and alternative medicine therapy

Written By variety on Saturday, June 18, 2011 | 10:48 AM

Ignatia remedies for physical or sexual abuse and alternative medicine therapy

Ignatia is a homeopathic remedy that is derived from the bean of a small tree that is native to the Philippine Islands and China. The tree belongs to the Loganiaceae family, and has long, twining, smooth branches.
On the branches grows a fruit that is the size and shape of a pear. Inside the fruit are almond-shaped seeds, or beans, that have a fine, downy covering and are blackish gray or clear brown in color.
The Latin name is Ignatius amara, amara being the Latin work for bitter. The bean was named after St. Ignatius Loyola, a Spanish Jesuit who was responsible for bringing the beans to Europe from the Philippines in the seventeenth century. As a result, the beans are often called St. Ignatius beans. The missionaries were introduced to the beans by the locals, who wore the beans as amulets to prevent disease. The bean was then used as a treatment for gout, epilepsy, cholera, and asthma.

10:48 AM | 0 comments | Read More

Pasta with caviar Recipes

Pasta with caviar Recipes

Ingredients
225g/8oz fresh vermicelli
75g/3oz unsalted butter
100g/4oz good-quality caviar
8 fresh chives, chopped
8 quail’s eggs, soft-boiled and peeled
1 lemon, thinly sliced

Serves 4
• Cook the pasta in lightly salted boiling water until al dente, then drain, retaining a very little of the cooking water, and toss in the butter. Arrange in swirls on four small serving plates.
• Put a dollop of caviar in the centre of each mound of pasta, and sprinkle the chives over the top.
• Garnish each serving with two quail’s eggs and lemon slices.
10:47 AM | 0 comments | Read More
 
berita unik