    
BENEFITS OF
GRAPE
The special value of the grape lies in the fact that it is a
very quick repairer of bodily waste, the grape sugar being
taken immediately into the circulation without previous
digestion.
For this reason is grape juice the best possible food for
fever patients, consumptives, and all who are in a weak and
debilitated condition. The grapes should be well chewed, the
juice and pulp swallowed, and the skin and stones rejected.
In countries where the grape cure is practised, consumptive
patients are fed on the sweeter varieties of grape, while those
troubled with liver complaints, acid gout, or other effects of
over-feeding, take the less sweet kinds.
Dr. Fernie deprecates the use of grapes for the ordinary gouty
or rheumatic patient, but with all due deference to that
learned authority, I do not believe the fruit exists that is
not beneficial to the gouty person. One of the most gouty and
rheumatic people I know, a vegetarian who certainly never
over-feeds himself, derives great benefit from a few days’
almost exclusive diet of grapes.
Cream of tartar, a potash salt obtained from the crust formed
upon bottles and casks by grape juice when it is undergoing
fermentation in the process of becoming wine, is often used as
a medicine. It has been cited as an infallible specific in
cases of smallpox, but I do not recommend its use, as it
probably gets contaminated with other substances during the
process of manufacture. In any case its value cannot be
compared with the fresh, ripe fruit. I have little doubt but
that an exclusive diet of grapes, combined with warmth, proper
bathing, and the absence of drugs, would suffice to cure the
most malignant case of smallpox.
Sufferers from malaria may use grapes with great benefit. For
this purpose the grapes, with the skins and stones, should be
well pounded in a mortar and allowed to stand for three hours.
The juice should then be strained off and taken. Or persons
with good teeth may eat the grapes, including the skins and
stones, if they thoroughly macerate the latter.
In the absence of fresh grapes raisin-tea is a restoring and
nourishing drink. Dr. Fernie notes that it is of the same
proteid value as milk, if made in the proportions given below.
It is much more easily digested than milk, and therefore of
great use in gastric complaints. Sufferers from chronic
gastritis could not do better than make raisin-tea their sole
drink, and bananas their only food for a time.
Raisin Tea
To make raisin-tea, take half a pound of good raisins and wash
well, but quickly, in lukewarm water. Cut up roughly and put
into the old-fashioned beef-tea jar with a quart of distilled
or boiled and filtered rain water. Cook for four hours, or
until the liquid is reduced to 1 pint. Scald a fine hair sieve
and press through it all except the skins and stones. If
desired a little lemon juice may be added.
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