Garlic
is powerful natural therapeutic herb in addition to being
a strong-flavored seasoning for food. It can help lower
cholesterol and high blood pressure and may help prevent
heart attacks by reducing blood clotting. What's more, raw
garlic is a potent antibiotic that is especially active
against fungal infections. It has immune-stimulating properties
as well as antibacterial and antiviral effects. The compound
that is principally responsible for garlic's disease-fighting
ability (and pungent smell) is allicin, also found in lesser
amounts in onions and other white vegetables. But note that
allicin is formed from an inactive precursor compound only
after garlic is mashed or chopped and exposed to air for
at least a few minutes.
Onions haven't been studied as well as garlic, but, eaten
raw, they may also inhibit clotting, and they appear to
have similar immune-enhancing compounds.
While still useful as seasonings, both onion and garlic
lose most of their medicinal value, including their cardiovascular
benefits and antibiotic properties when they're cooked or
dried. In addition, commercial garlic capsules do not preserve
the full activity of the fresh bulb.
You can use garlic as an effective home remedy for colds:
when you feel a cold coming on, chop a few cloves of garlic
a day into your food. The idea is to eat raw garlic at the
first onset of symptoms. A clove or two a day is recommended
for people who suffer from chronic or recurrent infections,
frequent yeast infections, or low resistance to colds and
flu.
To make raw garlic more palatable, chop it fine, mix it
with food, and eat it with a meal - add it last when you're
using it in cooking. Or cut a clove into chunks and swallow
them whole like pills. If garlic gives you flatulence, eat
less. Chewing some fresh parsley after eating garlic also
minimizes the odor.