Indigestion Remedies Edison NJ

The next time your stomach aches, take a lesson from the samurai: Eat some umeboshi, a Japanese plum that has been sun dried and pickled in brine. From the 17th to the 19th century, Japanese warriors ate umeboshi to combat stomach complaints and fatigue—and for good reason. With its intensely tart and salty flavor, it helps alleviate indigestion by reducing acidity in the stomach and by restoring the acid-base balance of the body.

Alexander Rapisarda, MD
(732) 238-0923
800 Ryders Ln
East Brunswick, NJ
Business
Digestive Disease Center of New Jersey
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Jeffrey Kalman, MD
(718) 720-5928
129 Slosson Ave
Staten Island, NY
Business
Dr Kalman & Yiachos MD
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
CHARLES ACCURSO
(908) 218-9222
511 COURTYARD DRIVE
HILLSBOROUGH, NJ
Business
DIGESTIVE HEALTHCARE CENTER
Specialties
Gastroenterology, WE OFFER THE FOLLOWING PROCEDURES: COLONOSCOPY UPPER ENDOSCOPY ERCP ENDOSCOPIC ULTRASOUND ANORECTAL MANOMETRY CAPSULE ENDOSCOPY SMART PILL AND OTHERS
Insurance
Insurance Plans Accepted: AETNA, AMERIHEALTH, CCN, CHN, CIGNA, CORESOURCE (PHCS), DEVON, FIRST HEALTH NETWORK, GHI, HEALTHNET, HIP, HORIZON BCBS, LOCAL 825, MAGNACARE, MEDICARE, MEDICHOICE, ONE HEALTH PLAN, OXFORD, PHCS, QUALCARE, UNITED HEALTHCARE, WELLCHOICE
Medicare Accepted: Yes
Workmens Comp Accepted: Yes

Doctor Information
Primary Hospital: SOMERSET MEDICAL CENTER
Residency Training: NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SCHOOL
Medical School: NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SCHOOL, 1984
Additional Information
Member Organizations: AMERICAN SOCIETY OF GASTROINTESTINAL ENDOSCOPY AMERICAN COLLEGE OF GASTROENTEROLOGY NEW JERSEY MEDICAL SOCIETY AMERICANN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION
Awards: NAMED BY CASTLE CONNOLLY GUIDE AS "TOP DOC NY METRO AREA" CONTINUALLY SINCE 2004. ALSO NAMED BY NJ MONTHLY AS A "TOP DOC"
Languages Spoken: English,Spanish,Italian,Korean

Data Provided by:
Barbara E Cencora, MD
(732) 972-6996
50 Franklin Ln
Englishtown, NJ
Business
Marlboro Gastroenterology
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Srinivas Vasireddi, MD
(732) 205-9886
205 Bridge St
Metuchen, NJ
Specialties
Gastroenterology
Gender
Male
Education
Graduation Year: 2007

Data Provided by:
Allan Cohen, MD
(908) 754-7992
1165 Park Ave
Plainfield, NJ
Business
Gastroenterology Associates
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Constantine Yiachos, MD
(718) 720-5928
129 Slosson Ave
Staten Island, NY
Business
Dr Kalman & Yiachos MD
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Jay Zelinski DO
(201) 243-0445
350 Kennedy Blvd
Bayonne, NJ
Specialties
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Srinivas S Vasireddi
(732) 205-9886
205 Bridge St
Metuchen, NJ
Specialty
Gastroenterology

Data Provided by:
Sudha Nahar, MD
2 Ethel Rd
Edison, NJ
Specialties
Gastroenterology
Gender
Female
Education
Medical School: Rnt Med Coll, Univ Of Rajasthan, Udaipur, Rajasthan, India
Graduation Year: 1992

Data Provided by:
Data Provided by:

Healing Foods - RX-Indigestion

Provided by: 

By Emily Yin

The next time your stomach aches, take a lesson from the samurai: Eat some umeboshi, a Japanese plum that has been sun dried and pickled in brine. From the 17th to the 19th century, Japanese warriors ate umeboshi to combat stomach complaints and fatigue—and for good reason. With its intensely tart and salty flavor, it helps alleviate indigestion by reducing acidity in the stomach and by restoring the acid-base balance of the body.

“As the panacea of Japanese food cures, umeboshi is beneficial for imbalances in the body, because it’s a potent alkalizing food,” says Esther Cohen, director of the Seven Bowls School of Nutrition, Nourishment, and Healing in Boulder, Colorado. “It removes stagnation in the body and encourages digestion.”

Normally, when you eat a meal, the stomach releases hydrochloric acid to start digestion. A while later the pancreas secretes bicarbonate, a base, to neutralize the acid. Without that neutralization, pancreatic enzymes can’t function, and the body doesn’t digest food efficiently. The excess acid also irritates your stomach.

Eating too many acid-forming foods, like sugar, refined carbohydrates, and meat can throw the acid-bicarbonate balance out of whack, leading to indigestion. Called the king of alkaline foods, umeboshi offers a zesty way to restore balance. “By taking 10 grams of umeboshi plums, we can neutralize the acidity created by consuming 100 grams of sugar,” Cohen says.

Umeboshi contains high levels of alkaline-forming minerals like calcium, potassium, and magnesium, which help reduce acidity. The plums’ organic acids—primarily citric and phosphoric acid—also help alkalize the body by bonding to the minerals and increasing absorption of them in the gut.

Umeboshi remains a popular Japanese remedy for acidic stomachs and indigestion, especially after eating rich foods. Aficionados usually add umeboshi—found in health food stores and Asian groceries—to rice, tea, or onigiri (rice-balls wrapped in dried seaweed). It also adds zest to broccoli, cabbage, and, when pureed, to cucumber slices and ears of corn. When seasoning sauces or salad dressings, skip the salt in favor of sliced or pureed umeboshi.

Taste it, and if umeboshi’s vibrant pink color—which comes from the shiso herb it’s pickled with—doesn’t grab your attention, the pungent flavor will.

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