Green barley
products
- additives and
other dangers
Green barley is full of
vitamins, minerals, chlorophyll, enzymes and amino acids
(if harvested and dried correctly).
It's particularly rich in vitamin A in the
form of beta carotene. But the betacarotene in leafy
greens is converted twice as efficiently into vitamin A as the
beta carotene in carrots and orange and yellow vegetables.
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Vita-Barley - 300
Capsules
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- Natural Energy Boost
- 100% Pure Barley Juice Powder
- Organic
- No Maltodextrins
- No Fillers
- Live Enzymes
- Amino Acids
- Vitamins & Minerals
- Antioxidants
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- Less Than Half the cost of the
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Market
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Like any plant, the nutrient content is
dependant on the quality of the soil. Sprouted grasses
are a little different in quality to green barley and wheat
grass. They grow differently and do not absorb important
minerals from the soil. For example, alfalfa in the form of
dehydrated cereal grass is an amazing source of bioavailable
calcium, which is drawn from deep within the soil by the
taproots of the plant. Alfalfa sprouts, whilst full of enzymes,
do not have these minerals
Green barley and dehydrated cereal
grasses (I do not recommend the juice for reasons below)
are whole food supplements, meaning that the dehydrated powder
still retains the nutritional and enzymatic qualities of the
fresh plant.
What does
science say about barley green?
Studies of cereal grasses (wheat grass,
green barley, alfalfa - not the sprouts though!) have been
published that show
-
the growth of lactobacilli and other intestinal
flora on the plant (1948)
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that it promotes the healing of peptic
ulcers (1950)
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possible cancer preventative properties
(1979)
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inhibition of cancer causing effects (1980)
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lowering of serum cholesterol (1984)
Chlorophyll has been shown to
-
reduce inflammation and pain (1940)
-
heal wounds (1949)
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encourage bowel regularity (1950)
-
encourage cell proliferation and tissue repair
(1955)
What to
look for (and look out for!) in your green health
product
Is your green barley really
as pure as the manufacturers claim?
-
does it contain any additives, sugars
(maltodextrin), chemical substances and
preservatives
-
is it grown with toxic chemicals?
-
when is it harvested? for it to be harvested at its
nutritional peak it should be harvested before the
jointing stage (before the seed head forms in the
stem of the plant)
-
how is it dried - at body temperature and
immediately to preserve all the nutrients
(including enzymes and chlorophyll)
-
how is it processed? heat or friction will
cause loss of nutrients.
-
does it contain both soluble and insoluble
fibre? the soluble fibres are where most of the
mineral content is.
-
is the fibre the product contains the fibre that is
part of 100% green barley, or is it fibre added
from cooked brown rice or other fibrous
carbohydrates? The naturally occuring fibre of
green barley is rich in other nutrients that are
not present in cooked brown rice.
With regards some green barley juice
products marketed as 100% juice - they actually have
additives and are of questionable quality. They contain
cooked brown rice to make up the gross fibre content (minus
the nutrients) and maltodextrin (simple sugars). If you
have blood sugar problems you should really be careful
of these.
From the patent (US patents office, patent
number 5445839, dated 29/9/1995) for the manufacture of the
green barley juice and other powder green juices of plants
(Inventors Yoshihide and Hideaki Hagiwara):
Pretreatment:
-
the green leaves are washed with water and can be
sterilised with a germicide such as hypochlorous
acid
-
other optional treatments - blanching at 100 - 140
degrees celcius for 2 - 10 seconds, at normal,
reduced or elevated pressure, then a rapid cooling
treatment. The patent states that this treatment
SERVES TO INACTIVATE ENZYMES. Yet the point of
consuming fresh greens is to consume the enzymes,
as they have a lot of digestive and other benefits.
Juice
extraction:
-
water is added and then the plant is squeezed. It
is mechanically pulverised in combination with the
use of a means to seperate liquid and solids. Its
ph is adjusted to the range 6 - 9.5 with an
alkaline substance such as corbonate, bicarbone,
the hydroxy of an alkali metal, or an alkaline
earth metal like sodium carbonate, sodium
bicarbonate, caustic potash, ammonium hydroxide or
magnesium hydroxide. The juice is then spray dried
or lypholized. Spray drying takes place at
temperatures of 120 - 200 degrees celcius, with a
stated preference for 140 - 170 degrees celcius.
The alternative is to use room temperature with a
dessicant such as lithium chloride.
The following are described as possible
additions before the drying step:
-
lignin sulfonate obtained from decomposing wood
chips, pulp, sawdust, rice hulls, defatted embryo
buds "etc" with sodium sulfite or an alkali agent
like caustic soda "to be water soluble and salts
thereof"
-
"a water extracted product of the water-solubilized
matters such as skeletons or cartilages of animals,
fishes or the like, condroitin sulfuric acid,
heparin, etc" (quoted from the patent)
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a fatty emulsion composed mainly of protein, cows
milk, and a combinaton of these fats
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"nutritive agents" (no doubt to replace all the
nutrition removed by the chemical and mechanical
(heat and pressure) manufacturing processes) -
ascorbic acid, biotin, calcium pantothenate,
carotene, chlorinated choline, magnesium oxide,
niacin, chlorinatedpyridoxine,sodium pantothenate,
riboflavin, thiamine hydrochloride, tocopherol,
vitamin a, vitamin b sub 12, vitamin d sub 2, "and
the like"
-
masking agents - sodium metaphosphate, sodium
phosphate (primary, secondary and tertiary salts,
sodium pyrophosphate, sodium tripolyphosphate "and
the like"
-
thickeners - gum arabic, tragacanth, sodium
aliginate, methyl cellulose, carboxymethyl
cellulose, calcium alignate, "and the like"
-
solidification inhibitors such as calcium aluminium
silicate
-
preservatives such as sorbic calcium, benzoic acid,
paraoxymethyl benzoate, sodium benzoate "and the
like"
-
the ubiqituos category "others" - mannitol,
sorbitol, lactose, soluble starch, amino acids,
dextrose, fruit sugar, dextrin, cyclodextrin,
polydestrose "and the like"
The patent further states that table salt,
sugar (as though there wasn't enough in the "others" category),
bee honey, glucose (more sugar!), and other seasonings and
spices can be added. Not to mention food antiseptics (such as
dehydroacetic acid and its sodium salt, or benzoic acid and its
sodium salt) and emulsifiers.
The patent also states that this process
will increase the flavour and taste of the powders of the green
juice obtained .... They state this is an improvement on the
use of chemical alkaline agents such as sodium carbonate and
calcium hydroxide used "hithero".
The last statement may well be true, but it
does not imply that the product created is either natural or
nutritious, or "pure". If you have chemical sensitivities, or
blood sugar problems, or are consuming similarly created so
called health products, you may want to carefully evaluate what
you're consuming.
That's not to say all green barley products
are created that way. Look closely at the label. The
addition of any sugars (dextrose, maltose, fructose, lactose,
or any combination thereof) or any added processed fibre
products (like cooked brown rice) should be a warning sign in
and of itself. There is no need to add any of those
elements if the nutritional integrity (the vitamins, minerals,
chlorophyll, enzymes and other phytochemicals) of the green
barley is maintained through less destructive processing
methods.
Did you know? Chlorophyll in plants
has a similar stucture to haemoglobin in blood. Charles
Schnabel, a food chemist, realised this in the 1920's.
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