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jana
03-26-2005, 07:16 PM
Excerpted from Health Benefits of Seaweed (http://www.loveseaweed.com/health.html)

Coastal peoples all over the world have prized seaweed as a source of valuable nutrients, primarily minerals, for millennia. Here in northern California, where Rising Tide Sea Vegetables is based, the inland native peoples used to trade their most precious possessions for a bag of dried seaweed laboriously carried on someone's back from the coast.

Knowledge of the tonic and healing powers of seaweed was passed down among coastal peoples from generation to generation. Much of their knowledge is in the process of being confirmed by modern scientific analysis. And demographic studies have shown that people who regularly incorporate edible seaweeds into their diets have fewer problems from mineral depletion and live longer than other peoples.1

Sea vegetables contain 10 to 20 times the minerals and vitamins of land vegetables. Gram for gram, they are higher in vitamins and minerals than any other class of food.2 The minerals are available in chelated, colloidal forms that make them especially available to the bodies of humans and animals, a concept known as “bioavailability.” All sea vegetables contain significant amounts of protein, sometimes as much as 48%. Sea plants are also a rich sources of both soluble and insoluble dietary fiber.3 The large brown seaweeds known as the “kelps” (including Rising Tide’s wakame and kombu) contain alginic acid. Studies have shown that alginic acid removes heavy metals and radioactive isotopes from the digestive tract, as well as strontium 90 from the bones.4

Sea vegetables have traditionally been used in Asia to treat heart disease, hypertension, cancer, and thyroid problems. Modern researchers are trying to understand the physiological mechanisms by which seaweed can be used to successfully treat these diseases, with some promising results. One especially exciting theory proposes that consumption of Laminaria (kombu) explains the low breast cancer rate in post-menopausal Japanese women.5 Much more will be learned in future years as the study of these wondrous plants from the sea continues.

Vitamins
Seaweeds contain vitamins A, B, C, and E.6 Moreover, many seaweeds contain what appears to be vitamin B-12, a vitamin normally found only in animal products. Avoiding B-12 deficiency has traditionally posed a problem for people on raw foods, vegan, macrobiotic, and vegetarian diets, but seaweed just might solve the problem. The source of the B-12 in seaweed remains a mystery (is it made by bacteria living on the surface or in the water?), and researchers wonder if it is not really B-12 but an “analogue” – something that resembles B-12 but cannot be utilized by the human body.7 Dr. Gabriel Cousens is quite convinced that the B-12 in seaweed is bio-available,8 and the experience of some long-term vegan/vegetarians seems to confirm that view.9

Minerals
The mineral content of sea vegetables is extraordinary, and is probably at the root of most of their healing properties. Several of the theories put forth to explain the ability of seaweed to reduce heart disease and hypertension are based in the high mineral content of seaweed, particularly potassium, calcium, sodium, and chloride. In the words of Shep Erhart, author of Sea Vegetable Celebration, “Every second of every day your body depends on minerals to generate billions of tiny electric impulses throughout your nervous system. Your heart would stop, your muscles would freeze, and your brain would black out if these minerals were not available in just the right amounts and the right form. The minerals in seaweeds are in colloidal form, meaning they retain their molecular identity while remaining in liquid suspension. Colloids are very small in size and are easily absorbed by the body’s cells. Plants convert metallic minerals, which can be toxic, into colloids with a natural, negative electric charge. Negatively charged minerals have been shown to increase the transport and bioavailability of other foods and supplements.10

“Minerals that are attached to other substances such as amino acids are also more bioavailable. These are call chelated (key-lated) minerals, from the Greek word for claw. Seaweeds provide all of the 56 minerals and trace minerals required for your body’s physiological functions in chelated, colloidal forms. Most enzymatic functions depend on minute amounts of bioavailable trace minerals. The major minerals are instrumental in all kinds of life-sustaining activities in your body: magnesium is crucial in calcium absorption, iodine in thyroid function, iron in blood oxygen exchange, and chromium in blood sugar regulation. All of these functions are facilitated by the presence of chelated, colloidal minerals.”11 Erhart

The minerals in sea vegetables are more important to humans and animals today than ever. The 1997 edition of Food Composition Handbook shows a 25–50% decline in the vitamin and mineral content of foods since the last survey done in 1975. “This decline suggests a steady deterioration in soil, air, and water quality, as well as reduced seed vitality, that is depleting minerals and other inorganic compounds from our food.”12

1 Erhart, Shep and Cerier, Leslie, Sea Vegetable Celebration, Book Publishing Company, Summertown, TN, 2001, p. 22.
2 Cousens, Gabriel, Conscious Eating, Essene Vision Books, Patagonia, AZ, 1992,
484.
3 Erhart and Cerier, 25-27.
4 Erhart and Cerier, 30.
5 Erhart and Cerier, 29.
6 Cousens, 484
7 Erhart and Cerier, 24-25.
8 Cousens, 484.
9 Erhart and Cerier, 25.
10 Erhart and Cerier, 27-28.
11 Erhart and Cerier, 21-22.
12 Jack, Alex, Let Food Be Thy Medicine, One Peaceful World Newsletter, 1999, 200 as quoted in Erhart and Cerier, Sea Vegetable Celebration, 22.




jana
03-26-2005, 07:18 PM
Excerpted from "Maine Coast Sea Vegetables" (http://curezone.com/foods/maine_coast_sea_vegetables.htm) by Larch Hanson.

Through seaweeds, an excellent source of trace minerals, the earth’s sea-blood is able to strengthen our bodies’ own sea-blood. The rain leaches the minerals from the land. They then are wash down to the sea, where they are incorporated by the wild seaweeds and ultimately by our bodies when we take advantage of their remarkable nutritional benefits. The seaweed minerals help us to maintain an alkaline condition resistant to fatigue and stress.

Daily use of seaweed provides optimum nourishment for the hormonal, lymphatic, urinary, circulatory, and nervous systems. Seaweed also inhibits the growth of many viruses as well as gram-negative and gram-positive bacteria. This directly assists the immune system, as does seaweed’s anti-oxidant ability. Seaweed has a soothing effect on the digestive system. Any restricted diet is improved by the addition of even a little seaweed. Seaweed creates an inner environment where nerve signals flow more smoothly and brain chemicals are produced as needed. Seaweed can dissolve fatty build-ups in the body.

Kelp is high in calcium: 942 mg./100 gm. Alaria has even more: 1100 mg./100 gm. Kelp is high in carotenes expressed as Vitamin A (140-8487 I.U.), and also supplies at least average amounts of virtually every other vitamin including the B Complex: thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, B6, B12. They contain vitamins C, K, and E as well. Eating one tablespoon of sea vegetables will provide you with your daily dose of Iodine.

Seaweeds have undeniably admirable qualities: they are flexible, tenacious and prolific. You could almost say that they are the “ultimate vegetable”. By eating properly harvested organic sea vegetables, you will being doing your body such a tremendous favor, that it will surely thank you for it with good health.

jana
03-26-2005, 07:31 PM
Here (http://www.wholefoods.com/recipes/tips_seaveg.html) are some tips and information about how to get sea vegetables into your diet.

Cook's Thesaurus (http://www.foodsubs.com/Seaveg.html) also has a lot of information about different types of sea vegetables.

The following recipe is a great way to introduce sea vegetables into your cooking. You can sprinkle a pinch on food as a salt substitute or add it to soups, casseroles, sauces, etc.

From Cathe Olson's The Vegetarian Mother's Cookbook (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0972469060/qid=1111884702/sr=8-1/ref=pd_csp_1/103-9566340-7875008?v=glance&s=books&n=507846), p.282.

Sea Veg Mix

Ingredients:
1/2 cup hiziki
1/2 cup arame
1/4 cup dulse
1/4 cup wakame, broken up
2 tablespoons granulated kelp

Directions:
Place sea vegetables in blender. Grind until coarse powder. Store in a covered jar. Makes about 1/2 cup.

amyd
04-04-2005, 08:03 PM
Hi, I'm Amy and I'm new here. Got a (probably stupid) question for you about seaweed. How in the world do you get the strong "seaweedy" taste to do away? For me, its' like eating fish thats too fishy tasting. Any ideas?

jana
04-04-2005, 08:59 PM
I'm pretty sensitive to it, too. I don't like fish, and some of the seaweed does taste fishy to me...I guess fish and seaweed all just taste like ocean? :) I'd have to say that the grind-it-up-and-put-it-in-soup approach has worked the best for me. That and eating lots of cucumber-avocado rolls...I like nori now!

It also depends on the seaweed; some are milder than others. I think arame is one of the mildest. I know that the Cook's Thesaurus site mentions how mild or strong most of them are. My favorites are nori, arame and kombu. I find dulse to be pretty strong, so I use it very sparingly.

Turtleheadfred
04-05-2005, 12:07 AM
Personally, I like my seaweed around a sushi roll!!!! :lick: :feed:

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