External Brain 03 Oct 2005 03:46 am
licorice for heartburn
Occasionally if I take my pills too close to bedtime, I get some pretty unpleasant heartburn. I did that today, and then there were those delicious leftover potatoes that I was too foolish to ignore. Ow. Dumb of me.
Propping myself up in a comfy chair was not as comfortable as I’d like, so I went googling for home remedies for heartburn. Turns out that licorice is one such remedy. As it happens, I had a package of Zagarese licorice tronchettini which I’d bought not for their herbal properties but because they’re weirdly delicious. It’s an acquired taste. They’re small pellets of licorice extract with a little added citrus flavor. This sounded a heck of a lot more pleasant than breaking out the baking soda, and therefore worth trying.
I will be damned. It worked, and it was fast about it. After ten tronchettini and five or ten minutes, about 90% of the discomfort is gone, which is easily enough to let me go back to bed. Hooray! Goodnight!
(But first, let me note that herbs are not necessarily safe. Licorice in particular should probably not be used by people who have high blood pressure or heart disease or who are pregnant, unless under medical supervision — and even then I’d wonder. My blood pressure tends to be quite low, but still I personally would not indulge in genuine whole licorice extract every day for more than a few days. You likely know or can guess all this stuff, but I feel I should say it anyway. Blah blah, natural doesn’t mean safe, blah blah.)
3 Responses to “licorice for heartburn”
on 22 Sep 2006 at 4:50 pm 1.Heartburn Resources said …
I just came across your blog while doing some research on heartburn. That tip on licorice is quite interesting. Thanks.
on 28 Sep 2006 at 1:11 pm 2.hbr said …
I enjoy licorice as well yet I generally avoid it (though not always) as I thought I read somewhere that it wasn’t good for high blood pressure.
on 28 Sep 2006 at 6:26 pm 3.Cam Sculpin said …
Yes. Thus, “Licorice in particular should probably not be used by people who have high blood pressure”.
I can’t tell from the wording whether these comments are spam or just the unobservant ramblings of heartburn otakus, but they sure look spammy. I’m yanking the commenters’ URLs and closing comments here.