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Primer on how to use garlic as a natural antibiotic for skin, ears, throat and body to resolve infections whether viral, bacterial, or fungal without the use of meds.
As problems with antibiotic resistance and fear of superbugs like MRSA increase, interest in the use of natural antibiotics for routine infections continues to skyrocket. Of all the dozen or so natural antibiotics, raw garlic tends to be the most popular for several reasons.
First, garlic is easy to obtain and widely available. Whether you live in the middle of a thriving metropolis or out in the sticks, obtaining a head of garlic is not a complicated process. Health food stores and mega-supermarkets alike carry it all the time regardless of the season.
Garlic is also one of the most inexpensive herbs on the market. I buy an entire head of high-quality, organic garlic from my local health food store for about $1.
Thirdly, garlic is one of the simplest herbs to grow as well. Just plant a few cloves with papery covering remaining in rich soil.
Water about once a week (warning; do not overwater as garlic does not grow well in overly moist soil) and fertilize regularly and watch them grow like crazy. The bulbs are ready to harvest ideally after a hot dry summer when the long green stalks, called scapes, turn yellow or brown.
Perhaps it is no coincidence that one of nature’s most useful remedies for human health is not only easy to obtain and inexpensive to buy (even if organic) but also super simple to grow even for novice gardeners.
Garlic: Ancient Medicine Come Full Circle
Before the use of pharmaceutical antibiotics became all the rage post World War II, garlic was regularly used to treat infections and wounds.
This herb is one of the oldest recorded remedies used by many ancient civilizations. It is specifically named in ancient texts of the Greeks, Hebrews, Babylonians, Romans, and Egyptians.
Chances are, you already have a head of garlic in your pantry right now. So how to harness it as a powerful natural antibiotic when necessary?
Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride MD, author of Put Your Heart in Your Mouth and creator of The GAPS Diet gives the simplest and most effective how-to I’ve personally used over the years. Read on for all the garlic-y details!
Used Preventatively
The great thing about garlic is that it can be safely used as a preventative or to resolve an existing illness.
To use garlic preventatively, take one clove a day for as long as you like. While you can take the clove anytime during the day that suits you, I’ve found that just before bed seems to work the best.
Using a clove of garlic per day starting a few days before overseas travel and continuing until your return is a helpful tip for the prevention of food poisoning.
Incidentally, eating a clove of garlic every day is a great way to slowly improve intestinal health. Garlic very effectively kills off a wide variety of gut pathogens including candida while simultaneously serving as a prebiotic food to encourage the growth and survival of beneficial microbes.
Used Therapeutically
Note that pharmaceutical antibiotics only work for bacterial infections. Garlic, however, helps resolve an illness no matter what type of microbes are causing the problem.
Hence, it is not only anti-bacterial but also highly antiviral and works as a very strong antifungal.
When used therapeutically to heal a bacterial infection or viral illness, Dr. Campbell-McBride recommends consuming an entire head of garlic every day until healing has occurred.
The average head of garlic contains 10 cloves! You don’t consume the entire head at once, however.
Whew!
You consume one clove every couple of hours from waking until bedtime.
If the raw cloves are too hot for you to consume, I would suggest making this recipe for pickled garlic. Naturally fermenting garlic preserves all the therapeutic value while eliminating the heat and odor potential on breath and sweat from eating raw cloves.
Another option is to take garlic capsules that concentrate the active ingredient from multiple cloves.
Common Mistakes
The most common mistake people make when using garlic is consuming cloves that have been sitting around in the pantry for too long.
Stale garlic may not be potent enough to resolve an infection, so be sure you use a fresh head if at all possible.
Fresh softneck (white) garlic like the kind typically sold at the supermarket has a green shoot running through the middle of the cloves.
If the shoot in your garlic head has turned brown or dried out, discard and purchase a fresh head. Organic is best and typically more potent.
Types of Garlic to Use as Medicine
You have no doubt noticed that there are several types of garlic available at the market. All work wonderfully well for antibiotic purposes with the exception of elephant garlic (Allium ampeloprasum).
Elephant garlic heads are large, covering the entire palm of an adult’s hand in some cases. However, the garlic flavor is very bland tasting more like a leek.
Due to the less powerful flavor and aroma, elephant garlic has inferior healing properties to other types of garlic.
Hence, bypass the elephant garlic and go for the small white, red or purple garlic heads instead.
How to Prepare Garlic Cloves for Swallowing
When consuming a garlic clove for use either preventatively or therapeutically, you can swallow it whole just like a pill. Be sure to remove the papery covering on each clove first.
Follow this approach only if the thought of tasting pure garlic is too overwhelming. If taken this way, consume the clove with a glass of milk or with food to prevent the possibility of indigestion.
If the taste of garlic doesn’t bother you, the most potent method for taking a clove is to crush it with a fork or garlic press.
Then, let the crushed clove sit for about 15 minutes at room temperature on a small plate or cutting board. This allows the enzyme alliinase to interact with alliin to produce a maximum amount of allicin – the active ingredient in garlic.
Then, scoop up the garlic bits on a spoon and swallow it down chased with water, juice or fresh milk.
The book Healing With Whole Foods suggests other ways to utilize garlic as a natural antibiotic both internally and externally.
Garlic Oil for Ear Infections
If an ear infection is a problem, garlic ear oil can really help. Simply prepare the garlic clove in a slightly different manner.
Crush the clove and mix with 1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil. Let the crushed garlic sit in the oil for 30 minutes. Strain out the garlic pieces and discard.
Warm the garlic oil in a cup placed in a small pan of warm water. Take care not to overheat the oil else the beneficial properties of the garlic-infused oil will be destroyed!
Drizzle a few drops of the garlic oil every hour into the ear that is infected.
This is an extremely safe remedy for children.
It also serves the dual purpose of soothing the pain and softening ear wax buildup for easy removal.
Garlic Tea for Use Internally or Externally
Garlic tea is easily made by simmering 4 cloves of chopped garlic in one cup of water for 20 minutes.
This garlic tea can be used topically on the skin for relieving poison ivy and poison oak. Â It can also be used to heal boils on the skin.
Garlic tea can also be sipped to help resolve internal infections. Please note that garlic tea will not be as strong or effective as eating whole raw, crushed garlic cloves. Cooking garlic reduces its medicinal properties.
Colds, Sore Throats or Sinus Headaches
For colds, sore throat, or sinus headaches, hold a clove of raw garlic with the peel removed in the mouth for at least 15 minutes.
If this is too hot, use a clove of fermented garlic instead. You can suck on it a bit during that time if you like. Then, chew the clove up and swallow.
Another fast-acting sore throat remedy combines garlic with raw manuka honey and cayenne pepper (or turmeric) as a one-two-three punch.
Do you use garlic as medicine in your home? If so, what is your favorite way to harness its medicinal power?
Nancy
I live a healthful life and mostly eschew doctors, but somehow got a high fever and painful throat back in May. I went right to urgent care to get flu and strep tests to see what I was dealing with. Strep was positive. I read your website page about natural remedies for strep infections, but saw that some readers were warning not to mess around at home with something as serious as strep. I decided to take the proffered antibiotics. Did the round, the symptoms disappeared, all the side effects of antibiotics arrived like yeast infections, sugar cravings, fatigue, bad digestion. I felt so bad killing off my good bacteria.
Then four days after the antibiotic round was done, I got all the strep symptoms back: high fever, sore throat. Went to a different doctor who claimed I wasn’t given the proper antibiotic. Gave me a very strong one. Finished it, strep “gone,” miserable from the side effects of killing my good bacteria. Went on some very powerful pre and probiotics. But as I started, again all the strep symptoms came back. AFTER TWO FILL ROUNDS OF ANTIBIOTICS. I started to see in my online research a LOT about “recurrent strep.” I thought, BS. These antibiotics simply aren’t medicine. They don’t work, they aren’t actually helping, they are weakening the immune system (or biome). I returned to your website and immediately began making the mixture of raw chopped garlic, raw honey, and cayenne. Started taking a 1/2 tsp of it per hour or when I thought about it.
Slowly, not suddenly like the antibiotics, this concoction made the symptoms subside. Each day I felt better, and after about a week, I was well enough to live a full life, but I kept up taking my little spoons of concoction 2-3x a day, even taking it with me. The strep NEVER RETURNED and I returned from illness to HEALTH, rather than to a weakened state plagued with candida and opportunistic infections. I have not been sick since, except for catching my child’s cold which disappeared in no time when I got out the garlic, honey, and cayenne and sent it packing. This is now my go to remedy for any of these illnesses.
I’m sorry I was scared off from trying this with the initial strep infection. Now I know what to do. Thank you for your wonderful advice.
Sarah
Thank you for this testimonial Nancy. My tween daughter actually had strep last month (of course while I was out of town) .. it was the first time ever one of my children had it. By the time I got home to her (I was a plane flight away), she was in a very bad way. But, the spots on her throat were gone, fever down and she out of the woods less than 24 hours after we started garlic, turmeric and manuka honey. It didn’t come back either.
Satyapriya
Thank you for the useful information
Christine
I’ve been growing garlic for a few years and I’ve always wondered if I could ‘fertilize’ them somehow. When you mention that at the beginning, what exactly do you mean by fertilize? With what? Thanks Sarah!
Sarah
Christine, believe it or not I use epsom salts to fertilize my flowers and garden. 1 tsp per gallon of water. It makes fantastic fertilizer! Here’s more on how to use it for this purpose: https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/epsom-salt-bath-necessity-for-health/
Heidi
Every August I fill a half gallon mason jar with freshly peeled garlic cloves. I pour a salt brine over the top and seal with a pickle pipe. It sits in my counter all winter and we eat them until they are gone. Raw garlic has never been great for my stomach, but fermented doesn’t bother it one bit.
Rin
What do you think of garlic supplements in capsule form?
Sarah
They are fine … just not as effective as pure whole garlic.
Karen
I love using garlic medicinally too, but I worry about how I smell to others! Does anyone have any suggestions or ways to combat the stinky side effects? I have heard that once your body get used to taking it regularly, you won’t smell. Is that true?
Sarah
Yes, some folks seem especially prone to getting stinky from garlic. Others don’t seem to have a problem with it at all. Not sure what to do about that except stay home 🙂 You’re sick and recovering anyway, so this shouldn’t be a problem.
One suggestion is to use garlic pills instead of raw cloves. This isn’t quite as effective, but the stinky issues do seem to be less when processed garlic supplements are used instead of whole garlic.
Cori
I keep a jar of fermented garlic in the fridge all throughout cold and flu season. My daughter enjoys the pickled cloves as a snack, and I pop one every time I start to feel tired or achy. I’ve always assumed the fermented garlic is effective in the same way that fresh, raw garlic is, but perhaps one is more effective than the other–do you happen to know? The fermented cloves lose some of their pungency (which is why we prefer them–they are usually mild enough to eat whole, with just enough kick for flavor), so it occurs to me that they may also be losing some of their effectiveness as they ferment; but then again, they contain probiotics that the raw cloves do not!
Sarah
Do you mind sharing your fermented garlic recipe Cori?
Kathleen
You mention using a “fresh” clove of garlic. Considering it is an ancient medicine, it would have been harvested once a year and stored. As long as your garlic is less than a year old and not from China, it should be fine.
Sarah
Actually, I would doubt that ancestral cultures would have stored garlic as is as it would have reduced the potency considerably. My guess is that they fermented it to maintain potency and naturally preserve it such as what is done in the Master Tonic. https://www.thehealthyhomeeconomist.com/master-tonic-natural-flu-antiviral/
Rita
I keep a small jar of homemade garlic oil (made with fresh garlic and coconut oil) in my fridge at all times. It hardens up so we just use a spoon and scrape some off and use it on scrapes, wounds, and burns, or a very small amount in the ear for ear infections, some of my kids will eat a hunk of it for a sore throat. Also, inserting a hunk of the solidified garlic oil for yeast infections works great too.
Ginger
In fact, I’m taking garlic medicinally today! I woke up with my throat on fire, and started on our family’s prescription, which is: GSE, garlic and cayenne capsules. I’ve always done 1 clove three times a day. Now I’m curious to see how quickly I can kick this if I actually take a whole bulb today!
Sarah
Let us know Ginger! My bet is that you will be better in 48 hours or less. I love how garlic works so fast and does no harm to gut flora .. in fact boosts them since it is a prebiotic.