placenta jelly drink

I’m not really sure what health benefits pig placenta would have for humans, but it seems we appreciate other mammal’s natural functions than we do our own.

9 Responses to “placenta jelly drink”

  1. on 08 Apr 2008 at 3:42 pm Lisa Barrett

    My new project. Collect all placenta’s of attended births, zap in blender with added peaches. Sell back to clients as fantastic regenerating medicine.

  2. on 08 Apr 2008 at 11:29 pm Katie

    O_______________X

    That is pretty much all I can say about that.

    Don’t pig mothers eat their placenta? I thought most mammals did O_o

  3. on 09 Apr 2008 at 6:40 am Cammeron

    I recently bought some “henna ‘n’ placenta” hair conditioner from the Wallgreens down the street. Don’t know why I bought it…I’m putting it on the *dead* part of my hair, afterall. I guess I just wanted to put placenta on my head. Dear, dead, Dr. Freud would have a field day with me.

  4. on 09 Apr 2008 at 3:33 pm abundant b'earth

    In my part-time life as a health food store retail whore, I try not to say snarky things to customers such as “Sure, bovine colostrum is totally awesome…..if you’re a BABY COW!”

  5. on 09 Apr 2008 at 8:09 pm HollyRhea

    Don’t tell anyone: I totally ate my baby’s placenta.

  6. on 09 Apr 2008 at 11:51 pm Toni

    Isn’t that the truth? I’m at a total loss for words. :PPPP

  7. on 10 Apr 2008 at 7:09 pm plain midwife

    Goodness gracious. What a commodity. Pig Placenta Jelly Drink. Making your own sounds like a good idea Lisa. Maybe strawberries and bananas can be added also. Maybe it can be a frozen confection.
    yikes

  8. on 13 Apr 2008 at 10:27 pm UmmZahra

    *gulps*

    yummy

  9. on 16 Apr 2008 at 5:09 pm Sarah Stewart

    Completely off topic!

    FYI:

    Online seminar for midwives: What does professional activity have to do with midwifery competence?

    Details:
    http://sarah-stewart.blogspot.com/2008/04/online-seminar-for-midwives-what-does.html

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