Hello Dearest Cheryl
I thank you for stopping by and showing an interest in the recipe. As more people post their reply I take an ingredient and show the medical benefits and if you put it all together you have one heck of a powerful cookie. I have been eating two a day and I am not lying when I say I really feel a difference - To your health my friend !
CinnamonAttributed Medicinal Properties
Recent
studies have determined that consuming as little as one-half teaspoon
of Cinnamon each day may reduce blood sugar, cholesterol, and
triglyceride levels by as much as 20% in Type II diabetes patients who
are not taking insulin it is mildly carminative and used to treat
nausea and flatulence. It is also used alone or in combination to treat
diarrhea. Chinese herbalists tell of older people, in their 70s and
80s, developing a cough accompanied by frequent spitting of whitish
phlegm. A helpful remedy, they suggest, is chewing and swallowing a
very small pinch of powdered cinnamon. This remedy can also help people
with cold feet and hands, especially at night. Germany's Commission E
approves Cinnamon for appetite loss and indigestion. The primary
chemical constituents of this herb include cinnamaldehyde, gum, tannin,
mannitol, coumarins, and essential oils (aldehydes, eugenol, pinene).
Cinnamon is predominantly used as a carminative addition to herbal
prescriptions. It is used in flatulent dyspepsia, dyspepsia with
nausea, intestinal colic and digestive atony associated with cold &
debilitated conditions. It relieves nausea and vomiting, and, because
of its mild astringency, it is particularly useful in infantile
diarrhea. The cinnamaldehyde component is hypotensive and spasmolytic,
and increases peripheral blood flow. The essential oil of this herb is
a potent antibacterial, anti-fungal, and uterine stimulant. The various
terpenoids found in the volatile oil are believed to account for
Cinnamon’s medicinal effects. Test tube studies also show that Cinnamon
can augment the action of insulin. However, use of Cinnamon to improve
the action of insulin in people with diabetes has yet to be proven in
clinical trials.
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