The taste of wormwood is something else... Not a fan but glad you can stomach it :P Also they say not to have too much or you might start hallucinating but I'm sure you've heard that before. Considering what some are saying about parasites and ivermectin etc. though, maybe they are trying to scare people away from wormwood in the same way.
Yes. In doing research, some medical sites say safe up to 3-4 cups a day (depending on site) but I only drank once a day for the first week, now I only drink once a week. I know the flavor is horrendous but I just added it to my morning peppermint & stevia brew I already drank on a regular basis and itβs really not as repulsive as it would be alone. I also drink a small grapefruit chaser at the end and that helps with any aftertaste :)
Also I do know GF juice can cause havoc with some medications but I have not been able to find any adverse connection with anti-parasitic remedies/medications. Most people around me have taken the jab so I began drinking wormwood tea after seeing info about it helping against those shedding the spike protein and realized the other benefits of the tea too. I noticed improved energy almost immediately and I no longer have to take my daily antihistamine (congestion is all but gone).
I don't quite remember the details but I believe there was contention and a couple of main theories, one that it supposedly made people crazy and the other that it threatened the business of wine sellers or something so they tried to persuade people against absinthe. From what I've heard they no longer make absinthe with the same ingredients that were considered dangerous but I could have my facts muddled up.
No, It's a bitter flavoring. The problem is drinking too much. A sip wouldn't kill you but bottles of it could make you crazy. Toulouse-Lautrec was a famous absinthe fan. Of course artists could be crazy on their own, but he was an anti-absinthe example.
The taste of wormwood is something else... Not a fan but glad you can stomach it :P Also they say not to have too much or you might start hallucinating but I'm sure you've heard that before. Considering what some are saying about parasites and ivermectin etc. though, maybe they are trying to scare people away from wormwood in the same way.
Yes. In doing research, some medical sites say safe up to 3-4 cups a day (depending on site) but I only drank once a day for the first week, now I only drink once a week. I know the flavor is horrendous but I just added it to my morning peppermint & stevia brew I already drank on a regular basis and itβs really not as repulsive as it would be alone. I also drink a small grapefruit chaser at the end and that helps with any aftertaste :)
Also I do know GF juice can cause havoc with some medications but I have not been able to find any adverse connection with anti-parasitic remedies/medications. Most people around me have taken the jab so I began drinking wormwood tea after seeing info about it helping against those shedding the spike protein and realized the other benefits of the tea too. I noticed improved energy almost immediately and I no longer have to take my daily antihistamine (congestion is all but gone).
I started wizzing up a whole lemon in my smoothies (and leave the skin on grapefruit chunks too) my allergy symptoms have greatly improved.
Check out Artemisinin.
Thanks.
Wait, is that why absinthe was banned?
I don't quite remember the details but I believe there was contention and a couple of main theories, one that it supposedly made people crazy and the other that it threatened the business of wine sellers or something so they tried to persuade people against absinthe. From what I've heard they no longer make absinthe with the same ingredients that were considered dangerous but I could have my facts muddled up.
Yes.
Wormwood is the source of absinthe?
??
No, It's a bitter flavoring. The problem is drinking too much. A sip wouldn't kill you but bottles of it could make you crazy. Toulouse-Lautrec was a famous absinthe fan. Of course artists could be crazy on their own, but he was an anti-absinthe example.