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Keyword: chlorophyll

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  • Consuming green vegetables, supplements suppresses inflammatory bowel disease (Chlorophyllin)

    The dietary supplement chlorophyllin alleviates inflammatory bowel disease (IBD), including Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, according to researchers. In addition, chlorophyllin significantly reduces mortality related to IBD, weight loss, diarrhea and hidden blood in the stool, intestinal epithelial damage and infiltration of inflammatory cells. Chronic gastrointestinal disorders such as IBD affect tens of millions of people living in the U.S. IBD has created a global health burden because of the rising cost of treating the condition. While the exact cause of IBD isn't fully understood, some contributing factors include stress and environmental, lifestyle, and dietary choices, such as high consumption...
  • Fake Olive Oil, It's Everywhere. Most Likely In Your Kitchen

    11/15/2015 11:19:04 AM PST · by WhiskeyX · 88 replies
    YouTube ^ | Mar 3, 2015 | Marcus Guiliano
    According to the book Extra Virginity: The Sublime and Scandalous World of Olive Oil, illicit manufacturers slap an Italian flag and the name of an imaginary producer on the label and dump this stuff on the US market, where consumers are easy pickings. But consumers in the US aren’t the only victims. Studies done in Australia and New Zealand found that half of their Mediterranean imports were fake, too. Anywhere olive oil is in demand is a possible target. How do you fake olive oil? Olive oil can be diluted with poor quality oils or sometimes there is no real...
  • Book Review: Losing 'Virginity': Olive Oil's 'Scandalous' Fraud

    12/12/2011 7:58:03 PM PST · by Rabin · 30 replies
    npr Books ^ | December 12, 2011
    The term "extra-virgin olive oil" means the olive oil has been made from crushed olives and is not refined in any way by chemical solvents or high heat… "In the past, the technology that had been used had been used really by the Romans, you grounded the olives with stone mills [and] you crushed them with presses." One olive oil producer told Mueller that 50 percent of the olive oil sold in the United States is, in some ways, adulterated.
  • Feds get picky over what makes oil 'extra virgin'

    06/04/2010 4:31:40 PM PDT · by Artemis Webb · 137 replies · 1,314+ views
    AP ^ | 060410 | JULIANA BARBASSA
    CARMEL VALLEY, Calif. – Extra virgin, light, with lemon, unfiltered, cold-pressed: the variety of olive oil on most supermarket shelves is dazzling. But what does it all mean? These terms might be common currency among foodies and the farmer's market crowd, but they have never been enforceable, or legally defined in the United States — until now. The U.S. Department of Agriculture in April adopted scientifically verifiable standards for nomenclature such as "virgin" or "extra virgin," with extra virgin considered the highest quality because it has the best flavor. (snip) "It will put an end to marketing terms that are...
  • Feds put lid on bogus olive oil

    02/12/2006 7:54:45 PM PST · by Coleus · 65 replies · 1,700+ views
    NorthJersey.com ^ | 02.10.06 | AMY KLEIN
    Federal agents who raided a Clifton warehouse Thursday weren't looking for the typical heroin mill or pile of laundered money. They were after a more slippery stash. The agents seized about 22,700 gallons of oil after the Food and Drug Administration found that the Hermes and San Giovanni brands had been substituting soybean oil for some of their extra virgin and pomace olive oil. Olive oil is approximately five or six times more expensive than soybean oil, according to the FDA, which estimated the profit of the swap at $105,600. "We will not permit New Jersey consumers to be defrauded,"...
  • Slippery Path When Oils Ain't Oils

    10/20/2007 6:50:50 PM PDT · by JACKRUSSELL · 60 replies · 222+ views
    The Canberra Times - Australia ^ | October 21, 2007 | By Sonya Neufeld
    FRAUD. It's associated with identity theft and bouncing cheques, but apparently it is also rife in the olive oil industry. Fake olive oil is an international issue, especially in Italy, the world's leading importer, consumer and exporter of olive oil. Australia the largest consumer of olive oil per capita outside the Mediterranean is not immune. Olive oil is more valuable than other vegetable oils, but is costly and time-consuming to produce. It is also easy to adulterate, or fake. In February last year US federal officials seized about 61,000 litres of what was supposed to be extra-virgin olive oil and...
  • It's the age-old story, lying about virginity. (Olive Oil Ain't what is seems)

    02/16/2005 11:03:01 AM PST · by utahguy · 11 replies · 639+ views
    It's the age-old story, lying about virginity... Hey, get your mind out of the gutter. We’re talking about olive oil. Olive oil is one of the few oils that can be consumed in its crude form without refining. Pure olive oil retains its natural antioxidants and essential fatty acids. The problem is, more olive oil is being consumed today than is being produced, so time-saving and cost-cutting measures are being employed. Technically speaking, to be labeled extra-virgin, olive oil must be made from 100% olives. The olives are picked by hand and transported in well-aerated containers and then processed within...
  • Fat Substitute Is Pushed Out of the Kitchen

    02/13/2005 3:41:46 PM PST · by neverdem · 121 replies · 2,960+ views
    NY Times ^ | February 13, 2005 | KIM SEVERSON and MELANIE WARNER
    Bob Pitts knows doughnuts. He fried his first one in 1961 at the original Dunkin' Donuts shop in Quincy, Mass. Just by looking at the lumps and cracks on a misshapen doughnut, he can tell if the frying oil is too cool or the batter too warm. But Mr. Pitts, the company's doughnut specialist, cannot find a way to make one that tastes good without using partially hydrogenated oil, now considered the worst fat in the American diet. An artificial fat once embraced as a cheap and seemingly healthy alternative to saturated fats like butter or tropical oils, partially hydrogenated...
  • Another miracle from Israel? Prostate cancer cure in 20 minutes

    01/13/2016 9:30:39 AM PST · by SeekAndFind · 50 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 01/13/2016 | Karin McQuillan
    One in six American men will develop prostate cancer.  It is the most common cancer after skin cancer, and the second biggest cancer killer for men.  Two Israeli scientists at the Weizmann Institute in Israel promise an almost miraculous cure, now in clinical trials at New York’s Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.  It is the culmination of 20 years of basic research by plant scientist Avigdor Scherz and cancer researcher Yoram Saloman. Professor Scherz took a naturally occurring form of chlorophyll from aquatic bacteria: … chemically modified by Prof. Scherz's lab at Weizmann to fit the team's pharmaceutical needs. Once...
  • A New Form of Chlorophyll?

    08/30/2010 1:42:40 AM PDT · by neverdem · 6 replies
    Scientific American ^ | August 19, 2010 | Ferris Jabr
    Researchers discover evidence for a new type of chlorophyll in cyanobacteria that can absorb near-infrared lightResearchers may have found a new form of chlorophyll, the pigment that plants, algae and cyanobacteria use to obtain energy from light through photosynthesis. Preliminary findings published August 19 in Science suggest that the newly discovered molecule, dubbed chlorophyll f, has a distinct chemical composition when compared with the four known forms of chlorophyll and can absorb more near-infrared light than is typical for the photosynthetic pigments. Chlorophyll f, which was extracted from cultures of cyanobacteria and other oxygenic microorganisms, may allow certain photosynthetic life...
  • Living On 'The Red Edge': Rare Form Of Chlorophyll Discovered In Newly Sequenced Bacterium

    02/11/2008 5:55:34 PM PST · by blam · 2 replies · 54+ views
    Science Daily ^ | 2-12-2008 | Washington University in St. Louis
    Living On 'The Red Edge': Rare Form Of Chlorophyll Discovered In Newly Sequenced BacteriumSea Squirts and sea stars. The Acaryochloris marina lives beneath the sea squirt, which is a marine animal that lives attached to rocks just below the surface of the water. The cyanobacterium absorbs "red edge" light through the tissues of its pal the sea squirt. (Credit: iStockphoto) ScienceDaily (Feb. 11, 2008) — Researchers at Washington University in St. Louis and Arizona State University have sequenced the genome of a rare bacterium that harvests light energy by making an even rarer form of chlorophyll, chlorophyll d. Chlorophyll d...
  • Early Earth Was Purple, Study Suggests (Go Vikes!)

    04/10/2007 12:31:20 PM PDT · by NormsRevenge · 32 replies · 759+ views
    LiveScience.com on yahoo ^ | 4/10/07 | Ker Than
    The earliest life on Earth might have been just as purple as it is green today, a scientist claims. Ancient microbes might have used a molecule other than chlorophyll to harness the Sun’s rays, one that gave the organisms a violet hue. Chlorophyll, the main photosynthetic pigment of plants, absorbs mainly blue and red wavelengths from the Sun and reflects green ones, and it is this reflected light that gives plants their leafy color. This fact puzzles some biologists because the sun transmits most of its energy in the green part of the visible spectrum. “Why would chlorophyll have this...