Apple
It is hardly possible to take up any newspaper or
magazine now a days without happening on advertisements of patent medicines
whose chief recommendation is that they "contain phosphorus." They
are generally very expensive, but the reader is assured that they are worth ten
times the price asked on account of their wonderful properties as nerve and
brain foods. The proprietors of these concoctions seemingly flourish like green
bay trees and spend many thousands of pounds per annum in advertising. From
which it may be deduced that sufferers from nervous exhaustion and brain fag
number millions. And surely only a sufferer from brain fag would suffer himself
to be led blindly into wasting his money, and still further injuring his
health, by buying and swallowing drugs about whose properties and effects he
knows absolutely nothing. How much simpler, cheaper, and more enjoyable to eat
apples!
The apple contains a larger percentage of phosphorus
than any other fruit or vegetable. For this reason it is an invaluable nerve
and brain food. Sufferers from nerve and brain exhaustion should eat at least
two apples at the beginning of each meal. At the same time they should avoid
tea and coffee, and supply their place with barley water or bran tea flavoured
with lemon juice, or even apple tea.
Apples are also invaluable to sufferers from the stone
or calculus. It has been observed that in cider countries where the natural
unsweetened cider is the common beverage, cases of stone are practically
unknown. Food-reformers do not deduce from this that the drinking of cider is
to be recommended, but that even better results may be obtained from eating the
fresh, ripe fruit.
Apples periodically appear upon the tables of
carnivorous feeders in the form of apple sauce. This accompanies bilious dishes
like roast pork and roast goose. The cook who set this fashion was evidently
acquainted with the action of the fruit upon the liver. All sufferers from
sluggish livers should eat apples.
Apples will afford much relief to sufferers from gout.
The malic acid contained in them neutralises the chalky matter which causes the
gouty patient's sufferings.
Apples, when eaten ripe and without the addition of
sugar, diminish acidity in the stomach. Certain vegetable salts are converted
into alkaline carbonates, and thus correct the acidity.
An old remedy for weak or inflamed eyes is an apple
poultice. I am told that in Lancashire they use rotten apples for this purpose,
but personally I should prefer them sound.
A good remedy for a sore or relaxed throat is to take
a raw ripe apple and scrape it to a fine pulp with a silver teaspoon. Eat this
pulp by the spoonful, very slowly, holding it against the back of the throat as
long as possible before swallowing.
A diet consisting chiefly of apples has been found an
excellent cure for inebriety. Health and strength may be fully maintained upon
fine wholemeal unleavened bread, pure dairy or nut butter, and apples.
Apple water or apple tea is an excellent drink for
fever patients.
Apples possess tonic properties and provoke appetite
for food. Hence the old-fashioned custom of eating an apple before dinner.
Apple Tea.
The following are two good recipes for apple tea:--
(1) Take 2 sound apples, wash, but do not peel, and cut into thin slices. Add
some strips of lemon rind. Pour on 1 pint of boiling water (distilled). Strain
when cold. (2) Bake 2 apples. Pour over them 1 pint boiling water. Strain when
cold.
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