Sexual tiredness, impotence, asthenia, sickness in the transports, digestion disorders (nauseas).
Description: This long-lived grass with the horizontal rhizome is originating in India.
It is told that the eagerness of Europeans to discover the famous road of the Indies was justified by the search of this spice, one of the most sought after in the Middle Ages. It is finally Marco Polo who brought the ginger in Europe at the end of 13th century.
Nowadays, we use its rhizome which contains an oil color of straw, with its characteristic camphorated odor and peppered savour, intense and hot.
Sovereign tonicity
The contemporary use of the ginger goes back at the beginning of the 1980’s, when a scientist discovered, by chance, that when he had a cold, the ginger reduced its nauseas; this discovery was followed by blind research which made it possible to conclude with the undeniable effectiveness of the plant to prevent the sickness in the transports and to treat the digesting disorders (thanks to its cholagogue and choleretic properties).
But the reputation of the ginger is above all due to its aphrodisiacs virtues, largely praised by Arab medicine. Those would be related to the presence of gingerols which would have an effect on the Irontility by increasing the volume of the sperm made and by improving of the mobility of the spermatozoa.
Wether it’s for sexual tiredness or a momentary loss of tonicity, the ginger carries on a stimulative and revitalizing activity, reinforced in the presence of ginseng.
The ginger carries on a stimulative and revitalizing activity, reinforced in the presence of ginseng.
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