Yemenis
Recognize Medicinal Benefits of Honey
AP Blog From
Yemen
Donna Abu-Nasr,
Associated Press, 2/22/2006
Yemenis have
honey for dessert. After a meal, they dip bananas in the thick, sweet liquid,
the color of which varies from amber to black. Or it's poured in circles over a
huge round pastry that tastes like chewy puff pastry.
But that's not
its only use. Long before honey stores cropped up about three decades ago,
honey was used mainly for medicinal purposes. It was not sold commercially;
rather, jars were presented as gifts.
Today, the
medicinal benefits of honey are touted by honey stores, which display jars of honey-laced
cream to treat everything from hemorrhoids to back pain, fatigue to dry skin.
The shelves the jars are on look like beehives.
There's also the
"newlyweds mix," honey spiked with ginseng and herbal extracts that
salesmen promote as an aphrodisiac.
"We give it
to men and women who come to us with sexual problems," said salesman Ahmed
al-Nahari. "Honey is a good aphrodisiac." . . .
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