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The Complete Home Guide tiomHmerubns,itNyatural Healing, and Nutrition  
121  
occur, mostly in the seeds, in more than twelve hundred plants, among  
the best known of which are apple, apricot, cherry, flaxseed, peach, and  
plum. The Hunzas of Pakistan, who are noted for their consistantly long  
lives (age ninety and older), have been found to consume mineral-rich  
water and lots of organic fresh food, including apricot flesh and seeds,  
which are very rich in nitrilosides (B17). Similarly used, the apple could  
give us equally long and healthy lives.  
The beautiful family of plants known as citrus fruits are also important  
additions to our diet. In 1928, Hungarian scientist Albert Szent-Györgyi  
isolated vitamin C from citrus and other sources. He knew that in 1757 a  
British doctor had prevented scurvy aboard ships by using lime juice.  
Szent-Györgyi later isolated bioflavonoids, which he called vitamin P. He  
blended vitamins C and P and named it “citrin.” We now know this  
compound to be a prime antioxidant. In nature, vitamin P occurs  
naturally in plants.  
Fresh lemon juice on salads, in springwater, or added to herbal teas or  
cooked food is tasty and nutritious. It is able to cleanse the bloodstream  
and protect oxygen, and is also rich in vitamin C. I also use limes, always  
keeping a stock of fresh limes and lemons, plus their dried, powdered  
versions. Try this treatment for viral infections: Collect the white pith of  
twelve organic lemons and put into the blender along with a little peel  
and juice for taste. You can add some maple syrup if you like to counteract  
the sour flavor. Add enough spring water to loosen the mix, and puree to  
a light, fluffy, frothy “pudding.” It tastes delicious and really helps if you  
are suffering from cold sores, candidiasis, flu, or colds. The vitamin C and  
the antioxidant qualities of the vitamin P in the raw white pith help heal  
the system. It makes an excellent one-day cleanse, combined with other  
herbs and teas that support the immune system.  
Olive (Olea europaea) leaf is another very effective all-around herb, not  
least for being of great assistance to the immune system. It was used in  
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927 to eradicate malaria in some areas. One of its chemical constituents,  
calcium enolate, seems to have particularly interested plant chemists who  
feel that it is largely responsible for fighting viruses and killing fungi,  
parasites, and bacteria. In the case of viruses, it is able to interfere with a  
number of key processes, thus inhibiting their spread, replication, and  
nutrition.  
As I have said already, there are literally hundreds of immune herbs.  
Eucalyptus leaf, walnut husk, pine needle, pau d’arco inner bark, and  
elderberry are a small selection, capable of tackling a wide range of  
microbes, bacteria, and viruses. We could also add chamomile flowers,  
which can kill invasive bacteria, such as salmonella, that have evaded  
long-term use of strong antibiotics. But all herbs have their own special  
abilities and specific ways of disarming, which makes constant variety  


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