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Apricot Kernels Seeds Stones Laetrile
You may have heard about “laetrile” and how it can potentially help heal cancer, including breast cancer. Laetrile is the commercial label for apricot kernels (it also goes by name amygdalin or Vitamin B17).
In the 1930s, Major Sir Robert McCarrison wrote about a tribe called the Hunzas who lived in the remote countryside near Northern Pakistan. According McCarrison’s written observations, the Hunzas seemed to enjoy near-perfect health. Some lived to be over 135 years old and no one in their clan had any of the conditions so common in the modern world, such as diabetes, obesity, heart attack, and cancer.
So at GO GREEN ARMENIA, we want the people of the land of apricots, Armenia, to have the same health, especially since it has the natural resources that it should!!
So you ask HOW MANY APRICOT KERNELS SHOULD I EAT A DAY!?! GOOD QUESTION:
You will need to determine the best amount for yourself. With that said most people find that one apricot seed for every 5kg (10 lbs.) of body weight per day spread out throughout the day is a good amount. You should build up to this amount over a few days. Start with one apricot seed an hour.
1 ingredient for a healthy you!
GGA Armenian Apricot kernels with shell 120g$6.20 -
Chocolate Chip Cookie
GGA Chocolate Chip Cookie is chewy mewy and filled with chocolate chips in every bite!
$3.38Chocolate Chip Cookie
$3.38 -
Pasta Fettuccine- Beetroot, Cabbage and Tomatoes
Produced in Armenia 100% natural homemade fresh Italian pasta with beetroot, red cabbage and tomatoes with basil.
No artificial colors.
No preservatives.
Handmade.Net Weight: 330 g
$17.50 -
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Wild Thyme Tea
Benefits of Go Green Armenia’s wild thyme tea:
‣ Anti-fungal
‣ Fights indigestion and gas
‣ Treats bronchitis and cough
‣ Lowers blood pressure and cholesterol
‣ Keeps the brain from agingThyme has been known since ancient times for its magical, culinary, and medicinal virtues. Tradition held that an infusion of thyme taken as a tea on midsummer’s eve would enable one to see the fairies dancing. Young women wore a corsage of blossoming thyme to signal their availability for romance. The generic name may have been inspired by one of thyme’s traditional attributes. Greek folk herbalists believed that thyme would impart courage (thumus in Greek) to those who used the herb, particularly soldiers. Greek men particularly liked the pungent scent of thyme and would rub the herb on their chests. The Romans believed that adding thyme to bath water would impart energy. They also included thyme in bedding to chase melancholy and to prevent nightmares.
The strong scent of thyme was employed as a moth repellent, and burned as fumigating incense. The philosopher-herbalist Pliny the Elder recommended burning the dried herb in the house to “put to flight all venomous creatures.” In the kitchen thyme has been used for centuries to season sauces, soups, stuffing, and soups. Thyme has long been recognized for its antiseptic properties. The Egyptians used the herb in formulas for embalming the dead. The herb was among those burned in sickrooms to help stop the spread of disease. Oil of thyme was used on surgical dressings and in times of war as recently as World War I, to treat battle wounds.
$3.75 – $33.00Wild Thyme Tea
$3.75 – $33.00 -
Citrus In Dark Chocolate Collection
3 dark chocolate hemispheres with 3 cm diameter. Ingredients: lemon, thyme infused cream.
3 dark chocolate hemispheres with 3 cm diameter. Ingredients: lime, basil infused cream.
3 dark chocolate hemispheres with 3 cm diameter. Ingredients: orange, estragon infused cream.
$8.45 -
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Sesame Seed Oil
COLD PRESSED, crushed, unrefined, premium oil
Net weight: 250g +/-3%
$11.00Sesame Seed Oil
$11.00