5 Awesome Insights on Nettle for Total Health

Nettle is a Protein Powerhouse

Containing all nine essential amino acids, nettle is a great source of protein.  The nine essential amino acids are histidine, isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tyrosine and valine.  Nettle is about 47% protein by dry weight so that applies to nettle powders and teas.  Nettle is a bout 20% protein by weight when you buy or pick it fresh.  Nettle contains the gut-healing amino acids that bone broth is famous for so is a great alternative.  Despite what “they” say there are alternatives to bone broth and its healing nutrients CAN be found in other foods, nettle is one example.  These gut-healing amino acids are glutamine, alanine, proline and glycine.  Nettle tea is a good alternative for replacing those amino acids.  It doesn’t have quite the same levels of these amino acids cup-per-cup but if you’re like me you make it strong and you can drink a lot more nettle tea than broth on a regular day.  The vitamin C in nettle can also help to form collagen necessary for our guts, skin and joints.

Nettle and Brain Healh

With its vibrant amino acid profile nettle can provide many of the raw materials we require for our neurotransmitters.  We need phenylalanine to make serotonin, dopamine and noradrenaline.  In other words we need phenylalanine to chill out and be happy!    Nettle provides us with that.  Nettle also contains choline which is essential for our brains and acetylcholine which is the compound that helps the nerve signals in our bodies be transferred and received at their end destination.  Nettle uses this to help us feel its sting more.  Ouch.  Um thanks a lot.  But our nerves use this acetylcholine to talk to our muscles.  For example we need acetylcholine for our brain-gut connection, for our digestive motility and for the smooth muscle movements in the gut to be coordinated.  Nettle also contains 108% of the RDA of vitamin A in a three cup serving of the fresh plant (that’s 5369 IU) which is good for our brains and is very high in lutein/zeaxanthin which is often sold as a supplement to reduce brain inflammation.  Of course this is a vitamin A precursor (vitamin A listings can be misleading) and needs to be converted but this is still a great source.  Skip the supplements with me and get some nettle tea.

Nettle and Calcium

Our three cup portion of nettle contains a whopping 1284.27 mg of calcium.  This is more by far than the amount of iron in there. Steaming 3 C raw nettles will take the sting out and leave the calcium.  The tea contains a good amount of calcium too, especially if you make it strong.  I use about a cup of dried nettle leaves for about 1.5 litres of water in my nettle infusions, remembering that all minerals are concentrated in dried plants.  Nettle contains a good amount of copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus and potassium.  Nettle also contains vitamin C which helps us with our calcium utilization.  Just make sure to store it well and buy reasonably fresh dried nettle as it will have a better chance of retaining the vitamin C.  See if you can ask where/when it was harvested from your supplier.

Nettle and Vitamin K
Three cups of steamed nettle contains 1331.4 mcg (1665% of the RD) of vitamin K.  Vitamin K is essential for healthy blood clotting and for preventing the mineralization and hardening of arteries.  K1 can be converted into K2, a vitamin with many forms, in the body though the mechanism is a bit complex.  K2 is the vitamin that helps mineralize our bones and teeth.  I often assume that my cup of dried nettle that I’m adding to tea contains about half of this amount of K1 but there is no guarantee with dried herbs.  The best of course is to dry them yourself so you know when and how they were stored.  Still a cup of dried nettle is not bad!  Nutrition calculators really are not programmed for these wild foods and if they are there are many errors that I have noticed.  AND of course everything depends on the environment in which the food was grown.
No matter what you are getting an abundance of nutrients in your nourishing nettle infusion.  Many authors write about K2 being an important and common deficiency.  One way to increase the K2 levels in our bodies is by including green foods that are absolutely replete with K1 like nettle.  Another way is to use nettle in fermentation and make a nettle natto.  Or any kind of natto.  Because the Bacillus bacteria in natto make K2.  Yup.  That’s right.  We do this in the Friendly Flora Collective and you can do this at home too.  You can actually use the bacillus bacteria for a variety of ferments but soy beans are traditional, anyway black beans and nettle work, believe it or not.
Inflammation Modulation
Extracts of nettle (tinctures or extract capsules) can help to reduce the COX1, COX2 and arachidonic acid cascades in our bodies.  These are our inflammatory pathways.  Some inflammation is good, like if you just broke your leg.  All inflammation serves a purpose, to protect our bodies short term and, if long term, alert us that something is getting in the way of healthy functioning.  BUT inflammation anywhere in the body, for example digestive inflammation, can turn on these inflammatory pathways and thereby increase inflammation everywhere else in the body.  This can worsen joint pain and more, making daily life more challenging.  So while you’re tackling the root causes of inflammation in the body (ahem… the gut) it can be nice to know nettle extracts have been shown to reduce inflammation via COX1 and 2 and reduce arachidonic acid.
So if you’re considering adding some nettle, dried nettle or nettle powder into your diet and you’re wondering HOW here are a few ideas:
Make a nettle tea and use it as a base for your almond milks, soups, dips or dressings.
Nettle pairs well with lemon, olive oil, basil, blueberry, artichoke, rosemary, pine nuts, aged “cheeses”, cauliflower, mushrooms, leeks, parsnips, potatoes and more.  Choose one or two feature flavours to pair with the nettle and see what you come up with.  It’ll be like “iron chef”.  Or should I say calcium chef.
I love to use nettle, fresh, frozen or dried in pestos and dips.  You can use nettle powder in the place of gluten-free flour in breads, wraps or pancakes.  How do you get nettle powder?  Buy cut/sifted nettle that is used for tea.  You can get this on Amazon HERE.  When you are ready to use it powder some of the nettle in your dry blender jug.  It’s better to powder herbs like nettle right before using them to reduce oxidation and degradation of the nutrients in there.  I would replace up to 1/4 of the gluten-free flour in a recipe with nettle powder.  This is handy for me because some of my family still enjoy bread.  If you’re going to bake you might as well sneak in a load of protein and minerals!  Adding the nettle powder greatly increases the protein content of foods.  Does make them green though!

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Turmeric Mango Ice Cream

Probiotic and not-too-sweet (ready for your fresh mango add-in) this ice cream packs a flavourful and nutritional punch.  You’re going to love it!  Feed it to your most hard core friends.  IF you have any left.  Ice cream that is.  We’re hard core but we have friends.

 

Ingredients
Coconut milk – 2 C
Mango – 1.5 C chopped pieces
Turmeric – 1/4 C juice
Black pepper (optional) – 1/4 t
Cayenne – pinch
Basil – 1/4 C chopped fine
Probiotics (optional) – 1/4-1 t
Stevia drops (optional) to taste OR 1/4 C liquid sweetener (also optional)
Instructions
If you would like your ice cream to be probiotic you can ferment the coconut milk before you make the ice cream.  Allow 12-24 hours to do this.  I started mine the day before making the ice cream.  Basically place your 2 C coconut milk or cream into a blender and add 1/4 t or more probiotic powder, blend JUST to incorporate and ferment at roughly body temperature for 8-12 hours.  Refrigerate the liquid coconut “yogurt” when completed so that it is a better temperature for making the ice cream when you’re ready.
Add all ingredients except the basil, sweetener and probiotics to a high-speed blender and blend until smooth.
Taste for sweetness and adjust.  I actually didn’t sweeten mine and we were all happy with the results but we’ve been told we’re nuts.  Make this so it tastes good to you and your friends.
Chop your basil fine.  I like to roll mine into tiny rolls and chop them like a rolled cookie so that I end up with long curly strips of basil.  You can chop them whichever way you like.  If you don’t have basil substitute something else.  Lemongrass would be amazing but I would use less of that so adjust accordingly.  (Pictured here with mint, use what ya got).
Freeze in an ice cream maker according to the manufacturer’s directions, incorporating the chopped basil just at the end for some texture.  Best eaten after sitting in the freezer for at least an hour after making.
If you’re using popsicle molds place some basil in the bottoms of the molds and pour your ice cream over that.  Freeze and munch.

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The Good Side of Ghrelin

Whoever named the hormone ghrelin seriously made it sound like some kind of evil elf monster.  Well it’s not.  I believe this hormone is largely misunderstood and we are missing the boat by working so hard to suppress it.  Maybe folks don’t realize how many benefits this hunger hormone has for our bodies.  Maybe folks making weight loss supplements have different priorities than we do.  By the time you’re through here you’ll be the village expert on the benefits of hunger and how to leverage it for yourself.  It may help you to think on the bright side when your table is yet to be served or you are skipping the snacks between meals and get the rumbly tummy.
Ghrelin is the hormone released in our stomachs that sends a signal to our brains telling us we’re hungry!  There are also small amounts of this hormone released from the brain itself, the small intestine and the pancreas.  There has been much popular press about ghrelin, teaching us how to suppress this hormone, blaming it for weight gain.  I do not believe our hormones are inherently good or evil, but that they are necessary messengers in our bodies.  Perhaps if we were eating the right amounts of the right things for our bodies and we were able to metabolize the carbs we were eating we wouldn’t be so eager to find someone to blame.
Ghrelin has been found to improve neuroplasticity, decrease the risk of Alzheimer’s and increase learning and memory by helping to build the hippocampus.  Yup.  Every time you are hungry you are actually building your brain power and improving your memory.  The addition of injected ghrelin has even been found to improve the conditions of many types of mammals who were already suffering from memory loss.  Could there be a biological need for us to be smarter when we’re hungry?  I think so.  Now if only we could use our brains when we’re eating….
Neuroplasticity is a big deal.  This is our ability to form new neural pathways, repair damage and learn new things.  Have you known someone who had a major head injury and then a new area of the brain developed to compensate for the change?  Neuroplasticity.  And ghrelin can help us with that.  Who knew?  Being hungry can help our brains.
So this is great until you reach the point where your blood sugar is so low that your body releases cortisol, damaging the hippocampus.  So be hungry.  Be hungry before each meal, wait a bit but not long enough to get into crisis and then you can reap the benefits without so much risk.
I love this.  I like compromises and moderation when we use our brains to come up with the solution in the first place.  There is a great deal of research on ghrelin’s ability to help the brain.  As you know I prefer studies on human beings for ethical and practical reasons but check out a summary of some of this research in the International Journal of Molecular Sciences HERE
Ghrelin signals the release of growth hormone all over the body.  This hormone (HGH) signals growth and repair, cell reproduction and regeneration, increases calcium retention and may help with bone density.  It also stimulates the immune system and helps to grow and repair our internal organs and helps the liver to stabilize our blood sugars.  Many of us have lower than optimal amounts of growth hormone in our systems because it is suppressed by insufficient sleep, stress and blood sugar dysregulation.
What if simply avoiding mid-morning snacks and allowing ourselves to become hungry could increase growth hormone in our bodies?  In fact it does.  In two different ways.  When our blood sugars and insulin are high we do not release growth hormone so we need enough time after meals for them to go back to baseline and the growth hormone to rise.  And for a double-awesomeness attack our hunger hormone ghrelin signals the release of even more of this powerful regenerating hormone.
Ghrelin has benefits for the digestive system too.  It builds the digestive mucosa.  This is a protective lining on the surface of our inner skin, our stomachs, small and large intestines.  We have mucosa in our lungs and kidneys/bladder too, all of those spaces that seem to be “inside” our bodies but are really on the outside, hollow spaces inside our bodies.  They need to be protected.  Some cases of extreme damage to the digestive mucosa include ulcerative colitis, where the mucosa and intestinal lining get damaged by our own immune systems.  Our mucosa can also be damaged by rough foods, by fasting, by bacterial imbalances or through nutrient deficiencies.
We are making and replenishing this mucosa constantly, every day.  This is why people enjoy taking slippery elm, marshmallow and aloe internally, they protect this important lining.  Our mucosa houses our digestive immunity, makes and stores enzymes to digest medium chain carbohydrates and releases other digestive hormones too.  It protects us from unwanted food and bacteria making their way into our bodies.  How great to know that when we are hungry within reason, when we allow ourselves to grumble a bit for food, we are actually signalling healing and protection for our small and large intestines!
Ghrelin has amazing benefits for our digestive tracts, our whole bodies and our brains.  The next time you’re hungry think to yourself:  I’m SO SMART right now and my body is healing itself 🙂  My body is a genius.

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Wild Greens Crackers

Dip these crunchies into your favourite hummus, dip or nut cheese.  You can use this recipe to clean out your fridge of greens or incorporate whichever outdoor greens are in season.  Taste it as you go so you can adjust to taste.  You are a super-food super-human!
Ingredients:
5 C greens (I used chickweed, miners lettuce, spinach, thistle (warning: spiky) and parsley
1/4 C chives, chopped fine
1 clove garlic
1 medium tomato
3/4C flax
1C almond pulp
1/4 C nut butter (optional)
1 lemon, juiced
1/2 tsp good quality salt
Instructions:
Start with the tomato and lemon juice in the blender until liquid
Add the greens and blend until liquid
Add everything except the chives and flax and blend until as smooth as possible
Add flax and blend to incorporate (if you have to add a bit of water just go slow so you don’t overdo it)
Add the chives at the last minute so they are incorporated but not totally blended
Spread your mixture onto a paraflex or silicone sheet in your dehydrator
Score the top to make square crackers
Dehydrate at 110 for several hours until dry to the touch
Flip over your dehydrator tray onto another tray so the paraflex sheet is on top of the cracker
Peel the paraflex sheet off and continue to dehydrate until crispy
Break into crackers
Store in an airtight, dark container

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Wild Greens Dressing

This is less of a recipe than it is an insight into how I might prepare a dressing.  Remember that high magnesium foods like these greens can keep unwanted bacteria low in a healthy (alkaline) small intestinal environment.  Magnesium doesn’t alter the bacteria in the large intestine as it is very acidic in there.  But in an alkaline environment these greens can help us keep our clostridium, E. coli, enterobacter just in the right proportions.

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups mixed greens: plantain, spinach, arugula, parsley
  • 2 TBSP nut butter or flax oil (optional)
  • 1 medium avocado OR 2/3 C soaked nuts
  • Juice of 2 lemons
  • 1⁄2 teaspoon sea salt
  • 1⁄2 cup water
  • 1 clove garlic
  • pinch cayenne (optional)

Instructions:
Blend everything in your high-speed or personal blender. If you don’t have room for all the greens blend half and then add the rest. This recipe also works with a bit of cucumber or even zucchini in place of some of the greens. Yum! Make sure to taste for saltiness and sourness and adapt to your own preferences. Let me know what you made in the comments and how you adapted this for YOU!

Photo caption: Here is a photo of one of the salads I made on the road. There were plenty of edible flowers to pick so the salad looks gorgeous. Just use whatever you have on hand, yours will be pretty too!

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