Thanks Doug. Although long, I thought the material was presented quite clearly. Certainly interesting.
It is interesting that the blood level of vitamin C was so much higher with the Oxidized Vitamin C as compared to the the Liposomal C. Dan On Wed, Aug 13, 2014 at 12:25 PM, Doug <dk...@q.com> wrote: > Hi Dan, > > > > It’s just a matter of total accumulated heat. The first stage is slower to > oxidize, so it requires oxygen at a slower rate. Thus it’s a good time to > cut back on mixing without any concern at all of “starving” the reaction > for oxygen. With the blenders I’ve used, the time it takes to complete the > additional stages with constant mixing is not enough to worry about > overheating the mixture. So it’s just simpler to mix constantly for the > remaining time. > > > > The video is long, and I couldn’t include every detail that I wanted to. > But since you brought it up, here’s another thing to know: If you are going > to try making the DHAA concentration higher by more “additions” of AA, then > the overall process is going to take more time, therefore more heat > accumulates. So, instead of constant mixing, it may become necessary to be > “more conscientious” during the later stages too, by using the same process > of intermittent mixing. > > > > Thanks, > > Doug > > http://youtu.be/YHKBhz7OCB4 > > > > > > *From:* Dan Nave [mailto:bhangcha...@gmail.com] > *Sent:* Wednesday, August 13, 2014 10:10 AM > *To:* silver-list@eskimo.com > *Subject:* Re: CS>Do-It-Yourself Dehydroascorbic Vitamin C > > > > I was wondering why it was necessary to be so conscientious about mixing > and cooling for the first addition of AA, and then for the subsequent > additions of AA it seems as if you can just add and mix constantly without > worrying about overheating and so on... > > > > Thanks, > > > > Dan > > > > On Fri, Aug 8, 2014 at 6:46 PM, Doug <dk...@q.com> wrote: > > 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 > > > > >