- Good
Sugars
- ANALYSIS
OF MOLASSES
- The
report on a sample of Molasses in Great Britain used for
making silage reveals:
- SUCROSE
|
- 39.5%
|
- INVERT
SUGAR
|
- 11.5%
|
- ASH
|
- 9.0%
|
- WATER
|
- 22.5%
|
- ORGANIC
MATTER
|
- 17.5%
|
-
- CRUDE
BLACKSTRAP MOLASSES
- 100
GRAMS
- The
United States Department of Agriculture, in Handbook No.
8, composition of foods, list the following content of minerals
and vitamins to be FOUND in Molasses.
- Calcium
|
- 684
mg
|
- Phosphorous
|
- 84
mg
|
- Iron
|
- 16.1
mg
|
- Sodium
|
- 96
mg
|
- Potassium
|
- 2927
mg
|
- Magnesium
|
- 258
mg
|
- Thiamine
|
- .11
mg
|
- Riboflavin
|
- .19
mg
|
- Niacin
|
- 2
mg
|
-
- A
more detailed analysis of American Blackstrap Molasses reveals
trace amounts of copper and zinc; furthermore, that the
aliment is a rich source of most of the vitamins of the
B family with the exception of Vitamin B1. According to
the notable diet expert, Gaylord Hauser, it is EXTREMELY
high in Vitamin B6, in Pantothenic Acid and Inositol; and
it should be put on one's table as regularly as salt, and
used as a sugar substitute on cereals, stirred into milk
and eaten instead of jam or jelly.
-
- A
most IMPORTANT constituent of Molasses is phosphoric acid:
"A COMBINED DEFICIENCY OF THIS AND POTASSIUM
IN THE HUMAN BODY CAUSES GENERAL BREAKDOWN OF THE CELLS,
ESPECIALLY THOSE OF THE BRAIN AND NERVES"
. CRUDE SUGAR CANE MOLASSES
CONTAINS ABOUT 50 PERCENT FRUIT SUGARS.
-
- Taking
Molasses everyday has been known to contribute to better
health and the overcoming of certain ailments like:
-
- Intestinal
growths & polyps
- Strokes
- Arthritis
- Ulcers
- Dermatitis
- Eczema
- Psoriases
- High
Blood Pressure
- Angina
Pectoris (Weak Heart)
- Constipation
- Colitis
- Varicose
Veins
- Dull
and Clouded thinking
- Sinus
trouble
- Pyorrhoea
- Tuberculosis
- Anemia
- Pernicious
Anemia
- Bladder
Troubles
- Difficult
urination
- Gallstones
- Bad
Nerves
- Maternal
Health during pregnancy
- Change
of Life (Menopause)
- Unhealthy
fingernails & hair
- METHOD
OF TAKING MOLASSES
- The
most convenient way of taking Molasses is before meals.
The dosage is one teaspoonful, which should be melted in
half cup of hot water, then cold water should be added,
so as to make two-thirds of a cupful, the latter to be drunk
warm.
-
- For
children, use 1/2 teaspoon. The Molasses can be taken
neat; but hot water should be drunk immediately afterwards.
Some people, however find the latter method unsuited to
them. The patient must use his own judgment and adapt the
method to his individual idiosyncrasies.
-
- Persons
with delicate stomachs who find a teaspoonful too much at
one time, should take a smaller dose, but more often during
the day. In severe cases, such as for growths, Molasses
should be taken last thing at night and on rising, as well
as during the day. The water should of course NEVER be too
HOT; never hotter than a temperature in which one can comfortably
bear to put one's finger.
-
- Another
point is that the Molasses-and-water mixtures should not
be gulped down like nasty medicine so as to produce flatulence,
but should be sipped and tasted like connoisseurs taste
fine wines.
- The
reason for taking the Molasses in hot water is because by
being thus diluted it is more easily assimilated, and also
more digestible. Cold water with some people is apt to chill
constant replenishing; moreover, as biochemists point out,
they are the most soluble salts ( especially potassium and
phosphorous) and are easily lost when foods are COOKED or
BOILED.
-
- Hence,
the advisability of taking Molasses at any rate once or
twice a day even when in great health should be emphasized.
This is all the more imperative, because, in addition to
the DEFICIENCY-diet on which the majority of people live,
the consumption of salty and soda impregnated foods has
vastly increased of late years
Source:
Peacekeepers.com
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