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I recently purchased vegetable glycerine from the Self Health Resource

Center, which is somehow affiliated with Hulda . They claim to have

products that are unpolluted. You have to call them for a price list.

800.873.1663

http://www.concentric.net/~Healthy/products.htm

> Re: J and her Cayenne Event...:)

>

> RE Cayenne tincture and where did we get the glycerine.  I don't know. 

> We've had it for years.  It's called Herbcraft 100% pure vegetable

> glycerine.  We've made goldenseal tincture for use in ears in the same way

> as we made the cayenne tincture.  There are some good sites with info and

> instructions on tincture making on the web.....

> J

>   << File: Card for K. >>

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  • 1 year later...

hi there!

>Why would one want to EAT glycerine, anyway???

it's sweet!! great for people with sugar and artificial sweetener

sensitivities, though not as strong as stevia - just less expensive.

glycerin is also good for the intestines.

~risa

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  • 10 months later...

Vilik Rapheles wrote:

> ~~~~~~~~~~

> A plasticiser eh? Hmmm....

>

> Glycerine IS used internally. Some flower essences and herbs are

> preserved in it, and I knew at one time a practitioner who used

> it with patients as a form of sweetner, claiming the candida

> are not affected by it. Wish I could find him/them again...would

> like to ask some questions...

I know that Carlton Fredericks used to advise glycerin as a sweetener

for hypoglycemics, and also for the glycine content. that does go back

quite a few years!

Sharon

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  • 2 months later...

Starr,

You buy the glycerine in liquid form. You may or may not have it at your

local store. If you can't find it, ask anyways! I'm not for sure where to

get it online; does anyone else have any good websites?

Whitney

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  • 1 month later...
Guest guest

Andy,

That reminds me of something similar that I heard from my pharmacist last

year-

we somehow ended up on the topic of strange ingredients found in food. When

I mentioned that my favorite treat is fat free cool whip, he said he would

never eat that stuff b/c it's made out of the same ingredients as anal

suppositories!

Now, that did put a slight damper on my liking for cool whip. Ha Ha!!!

:-)

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  • 7 months later...

Christi-

I found quite a bit of glycerine at the health food

stores.

Hope it helps

Janet

--- christi@... wrote:

> I have done it...waited until the last minute and

> relied on just one

> supplier. What lessons I am learning! I have now

> been driving

> around to every possible grug store in the Dallas

> metroplex for 5

> hours and cannot find a bottle of glycerine. Not

> even an expensive

> one!

>

> Please learn these lessons from me:

> 1. Don't procrastinate

> 2. Keep in touch with suppliers - they only need a

> day or two to

> order it

> 3. Don't committ to an order until you know you can

> fill it

>

> I will get this done, I am just going to delay my

> departure for

> Thanksgiving. Thanks everyone, I feel so much

> better now! Christi

>

>

__________________________________________________

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Thanks everyone...I pulled off a miracle. I had enough of the complete recipe

to make a few samples, to give to the client. Then I used just the salts

themselves and bagged them in a variety of ways, to show flexibility.

I will take any profits from this first order and start building my stock of raw

product. Oh, why oh why can I I not learn things the easy way??? :-)

Christi in Dallas

Re: Glycerine

Christi-

I found quite a bit of glycerine at the health food

stores.

Hope it helps

Janet

--- christi@... wrote:

> I have done it...waited until the last minute and

> relied on just one

> supplier. What lessons I am learning! I have now

> been driving

> around to every possible grug store in the Dallas

> metroplex for 5

> hours and cannot find a bottle of glycerine. Not

> even an expensive

> one!

>

> Please learn these lessons from me:

> 1. Don't procrastinate

> 2. Keep in touch with suppliers - they only need a

> day or two to

> order it

> 3. Don't committ to an order until you know you can

> fill it

>

> I will get this done, I am just going to delay my

> departure for

> Thanksgiving. Thanks everyone, I feel so much

> better now! Christi

>

>

__________________________________________________

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Christi, Good job for pulling this off. There IS no easy way. Always

something comes up. If it doesn't, funny, how we don't think about it. Give

yourself credit for the great job you did.

Barb J

Idaho

In a message dated 11/20/2001 4:19:39 PM Pacific Standard Time,

christi@... writes:

> Thanks everyone...I pulled off a miracle. I had enough of the complete

> recipe to make a few samples, to give to the client. Then I used just the

> salts themselves and bagged them in a variety of ways, to show flexibility.

>

>

> I will take any profits from this first order and start building my stock

> of raw product. Oh, why oh why can I I not learn things the easy way???

> :-)

> Christi in Dallas

>

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  • 2 years later...

It was too sweet for me when I tried it about ten years ago.

I get Stevia raw from Whole foods stores here in the USA.

The glycerine was too sweet almost like over concentrated which if I

was supposed to

dilute I can understand.

Kirk

On Friday, November 19, 2004, at 11:24 AM, Margarete Meier wrote:

>

> Hello all,

>

> Do you have any recipes with Glycerine? I have asked my parents to buy

> me something in the U.S. Can I use it like honey or is it sweeter?

> I have already ordered a book how to cook with Stevia, but

> unfortunately I have lots of trouble getting this book.

>

> Thanks and have a nice week-end, Margarete

>

> __________________________________________________

>

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  • 9 months later...

Jill wrote:

> Morning from Australia.

==>Hi Jill. Welcome, from Canada!

>

> Can anyone tell me if glycerine exacerbates candida/dysbiosis? I have

> recently bought some olive leaf extract and it has it in it instead

> of alcohol. It tastes very sweet to me and I don't want to do any

> more harm to my gut. I have found conflicting info on the net.

==>I do not believe olive leaf extract is as good as raw crushed garlic

or oil of oregano, which do not contain glycerine. Glycerine is a " man-

made " fractionated product used in many foods and cosmetics. In

cosmetics it pulls water out through the skin. I wouldn't take it if I

were you. Alcohol is used to extract the essences and in most products

there is none, if very little, left. Higher quality products will have

minute amounts left. Lower quality products contain more. Our recipe

for extracting garlic oil uses alcohol.

Bee

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Hi Jill

I believe glycerine is a type of alcohol and its sweet :)

Being a highly processed product, personally I would avoid it.

Does the bottle state what percentage is glycerine? If its

insignificant than it may be ok.

cheers

Irene (from Sydney)

> Jill wrote:

> > Morning from Australia.

>

> ==>Hi Jill. Welcome, from Canada!

> >

> > Can anyone tell me if glycerine exacerbates candida/dysbiosis? I

have

> > recently bought some olive leaf extract and it has it in it

instead

> > of alcohol. It tastes very sweet to me and I don't want to do any

> > more harm to my gut. I have found conflicting info on the net.

>

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  • 1 year later...

http://www.bulknutrition.com/?products_id=1129 is one source... probably mountain rose herbs would be another. SuziSara Mandal-Joy <smjlist@...> wrote: Hi, I am using an experimental recipe of my own, just dissolving msm in a bit of boiling water, addinglecithin to help hold things together, and then using primarily coconut oil, in amount that makes a 15 per cent solution of the msm - more than that and it recrystalizes. I wouldn't use cheap coconut oil, that would be as problematic for me as glycerine, which is heated over a lengthy period of time in the hydrolysis process. Cheap oil has lost its benefits, and become problematic due to heating and impurities. You absorb all that stuff directly into your blood stream.

The msm cream is doing amazing things for me,but the good (coconut oil) stuff is so so expensive, just really hard to fit into the budget. Suzanne, can you recommend a good vegetable glycerine? Thanks, Sara Suzi What is a weed? A plant whose virtues have not yet been discovered. health/ http://suziesgoats.wholefoodfarmacy.com/ http://360./suziesgoats

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