Category Archives: Medical Related

An Elixir Tasting For Today.

Liqueur.Tasting.TogetherToday turned out in such a way that we ended up having a Soursop Elixir Tasting between the two of us.  A few days ago, we sold a few bottles of Soursop Elixir to somebody who, we subsequently found out, was a repeat customer who had bought the same Elixir before.

I reprint his comments below to show how we handled the situation (Italics and spacing are mine for easier reading).

I was at your gate last friday to receive an order of soursop liquor/elixer . The road was blocked on the way out of Barranco so we spent the night there were I tasted the elixer on which I fell asleep very fast.

It took me a long time to come to Toledo to be able to find you after several friends talked about this extra ordinary soursop drink. Soursop has been my favorite fruit and drink for years ever since I was in Suriname in the 1960’s.

To tell you the truth I did not taste very much soursop at all and if you had made me taste it before the purchase I would have thought it would be some sort of Grappa.

My questions are now : Did you taste the specific batch? Because other people who had tasted your soursop elixer before asked themselves if you had changed the recipe or that it was filled with something else.

My input was that it was made of the seeds because I did pass out very fast after the consumption of one small shotglass.
Because in drinking a soursop shake years ago in Honduras were they mixed the seeds in the shake I passed out about the same way as I did in Barranco. Later I heard that the seeds are like a sort of Valium/relaxant. Or did you make it of the leaves as a sort of medecine because I don’t taste any soursop fruit.

Looking forward to your reaction!
Kindest Greetings!

}

We find this type of feedback very useful as it allows us to review our quality procedures and make sure that we are not missing anything.  I mean, we think our stuff is the best because we make it, it is good to get real opinions in order to make sure that our bias is not clouding our ability to see reality.

Anyway, in response to this, we sat down and “did” a formal tasting of our Soursop Elixir and proceeded to write the following:

Thank you for your feedback, it is nice when somebody gets back to us.

I hope that the following answers some of your questions and clarifies some issues. With specific regards to the Soursop Elixir that you had: the batches; there is only one batch. Making soursop elixir is a huge amount of work compared to some of the other elixirs we make and because of that we only ever made one batch, once we finish drinking or selling it, we will not make any more. This means that if you or anyone had tasted a previous bottling you are now still tasting the same batch. The elixir is stored in 6.5 gallon carboys and sealed until bottling is required. It is allowed to age in the carboy with repeated rackings to clarify it (soursop takes a long time to become clear) every three to six months. The soursop you had at this stage has aged for four years and next year will be bottled as a special 5 year reserve (until it runs out).

I am surprised at your comment that you cannot taste the soursop flavour. The only thing that I can think of saying is that the maturation process has mellowed the in-your-face flavour of fresh soursop and as I am tasting some of the elixir right now I can discern a honey-flowery aroma with hints of butterscotch. The flavour hits the front of the tongue first…sweetness with very mild banana and some passionfruit and then moves to the back with the heat of alcohol and some very subtle bitter, like orange pith. The heat then passes into the belly while the whole tongue is covered quite unctuously. I would not mix it with anything as the flavour is too subtle and I would drink it warm (room temperature) in a brandy snifter in slow sips over half an hour to forty-five minutes. That would be my tasting opinion. I would hazard a guess that other soursop liqueurs you might have tasted are a different drink made with a different technique and maybe not aged as long. I am quite sure that the flavour is different if you tasted an earlier bottling and are comparing but I would add that the flavour has improved and matured with the aging. I am also surprised that you think it tastes like grappa; grappa is a completely different drink, a distillate, usually with the unmistakable flavour of fusil oils still in it, drunk from a small glass in one go. It is really quite the opposite of drinking the soursop elixir.

So, to answer your questions: yes, it is the same batch; yes, we taste it all the time and love it; no, it is not possible that the recipe has been changed because it is the original material. No, seeds were not used and neither were leaves, only ripe pulp with the seeds strained out is in this batch.

Now, the most interesting part that you have mentioned is the elixir’s effect on sleep. I never noticed that before but I will look out for it specifically now that you have mentioned it. I am wondering if the aging process has produced some soporific substance within the chemical reactions that occur during maturation. Thank you specifically for that piece of feedback, we will look into it as such an effect would allow us to use this elixir directly as a natural medicine alternative for insomnia……..

}

I hope this is helpful to other people that have tasted our Elixirs and answers some questions that everybody is likely to have.  The important thing is that we got to have a tasting!!  Yum, yum!

Munchkin's Continuous Cauldron of Soup!

Munchkin.Eating.BunThis is a technique I have developed which allows you to have a continuous soup over a long period of time.  There is a daily replenishment of ingredients and flavourings to vary the taste so that you can keep on enjoying the soup for longer.  Also, this continuous method frees up your time so that you always have a healthy “ready-made” meal at home.  This is a better alternative to ordering “take-out” or micro-waving processed meals.

Continuous Cauldron of Soup.
Continuous Cauldron of Soup.

I would recommend this to my patients if I felt that they needed a “Prescription of Soup.”  This can be used for de-toxification especially in getting over an acute illness or after an intense period of rich foods and alcohol.  The ingredients in the soup can provide all the daily requirements for protein and nutrients so that it can be a complete meal in itself.  Furthermore, if there is no addition of carbohydrates into the soup, it can help in weight loss and the control of Diabetes Mellitus.

Soup: A Complete Meal.

If you want to read more on Munchkin’s Soup Technique, click on the link.

Home-made Remedy For Eczema.

AvatarMunchkinToday, I have a Home Remedy for Eczema and other dry, irritating skin conditions.  All the ingredients can be found in your home pantry and the recipe works well to relieve the redness and itching in acute dermatitis.  If you use it on your scalp, it actually doubles up as a natural hair conditioner too.

Here are the list of ingredients:

  • Cornstarch 5 tbsp.
  • Water 500mls
  • Olive Oil 1 tbsp.
  • Glycerine 1 tbsp.
  • Optional Chamomile Teabag (one)
  • Optional Lavender Essential Oil.

If you interested in reading about the different types of Eczema and in viewing the detailed recipe, click on Home Remedy For Eczema in the Doctoring in Belize section.

Mushroom Foraging in Belize.

Munchkin.ShoutingIt has been pouring down in Toledo so this is the best time to go foraging for mushrooms!  Take a look at what we found today…a bountiful treasure for Munchkin and Gnome!

We found oyster mushrooms growing on some peach palms.  We identified them as Pleurotus ostreatus which is a smaller type of edible oyster; they are fleshy and full of texture.

Oyster Mushrooms Growing on Palm.
Oyster Mushrooms Growing on Palm.

Yay!  There are more Oysters coming up!

Lots of Baby Oyster Mushrooms!!
Lots of Baby Oyster Mushrooms!!

We also found more Wood ear mushrooms which are edible.  These mushrooms are well-liked by the Asian population and are usually cooked in soups and stews.  Of course, we like them too!  Moreover, this little number also has medicinal properties which include anti-cancer, hypoglycaemic, anti-coagulant and cholesterol lowering activities.  What a wonderful mushroom!

Wood Ear Mushroom with Two Romantic Snails.
Wood Ear Mushroom with Two Romantic Snails.

Fungi foraging also revealed more of the Mayan mushroom known as Schizophylum commune.  These are rubbery in texture but are edible nonetheless.

Mayan Mushroom on Log.
Mayan Mushroom on Log.

There was a plethora of Turkey Tail Polypores which came in a spectacular array of different colours.  Not only are they nice to look at but they can be made into a medicinal tea.  This type of fungus is known to have anti-cancer properties and so a cup of tea now and then won’t do you any harm.

Trametes versicolor on Log.
Trametes versicolor on Log.
Big Trametes.
Big Trametes.

You may have gathered that we are really Big on Mushrooms. Gnome has written many essays on this subject.  Check out these links:

Tomorrow I will post up pictures and a recipe for my Beef Jerky Soup with Wild Edible Mushrooms.  Meanwhile, Happy Hunting!

Copal as Medicine.

AvatarMunchkinI have been updating the product descriptions and revised the pages on Copal Medicinal Oil and Copal Medicinal Ointment in Product Descriptions.

Copal Medicinal  Oil.
Copal Medicinal Oil.
Copal Medicinal Ointment.
Copal Medicinal Ointment.

Since we are doctors down here in Toledo, most locals are actually more interested in our medical products.  Our copal products were the first things we made and still remain the most commonly sought after preparation in Belize.

Copal Resin (Protium copal) has been used by the Mayans for centuries in skin ailments including infections and inflammatory conditions.  It is a medicine which is still used in the villages of Toledo but with westernisation and modernisation, many younger Mayans are losing these traditions.

If you are interested in reading about how we came about making this medicine, please read my article Copal in the Library.

The Christmas Plant of Belize: Sorrel.

Munchkin.Another.LookEvery year, Sorrel flowers and fruits in the months of December and January.  That is why I call it the Christmas Plant of Belize.  It is also green and red so it fits in with the whole theme.

Sorrel Plant with Flowers.
Sorrel Plant with Flowers.

I have been a busy little bee collecting sorrel over the holidays.  It is quite intensive work so you really have to like the plant to do all this.  After harvesting, the fruit needs to be removed from the seed pod and this involves scoring around the base of the fruit to pop out the pod.  This gets quite repetitive especially after the hundredth one!

Seed Pods Separated From the Sorrel Fruit.
Seed Pods Separated From the Sorrel Fruit.

I had quite a bit of sorrel so I sun-dried the fruit to store in jars.

Fresh Sorrel For Sun-drying.
Fresh Sorrel For Sun-drying.
Jar of Sun-dried Sorrel.
Jar of Sun-dried Sorrel.

The fruit of the plant can be used to make a tea or a cool drink and it has a lovely, berry-like tart flavour.  To make a tea simply use between 10 to 20 calyces per cup and boil for about 5 minutes until it is a deep red colour.  This hibiscus has many medicinal properties including lowering your blood pressure so it is well worth the effort.  It you would like to know more about the useful properties of Hibiscus sabdariffa, check out my link in the library.

 

Jackass Bitters Detox.

Angry.MunchkinIt is New Years day and some of you may be thinking about detoxification after the festive season.  I would like to recommend a cup of Jackass Bitters tea once daily for the next 7 days.  It is really, really bitter so you just need to boil one leaf per cup (boil for 5 minutes).  Add some honey but that won’t hide the bitter taste.

Jackass.Bitters.Leaves
Jackass Leaves.

Jackass Bitters has been used traditonally in Belize for its purification and detoxification properties.  It can also be used effectively for many skin conditions including ulcers, wounds and cold sores.

If you would like to read more on Jackass Bitters and the Medicinal Properties, please press on the link.

 

Bumps Done Gone!

Bumps Done Gone.
Bumps Done Gone.

I sold my first trial of 6 bottles of Bumps Done Gone! in the local pharmacy.  In Belize, “Bumps” is a local term for acne or pimples; “Done Gone” means in local terms that it has already gone.  It is an acne treatment which has been formulated to unblock pores and made with natural essential oils including rosemary and grapefruit.

This is really good (for me) because it is nice when I start a new product and people buy it.  I know it doesn’t sound like a lot for all of you out there (I should be manufacturing zillions and making zillions and taking it to China to replicate, right?)!

It is an achievement when you formulate something by yourself, bottle it and make your own label to stick on to it.