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About wasabi - I don't know specifically about the " extract " but

living in Japan I have seen paper sheets impregnated with wasabi

(extract?) that you place on top of a Japanese obento (boxed rice

lunch) to keep it from spoiling so easily. This was a few years ago

so I'm not sure they're still available. But it's true - wasabi and

ginger apparently both have some sort of antibacterial/antiparasite

effect. I doubt that's why people originally started eating them, they

just eat it because it tastes great with sashimi. But somebody must

have put two and two together about being/staying healthier when using

them. And now I'm quite sure it's been scientifically proven. I can't

help you with where to get the extract though, sorry.

 

Barb S.

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You should be able to get the extract from a Japanese grocery store. My

mother-in-law is from Japan and I asked her about it. She told me to check at

the Japanese grocery store that's about 20 miles from here.If you don't have an

Asian grocery store near you, I can check on it next time I'm at that store. We

go about once or twice a month. I think it tastes a lot like horse radish.

Paula ........in Michigan

Coming soon Farm Fresh Soaps & Candles

paula

 

 

 

About wasabi - I don't know specifically about the " extract " but

living in Japan I have seen paper sheets impregnated with wasabi

(extract?) that you place on top of a Japanese obento (boxed rice

lunch) to keep it from spoiling so easily. This was a few years ago

so I'm not sure they're still available. But it's true - wasabi and

ginger apparently both have some sort of antibacterial/antiparasite

effect. I doubt that's why people originally started eating them, they

just eat it because it tastes great with sashimi. But somebody must

have put two and two together about being/staying healthier when using

them. And now I'm quite sure it's been scientifically proven. I can't

help you with where to get the extract though, sorry.

 

Barb S.

 

 

 

 

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Really...well, wasabe is Japanese horseraddish used mostly with sushi...perhaps,

it is some kind of Vita E Sugar substance??

dunno why they would use that.

funny.

Hugs,

Nessy

 

hahagranny wrote:

Is anyone familiar with wasabi extract? I bought a soap yesterday, liked

the sponge concept. But anyway, one of the ingredients is: wasabe extract

(natural preservative). Is this so? I have never heard of it before, which, of

course, does not mean anything. Any experience/info with it?

 

God Bless You and Yours,

Georgia (hahagranny)

~~~~~~Life is not measured by the number of breaths you take but by the

moments that take your breath away~~~~~~

 

 

 

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JMHO, it could be the antibacterial properties. I know a lot of people who'd try

it on that count alone.

HTH,

Serra

 

 

" Nessy Saylor (Rodney's Wife) " wrote:

 

> Really...well, wasabe is Japanese horseraddish used mostly with

sushi...perhaps, it is some kind of Vita E Sugar substance??

> dunno why they would use that.

> funny.

> Hugs,

> Nessy

>

> hahagranny wrote:

> Is anyone familiar with wasabi extract? I bought a soap yesterday, liked

> the sponge concept. But anyway, one of the ingredients is: wasabe extract

> (natural preservative). Is this so? I have never heard of it before, which, of

> course, does not mean anything. Any experience/info with it?

>

> God Bless You and Yours,

> Georgia (hahagranny)

 

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> hahagranny wrote:

> Is anyone familiar with wasabi extract? I bought a soap yesterday,

liked

> the sponge concept. But anyway, one of the ingredients is: wasabe

extract

> (natural preservative). Is this so? I have never heard of it before,

which, of

> course, does not mean anything. Any experience/info with it?

>

> God Bless You and Yours,

> Georgia (hahagranny)

 

Hi Georgia,

 

Never heard of that before (I've heard of wasabi, but not the extract as

a preservative). I found this snippet of info about wasabi as a

preservative

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

<http://www.cityfarmer.org/wasabi.html>

http://www.cityfarmer.org/wasabi.html

 

" Potential industrial applications for the bioactive compounds of Wasabi

are antibiotics (this feature of course also has medicinal value),

fungicides and as a wood preservative. It has long been known that

Wasabi contains natural antibiotics and this feature helped bring Wasabi

into Japanese cuisine as long as 1300 years ago. This knowledge has been

scientifically validated in studies (Hasegawa et al. 1998, Ono et al.

1998, Shin and Lee 1999) that have shown Wasabi extracts to inhibit the

growth of food poisoning types of bacteria. Recent research, done in

Canada (Soledade et al. 1998) has shown that Wasabi contains antifungal

metabolites that render the plant resistant to virulent isolates of the

blackleg fungus. This fungus can devastate commercially important crops

such as the oilseed plants rapeseed and canola. Thus, there is a

potential here to develop a natural (organic) fungicide for this

industry.

 

Lastly, there have been indications that Wasabi extracts may be

effective natural wood preservatives. Several years ago, the Wasabi

Kyokai (Japanese National Wasabi Association) approached a major

Canadian Industry Association to see if there would be any Canadian

interest in participating in the development of a " natural source "

Wasabi-based wood preservative as an alternative to the toxic chemically

based wood preservatives, which continue to be methodically regulated

out of use. At the same time, the Wasabi Kyokai also expressed an

interest in looking at British Columbia as a potential source of cold

fresh water mountain streams for traditional Wasabi production. There

was no Canadian-side follow-up at the time. "

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

So its a good wood preservative it seems ... *lol* ;)

 

It MAY work for soaps and such, but I would think it'd have the

potential to be an irritant though .. ? Until more info is out there

about it I'd be a bit leery of using it myself to be honest.

 

*Smile*

Chris (list mom)

 

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This explains why when my brother-in-law was in high school and developed

athlete's foot, his mother told him to wash his feet with some ground wasabi. It

cleared up his foot problem. Anytime you go around my mother-in-law with the

sniffles, she'll tell you to have a sandwich and to put some wasabi on it.

Paula ........in Michigan

Coming soon Farm Fresh Soaps & Candles

paula

 

 

Hi Georgia,

 

Never heard of that before (I've heard of wasabi, but not the extract as

a preservative). I found this snippet of info about wasabi as a

preservative

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~

 

<http://www.cityfarmer.org/wasabi.html>

http://www.cityfarmer.org/wasabi.html

 

" Potential industrial applications for the bioactive compounds of Wasabi

are antibiotics (this feature of course also has medicinal value),

fungicides and as a wood preservative. It has long been known that

Wasabi contains natural antibiotics and this feature helped bring Wasabi

into Japanese cuisine as long as 1300 years ago...........................

 

 

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