Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#31
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article ,
Omelet wrote: In article , Billy wrote: In article , Omelet wrote: Try Kombucha. Try Kombucha? Kombucha for Parkinson's? Knew it was good for detox. Can you amplify your statement? Kombucha, especially if you eat the critter itself, has shown some positive effects for autoimmune diseases. Need a critter? We have plenty. g Dad's been brewing and drinking it for years. Your dad worked for Google? The "critter" as I understand it is a vinegar "mother". Thanks for the reference. -- Billy Bush Behind Bars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTf...ef=patrick.net http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo...eature=related |
#32
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article
, Billy wrote: In article , Omelet wrote: In article , Billy wrote: In article , Omelet wrote: Try Kombucha. Try Kombucha? Kombucha for Parkinson's? Knew it was good for detox. Can you amplify your statement? Kombucha, especially if you eat the critter itself, has shown some positive effects for autoimmune diseases. Need a critter? We have plenty. g Dad's been brewing and drinking it for years. Your dad worked for Google? Uh, no... The "critter" as I understand it is a vinegar "mother". Thanks for the reference. Pretty much. :-) It makes a very fine red wine vinegar! It has uses other than brewing green tea Kombucha. -- Peace! Om "Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Stephan Rothstein |
#33
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article ,
Omelet wrote: In article , Billy wrote: In article , Omelet wrote: In article , Billy wrote: In article , Omelet wrote: Try Kombucha. Try Kombucha? Kombucha for Parkinson's? Knew it was good for detox. Can you amplify your statement? Kombucha, especially if you eat the critter itself, has shown some positive effects for autoimmune diseases. Need a critter? We have plenty. g Dad's been brewing and drinking it for years. Your dad worked for Google? Uh, no... The "critter" as I understand it is a vinegar "mother". Thanks for the reference. Pretty much. :-) It makes a very fine red wine vinegar! It has uses other than brewing green tea Kombucha. Seems like Kombucha is going main stream (or is that Main Street?) with different flavorings. Wish I had time to fiddle with it, maybe this winter. What do you find to be the benefits of it? Is it a broad spectrum kind of thing or do you have particular applications for it? For example, Noilly Pratt sweet (red) vermouth has many different herbs in it (usually used as an aperitif) but I find a small glass of it is very effective for cooling hot stomachs (as happens when you've had one too many cups of coffee in the afternoon, and friends who have hot stomach reactions to tomato paste tell me that it takes the burn away as well). The herbs I would describe as wide spectrum, fudge factors (who knows what they do), whereas the hot stomach is a specific application. Is Kombucha more like the former or the later? -- Billy Bush Behind Bars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTf...ef=patrick.net http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo...eature=related |
#34
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article
, Billy wrote: The "critter" as I understand it is a vinegar "mother". Thanks for the reference. Pretty much. :-) It makes a very fine red wine vinegar! It has uses other than brewing green tea Kombucha. Seems like Kombucha is going main stream (or is that Main Street?) with different flavorings. Wish I had time to fiddle with it, maybe this winter. What do you find to be the benefits of it? Is it a broad spectrum kind of thing or do you have particular applications for it? For example, Noilly Pratt sweet (red) vermouth has many different herbs in it (usually used as an aperitif) but I find a small glass of it is very effective for cooling hot stomachs (as happens when you've had one too many cups of coffee in the afternoon, and friends who have hot stomach reactions to tomato paste tell me that it takes the burn away as well). The herbs I would describe as wide spectrum, fudge factors (who knows what they do), whereas the hot stomach is a specific application. Is Kombucha more like the former or the later? -- Billy It's.... mixed. Dad has shown some interesting results using beneficial herbs in the teas, not just straight green tea. Things like dandilion and Matte'. The brewing process with the kombucha critter seems to enhance the effects. You can tailor your tea mix to what you are trying to treat. -- Peace! Om "Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Stephan Rothstein |
#35
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article ,
Omelet wrote: In article , Billy wrote: The "critter" as I understand it is a vinegar "mother". Thanks for the reference. Pretty much. :-) It makes a very fine red wine vinegar! It has uses other than brewing green tea Kombucha. Seems like Kombucha is going main stream (or is that Main Street?) with different flavorings. Wish I had time to fiddle with it, maybe this winter. What do you find to be the benefits of it? Is it a broad spectrum kind of thing or do you have particular applications for it? For example, Noilly Pratt sweet (red) vermouth has many different herbs in it (usually used as an aperitif) but I find a small glass of it is very effective for cooling hot stomachs (as happens when you've had one too many cups of coffee in the afternoon, and friends who have hot stomach reactions to tomato paste tell me that it takes the burn away as well). The herbs I would describe as wide spectrum, fudge factors (who knows what they do), whereas the hot stomach is a specific application. Is Kombucha more like the former or the later? -- Billy It's.... mixed. Dad has shown some interesting results using beneficial herbs in the teas, not just straight green tea. Things like dandilion and Matte'. The brewing process with the kombucha critter seems to enhance the effects. You can tailor your tea mix to what you are trying to treat. Dandelion is OK but yerba mate is nasty tasting stuff. Hmmm. I wonder if you could make a "single malt" flavored kombucha? Maybe that's what Charlie is up to out in the "skunk works". He say he be brewing compost tea but he may be funnin' us;o) -- Billy Bush Behind Bars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTf...ef=patrick.net http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l0aEo...eature=related |
#36
|
|||
|
|||
taxes and the best place to vegetable garden?
In article
, Billy wrote: It's.... mixed. Dad has shown some interesting results using beneficial herbs in the teas, not just straight green tea. Things like dandilion and Matte'. The brewing process with the kombucha critter seems to enhance the effects. You can tailor your tea mix to what you are trying to treat. Dandelion is OK but yerba mate is nasty tasting stuff. Hmmm. I wonder if you could make a "single malt" flavored kombucha? The nice thing is that, like with any tea, you can add herbs for flavor as well as medical efficacy. :-) Fruit juices too. Maybe that's what Charlie is up to out in the "skunk works". He say he be brewing compost tea but he may be funnin' us;o) -- Billy lol Manure and compost tea seem to be good for a quicker fertilizer without burning plants? I've never tried it but dumping the poopy duck ponds we used to have (kiddy pools emptied by mostly bailing) seemed to be well loved by the plants. Duck poop tea. g -- Peace! Om "Human nature seems to be to control other people until they put their foot down." -- Stephan Rothstein |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Forum | |||
profit and its links with taxes | United Kingdom | |||
OT Property taxes | Texas | |||
New taxes ????? | Ponds | |||
Bush/Kerry will raise taxes | Gardening |