Quillaja for Herbal Supplementation User Reviews
- Val...
- Taken for 2 to 5 years
- December 12, 2021
"For years, I'd noticed this trend with certain soft drinks -- choosing Dr. Pepper over root beer at restaurants. And I gravitated toward a specific brand of root beer in the grocery store when Dr. Pepper wasn't available. But with the pandemic and supply shortages, my small-town grocery store only had certain items on occasion. Which led me to buy A&W root beer, even though I never particularly liked that brand. Well, it took a while, but I finally realized that every time I drank the A&W root beer, it severely affected my mental capacity. I felt drowsy, spacey, and mentally impaired. This happened almost immediately, and the effects lasted for a few hours each time. Upon reading the ingredients and comparing them to another brand of root beer, the only difference seemed to be 'quillaja extract.' Since we don't fully know the combined effects of quillaja (itself toxic in certain quantities) and other chemical ingredients, let's be careful when adding this to food or vaccines."
- Sad...
- November 3, 2021
"I've had oral experiences with quillaja in coffees and as food administrations. But the use of this quillaja in medical uses is safer than any other drug on the market today. Other side effects are mild and usually last for 2 to 3 days, including: redness, swelling, tiredness, muscle pain, headache, chills, fever, stomach pain, nausea. So how can they say this doesn't work?? Because it's a cure-all and big pharma would go bankrupt. I'd take any vaccine produced with this."
"So, my mom got me a mocha-flavored coffee foam at TJ Maxx, specifically because I love gourmet coffees and also because I was dieting at the time and it contained 0 sugar. Every time I used it in my coffee I put 3-4 pumps in it. Today I go to read the ingredients which are listed as: water, quillaja saponaria molina (which I'd never heard of until now). So after a little research, it's brought to my attention that it is from the 'Soapbark Tree' and mainly used in the manufacture of soap. A few sites do indicate that it's used as a foaming for coffee, however, I'm not happy about the side effects I've read that it can cause (sneezing, difficulty breathing). Just sharing my experience."