There are issues with taking too much vit C I believe. It is necessary for many things but only in moderate amounts....dee
Sent from my iPad > On 9 Aug 2014, at 14:46, PT Ferrance <[email protected]> wrote: > > Thanks. The thing is that it is not always available in the state you > recommend... think winter. > Interesting for those of us who have issues taking Vit C supplementation. > PT > > Rev. PT Ferrance, L.Ac. > From: Doug <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 11:25 PM > Subject: RE: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C > > Hi PT, > Many vegetables and other plants contain ascorbic acid oxidase. But zucchini > squash contains a much higher concentration than any other known source. It’s > important to use as high concentration of AAO as possible in order to produce > as much DHAA as possible. > Doug > > > > From: PT Ferrance [mailto:[email protected]] > Sent: Friday, August 08, 2014 6:46 PM > To: [email protected] > Subject: Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C > > Interesting video. Do you ever use vegetables other than zucchini? Could > you use parsley? > PT > > From: Doug <[email protected]> > To: [email protected] > Sent: Friday, August 8, 2014 7:46 PM > Subject: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C > > Dehydroascorbic acid (DHAA) is a form of vitamin C that is absorbed much > better than common ascorbic acid (AA). When taken orally, 5 grams of DHAA > results in peak blood plasma vitamin C levels twice as high as AA or > liposomal C. DHAA for dietary use can be made by an economical, > do-it-yourself method right at home. I have published a YouTube video that > teaches you how to make it. This is a very long video (45 minutes) that > discusses the science behind why DHAA is absorbed so much better, shows > actual blood absorption data comparing various oral forms of vitamin C, and > demonstrates in great detail the DIY method for making DHAA. People who are > interested in achieving high blood levels of vitamin C will be very > interested. I am going to post a link to this video here, but before I do, > please be informed of the following disclosure and notice: > My name is Doug Kitt, and I am a commercial vendor of vitamin C products. I > have a commercial interest in the video. The name of my company is mentioned > several times, and one of my products is briefly discussed. You will be asked > for a donation at the end of the video. Furthermore, data is presented that > some people consider critical of liposomal C. If any of these things is > likely to offend you, please don’t click on the link! > http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4 > > > >

