Do you wish there was a simple solution that tackled things like cancer AND the common cold?
Time and again, both in my nutritional training and my own experience with my family, I am shown that the kitchen is the first place to begin for getting well.
Helping our little ones and ourselves get strong and well can come from the most modest and unassuming sources. The two immune boosters that I discuss today could not be more humble and are probably available right now in your pantry.
Garlic. Onions.
That’s it!
Garlic and onions are simple and inexpensive – the best vegetables for highly effective immune-boosting if applied in a therapeutic manner.
Garlic and onions are featured as the third of the Top 10 Immune Boosters, taken from the book The Gut and Psychology Syndrome, by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride. Simple ways to have robust health.
If you are unfamiliar with her work, Dr. Natasha is a neurologist in the U.K. with a master’s in nutrition. She created a dietary protocol for healing autism, as well as other neurological, chronic and autoimmune issues. She has helped patients around the world and has trained other practitioners to do so as well. The GAPS Diet helps by healing and sealing the gut lining, reducing the toxic burden on the immune system, and replenishing beneficial microbes.
Best Vegetables for the Immune System
Garlic
While not necessarily awesome for those receiving your kisses, garlic is an absolute champion as a natural antibiotic for boosting the immune system.
- It packs a punch with its phytochemicals and healing sulfur components. These sulfur compounds even chelate toxic heavy metals (like lead & cadmium), binding with them for excretion out of the body.
- Garlic has antibacterial, anti-fungal, and even antiviral qualities
- It promotes the growth of healthy intestinal microflora
- Garlic helps to keep fats from oxidizing. I outlined how this works in previous posts about boosting immunity and cold pressed oils.
- Garlic acts as a strong antioxidant and guards against DNA damage
- It protects against radiation & sunlight damage
- Fights worms and parasites
- It benefits digestion, which is good for the whole body
- It contains many nutrients such as –
Vitamins: C, B1, B2, B3
Minerals: Calcium, folate, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, potassium, selenium, zinc
Phytochemicals: Allicin, beta-carotene, beta-sitosterol, caffeic acid, chlorogenic acid, diallyl-disulfide, ferulic acid, geraniol, kaempferol, linalool, oleanolic acid, p-coumaric acid, phloroglucinol, phytic acid, quercetin, rutin, s-allyl-cysteine, saponin, sinapic acid, & stigmasterol.
As the book Prescription for Nutritional Healing states, it is “Good for virtually any disease and infection”
Onions
As a whole, the onion family (garlic included) is an immune-boosting plant family. Onions in particular help to decrease phlegm and inflammation in the nose and throat, and when applied as a chest poultice they can help with the inflammation and congestion in the chest, such as from a bronchial infection. Onions also inhibit allergic reactions, which are a sign of imbalance in the immune system.
Some of onion minerals worth noting are:
- Manganese
- Potassium
- Phosphorus
- Magnesium
- Calcium
Onions also contain a significant amount of Vitamin C and both onions and garlic (especially red onions) are high in quercetin, the antioxidant which helps inhibit cancer cell growth.
Historical usage
Onions and garlic are featured in historical art, medicine, religious application, and culinary tradition. Here are just a few examples:
Pre-antibiotics era, garlic was used to treat infections and wounds during World War I. It is one of the oldest recorded remedies and is listed medicinally in ancient texts of the Greeks, Hebrews, Babylonians, Romans, and Egyptians.
Onions were used in the Egyptian mummification process (onions symbolized eternity), as well as in their art. The layered circle form of the onion held special significance.
Apart from growing in the wild, onions have been cultivated for at least 5,000 years, showing up in ancient texts of India, Sumeria, Egypt & China.
Garlic and onion belong to the Allium family of plants, which includes 600 – 750 species. Other popular alliums are shallots, chives, leeks, scallions.
How to use onions & garlic therapeutically
Garlic
Dr. Natasha recommends consuming a whole head of garlic a day for therapeutic purposes (not just a clove!), and she also outlines its usage as a remedy for ear infection, through garlic-infused olive oil.
Garlic for ear infection
Ingredients:
- 1 crushed clove of garlic
- 1 – 2 tablespoons cold-pressed olive oil
Method:
Place the crushed garlic in the oil and let sit for 30 minutes, then strain. The oil can be warmed slightly by placing it in a cup and setting the cup in warm water (don’t overheat or this will destroy beneficial properties). Use a few drops of this oil hourly in the ears to treat an ear infection. Garlic oil is a safe remedy for children and can also be used daily (just a couple of drops) to soften ear wax buildup.
The book Healing With Whole Foods outlines more garlic usages:
Garlic tea – Simmer 4 cloves of chopped garlic in one cup of water for 20 minutes…(apply both topically and drink internally) use for relieving poison ivy & poison oak & other boil-like skin conditions.
Travel – When traveling or eating out, take 2 capsules of aged garlic or chew up a clove of raw garlic prior, to help avoid food poisoning.
For colds, sore throat, & sinus headaches – Hold a clove of garlic in the mouth for at least 15 minutes, then consume it.
Onions
Dr. Natasha again gives us simple, time tested remedies.
Onion for ear infection
Ingredients:
- Large white onion
- Cotton cloth
Method:
Chop the onion finely and put it into the cotton cloth. Heat it in an oven until it is hot but still tolerable to touch. Place the wrapped onion on your child’s ear, with a cozy hat over to keep it in place…you can use plastic wrap between the onion and hat to keep the hat from getting onion juice on it. Keep this in place until the onion has cooled and repeat the heating and application on the ear. This is good to do before bed when they can then sleep on the affected ear and keep it very warm. It’s smelly but works well!
Onion for a throat infection
Eggs, onion, & animal fat immune booster (good for any infection)
Ingredients:
- 1 large white onion (sliced)
- 1 – 2 tablespoons animal fat (such as ghee, duck or goose fat)
- 2 – 3 high quality pastured eggs
Method:
- Cook the sliced onion in a pot on low heat, covered with a lid, for about 20 minutes, until onion is soft and sweet
- Fry the eggs in generous amounts of the animal fat until the whites are gently cooked but the yolks are still runny.
- Serve the eggs and onions together with the fat and an extra drizzle of cold-pressed olive oil on top.
This dish is very gentle and soothing on the throat, the fat and the egg yolks will dissolve any damaged tissues and help to remove them; the eggs, fat and cooked onion feed the immune system locally in the throat, and boost systemic immunity as well. Give this dish to your child twice a day, and the sore throat will melt away quite quickly. This is food that should be given to patients in hospitals, whose tonsils have just been removed. – from The Gut and Psychology Syndrome, by Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride
Storage and preparation
The best way to store garlic and onions is in a cool, dark place with good air circulation. This could be in a paper bag, a mesh basket in the cabinet, or an open box in the pantry. Stored carefully, onions and garlic can keep well for a month or much more. Note: When a clove is taken off a head of garlic, its storage life is decreased.
In preparing garlic, take to cut into the garlic clove and then let it sit for 15 minutes. This process allows time for the enzyme alliinase to convert alliin into allicin.
If you are prepping a bunch of garlic cloves at the same time, you can put the garlic in boiling water for 10 – 20 seconds and then put them into cold water. This should make it so that the skins come away easily. Only do this if you plan to cook the garlic anyway. Heat deactivates alliinase and the potential for allicin creation once the garlic is chopped, minced or crushed.
In preparing onions it is helpful to have a good, sharp knife. Here is a video showing how.
Raw or fermented garlic is preferable for medicinal purposes. There is some degree of potency that is lost during cooking, but some sulphur nutrients are actually enhanced during cooking, so there is still benefit.
How we incorporate onions & garlic
- I put onions and garlic into almost every soup I prepare for my family.
- A cheese plate with local artisan cheeses, roasted garlic, dates, fruit & nuts as an at-home date.
- I love making a simple dressing for our salads. It’s made with olive oil, store-bought or homemade apple cider vinegar, lots of chopped garlic and a little bit of honey & sea salt.
How do you include these two best vegetables into your daily life? Please scroll down and tell us in the comments below…I’d love to hear about it.
References
Prescription For Nutritional Healing Book
Healing With Whole Foods Book
Gut and Psychology Syndrome
More Information
Onion poultice
Top 10 Ways to Boost Immunity
The 11 Best Natural Antibiotics and How to Use Them
Elderberry Syrup Recipe
How to Boost Immunity with Greens
Juicing 101: Why Do It, the Best Juicers, and Recipes to Try
Think Raw Veggies are Best? Think Again
Christina Renee Bryan via Facebook
Kelsey Yvette Davis
vineeta
I love this blog. What great suggestions! Thanks a lot.
I’m Indian and grew up eating raw onions and garlic with our meals, in addition to using them in our cooking. Both garlic and onions are also used in traditional Indian medicine to help one recover from coughs and colds. My father used to make us drink raw onion juice when we were sick. And he would make a garlic “kheer” cooking plenty of garlic lightly with turmeric and some sugar colds.
However, while Indian garlic is quite mild, and I could easily eat several cloves raw with my food there, I find the garlic in the U.S. is very pungent and can’t tolerate it raw. I grow my own garlic and use it in Indian cooking, in pestos, and roasted. I’d love to learn how to ferment garlic especially since it is organic and fresh from my garden.
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Hi Vineeta,
Thank you for sharing about your childhood and traditional Indian medicine. The difference between Indian garlic and American garlic is interesting!
Melanie
Joy
There is a 2 minute video at http://foodwishes.blogspot.com/2013/11/how-to-peel-garlic-like-bosslike-actual.html
How to peal a whole head of garlic in 20 seconds — this trick comes from Martha Stewart but presented by Chef John. Very cool. Check it out.
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Hi Joy,
Thanks for sharing the video!
terry
great article. I ferment my garlic, and eat it raw. Especially good if I feel a cold or sore throat coming on, I eat a large clove at bedtime, and in the morning feel completely well
Megan
Terry, would you mind sharing how you ferment the garlic? I do cabbage and other veggies, but have never done garlic. I’d like to try!
Patrick
Just pointing this one out, but allicin, one of the most (if not THE most) active compounds in garlic and onions both, degrades when heated. You MUST eat it raw to get the benefits of this wonderful and medically potent substance.
Chop the garlic finely, let it sit for a minute or two, and eat the bits. This is the best way to maximize allicin content.
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Hi Patrick,
Thanks for the comment. It is important to note that the sulphur compounds are also very important in garlic and onions, and cooking can enhance these sulphur nutrients. So all is not lost by cooking.
Barbi
I was just reading the other day about fermenting garlic, and something about it being 13x stronger in benefits (of something… can’t remember.) Know anything about that?
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
I haven’t heard the 13x number but fermenting makes more nutrients available, so it wouldn’t be surprising. Thanks for commenting!
Jen
Lots of great information in this post!
I make raw garlic honey for colds and sinus congestion. I very gently warm 1/2 cup of raw honey (not too much heat!), with 3 large crushed cloves of garlic. Remove from heat and let stand about 1 hour, then remove the garlic. Store in the refrigerator, and take a spoonful as needed. My children love this “medicine honey”, and it clears your sinuses right away.
When sniffles, sneezes and sore throats begin to appear in my family, I place chopped onion in small bowls in every bedroom on the nightstand, and leave it there overnight while we sleep. If I do this early enough, the symptoms don’t progress to anything worse, but your house will smell very pungent!
There is barely a meal in our home that doesn’t begin with lots of garlic and onion. One favorite is guacamole with chopped tomatoes, lots of chopped raw garlic and red onion, lime juice, salt and cilantro. YUM!
Pat in TX
Yum, thanks for the ideas!! I am big on cooking with onion and garlic, but don’t have a kitchen this winter and everything has to be ultra simple. We are feeling the effects of the change in cooking style this winter, I am afraid:-/
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Yum is right, Jen! Thanks for sharing.
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Jmr,
Lol! Yes, eating a lot of garlic can do that, but its worth it to not have days and days of being sick, eh? Thanks for commenting.
Magda
Growing up we did ‘onion syrup’ for colds. Simply slice an onion and layer in a jar with sugar and wait for it to release the juices. It was actually very yummy (at least to my kid-self). We also ate sliced raw onion on bread (with plenty of butter). DH grew up eating raw garlic on bread, the same way!! Nowadays I use garlic oil for the occasional ear infection (kids are age 4 and 9 and had maybe 3 ear infections between them) and make this simple spread: mayo, Parmesan (grated or shredded) and garlic put through a microplane (as much as you can stand!!). Delicious and beneficial!!
Rheesa
My aunt used to do the “onion juice extracted by sugar” cure for colds when I was a kid. I’ve never heard of anyone else doing it until now!
Melanie Christner, NTP, CHFS, CGP
Hi Magda,
I love hearing about the remedies that have been used in the past. I’m also going to try the mayo, parmesan, grated garlic…that sounds delicious (and really good for you, if you are making home made mayo with healthy oils)
jmr
Great article! Thanks! I’ve used heated onion for an ear infection and it works great. Just before Christmas, I came down with the flu (fever, sore throat, headache, congestion)…I spent day in bed eating onion, garlic, ginger & bone broth soup and also eating raw garlic. The next morning, I was well enough to get on a plane to visit family for the holiday and by that night, I was completely well. I didn’t smell very good, however.