Herbs & Herbal Remedies @ Green Papaya

Green Papaya lists 240 of the most medically useful American plants...Papaya - a world class meat tenderizer, natural digestive aid, prevents ulcers, and also a soft contact lense cleaner.

The remembrance of these astounding folk discoveries... should sober our thoughts when we criticise too freely the old pharmacopoeias. It is easy to make fun of medieval recipes: it is more difficult and may be wiser to investigate them. Instead of assuming that the medieval pharmacist was a benighted foot we might wonder whether there was not sometimes a justification for his strange procedure. -- George Sartori, Harvard Professor and Author

DISCLAIMER: Green Papaya offers Home Remedies with specific annotations to health and well-being. Such remedy advices are offered as emergency first aid and are governed by the Good Samaritan Act. Under the common 'Good Samaritan laws' - "a citizen is obliged to provide first aid when necessary and is immune from prosecution if assistance given in good faith turns out to be harmful". Within our developing "wireless world" there comes a time when the only immediate assistance is that offered through the Internet. Green Papaya therefore feels that obligation and thereby offers this resource of Home Remedies as necessary.

Green Papaya's home remedies are meant for temporary relief and first aid measures; for the average person without any special needs or uncommon or compounding medical conditions. Green Papaya's advice, regardless of the situation, IS NOT a replacement for professional care and consultation. Please consultant with your family doctor or any emergency service immediately.

Caraway

Caraway

Digestive Aid Since Ancient Egypt

Family: Umbelliferae; (includes Carrot, Parsley)

Genus and Species: Carum Carvi
Also known as: Carum
Parts used: Fruits (”seeds”)

Caraway is best known as the seed that flavors rye bread. The reason it’s in rye bread, and many other foods, is that caraway has been used since ancient times to calm the digestive tract and expel gas.

Caraway seeds have been found in prehistoric food remains from 3500 s.c. The ancient Egyptians loved the aromatic seeds. They were recommended for digestive upsets in the Ebers Papyrus, one of the world’s oldest surviving medical documents, about 1500 BC.

Unchanged for Centuries

Caraway is one of only a handful of herbs whose major medicinal use has remained unchanged throughout history. The ancient Greek physician Dioscorides mentioned the seeds to aid digestion, and herbals down through the ages have recommended them for indigestion, gas, and infant colic.

In Shakespeare’s day, baked apples with caraway seeds were considered a stomach-soothing dessert. In Henry IV, a meal ends with “a pippin and a dish of caraway” Seventeenth-century English herbalist Nicholas Culpeper said caraway “helpeth digestion… and easeth the pains of the wind colic.”

And America’s 19th-century Eclectic physicians believed the seeds “gently excite the digestive powers… I and are I used in flatulent colic, especially of children.”

Throughout history, in Europe, the Middle East, and early America, caraway was a favorite addition to laxative herbs because it tempered their often violent effects.

Caraway’s only other traditional uses relate to women’s health-for menstrual cramps, menstruation promotion, and milk promotion in nursing mothers.

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