How to make a Golden Milk drink that helps your gums

How to make a Golden Milk drink that helps your gums

Personally I’ve never acquired the taste for coffee, even though I quite like the smell. I’ve long been grateful that I’m not exposed to coffee’s health hazards, for both oral and general health. However, disliking coffee (and regular tea) has often been socially awkward for me. I never take an invitation to ‘catch up for coffee’ literally.

So I was thrilled the first time I saw Golden Milk on a cafe menu: at last there is a delicious, warm drink that is jammed with ingredients that nourish teeth and gums. It goes by many names: Golden Latte. Golden Milk or  Golden Tea, and Turmeric Tea.

Anti-inflammatory Turmeric

There are also as many flavor variations as there are fancy coffees in a Starbucks but they all have turmeric in common, which gives it the golden glow and the powerful anti-inflammatory qualities.

Turmeric’s healing powers

The benefits of consuming turmeric extend to the whole body, but because we are focusing on oral health I’ll just mention a few of its amazing powers.  Turmeric is

  •  Anti-Inflammatory
  • Antioxidant
  • Wound Healing
  • Anti-microbial.

Whether your gums are just starting to recede or you are dealing with chronic periodontal disease, turmeric can help to heal and prevent inflamed gums, abscesses and infections.

 

How to make Golden Milk for gum health

To get the full benefits of turmeric it should be consumed:

  1. warm (or at least room temperature)
  2. with fat for absorption
  3. with black pepper to activate the turmeric.

Extra teeth healing value comes from using butter and  raw milk or bone broth,- all powerful teeth and gum healing foods.

Keep these three things in mind as you take the basic recipe below and adapt it to your preferences and need. Experiment- its hard to go too wrong!

 

Golden Milk basic recipe

Makes one serve.

  • 1 cup raw milk or whole organic milk or coconut milk or activated almond milk or bone broth or water
  • ½ teaspoon or more powdered turmeric, fresh turmeric or fermented turmeric paste
  • dash of black pepper
  • ½-1+ teaspoon butter (or coconut oil)

Optional extras

  • ¼+ teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • ¼+ teaspoon ground ginger or grated fresh ginger
  • ¼ tsp cardamom powder  (or 1 pod split)
  • pinch of cayenne pepper
  • 1/2 -1 teaspoons raw honey or 1-5  drops pure liquid stevia or maple syrup

Mix all ingredients in a small saucepan over low heat for 5-10 minutes but do NOT bring to the boil.
Whisk well to to blend and foam.

If using fresh turmeric ginger or cardamom strain out the lumpy bits.
Serve warm in a mug garnished with a sprinkle of cinnamon or turmeric.

 

Check out Feed Your Teeth my FREE e-guide for more teeth and gum healing nutrition.

Meliors Simms headshot

Hello! I'm Meliors Simms, the Holistic Tooth Fairy.

As a natural oral health coach I have worked with hundreds of clients worldwide to avoid unnecessary dental procedures and have better experiences with the necessary ones. (Find out about my coaching services here).

After a diverse career (from research to counselling to arts) and a lifetime of terrible teeth, I stumbled on an Alt Oral approach which prevented what would have been my 7th root canal.

That inspired years of independent research and experimentation, eventually resulting in my uniquely holistic approach to oral health.

My new book The Secret Lives of Teeth is a comprehensive guide to healing teeth and gums with metaphysical perspective. Read a sample here for free

.

 

Alt Oral Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry® by Dr Mark Breiner

  Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry: A complete guide to understanding the impact of dentistry on total healthby Dr Mark A. Breiner DDS (2011)         In the small but horrifying Alt-Oral publishing sub-genre of 'what's wrong with dentistry', 'Whole Body...

Removing Root Canals

How long can a root canal last? In Part 1 of this two part article about root canals, I told the story of my first, traumatic, root canal on a front tooth more than thirty years ago. I still have that root canal right in the front of my mouth. Over the years it...

Learning to love liver to prevent a root canal

How far would you go to prevent a root canal? For a genuine super-food, liver gets a very bad rap but eating it helped me to prevent a root canal five years ago, and any significant cavities since then. I hated liver, and shuddered at the thought of eating it, but I...

How to protect your teeth from sugar damage

How to protect your teeth from sugar damage

Protect teeth from holiday sweets

What can you do to protect your teeth from sugar when you succumb to sweet temptation?

We all know that sugar is bad for your teeth, but it can be hard to resist, especially at certain times of the year when sweet treats are everywhere: at parties, as gifts, even as decorations!

Protect teeth from hidden sugars

As well as the obvious sugars in desserts, candy, cookies and cakes, there are also sugars lurking in:

  • fruit: fresh, dried and juiced
  • alcohol which is basically fermented sugars
  • processed foods
  • savory foods (eg salad dressing, sauce, bread)
  • breakfast cereals and snack bars

Sugar is hard to avoid, even when you are trying. Most people have a sweet tooth to some degree, and some of us are definitely addicts!

I gave up eating sugar a few years ago, but I had already healed my chronic tooth decay by then, so it is possible to eat sugar and take good care of your teeth. 

In fact, the teeth healing diet that cured my cavities actually made it easier to (eventually) become sugar free!

IIn this short video I share six simple tips that will help protect your teeth from sugar when you just can’t resist it!  (2.5 minute watch time)

Six tips to protect teeth from sugar damage

1. Try to limit sugary foods and drinks to mealtimes, not inbetween.

2. If you are going to snack on sweets, eat some healthy fats at the same time (eg cream, yoghurt or coconut oil).

3. If you are going to eat lollies, chocolate (preferably dark) is less harmful than candy canes or chewy toffees.

4, Avoid snacking or sucking on sweets over an extended period of time. The less time your teeth spend bathed in sugar, the better.

5. Rinse your mouth with water straight after eating anything sweet.

6. Wait 30-60 minutes before brushing your teeth, because tooth enamel is soft and vulnerable to scratching for up to an hour after you eat.

Meliors Simms headshot

Hello! I'm Meliors Simms, the Holistic Tooth Fairy.

As a natural oral health coach I have worked with hundreds of clients worldwide to avoid unnecessary dental procedures and have better experiences with the necessary ones. (Find out about my coaching services here).

After a diverse career (from research to counselling to arts) and a lifetime of terrible teeth, I stumbled on an Alt Oral approach which prevented what would have been my 7th root canal.

That inspired years of independent research and experimentation, eventually resulting in my uniquely holistic approach to oral health.

My new book The Secret Lives of Teeth is a comprehensive guide to healing teeth and gums with metaphysical perspective. Read a sample here for free

.

 

Alt Oral Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry® by Dr Mark Breiner

  Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry: A complete guide to understanding the impact of dentistry on total healthby Dr Mark A. Breiner DDS (2011)         In the small but horrifying Alt-Oral publishing sub-genre of 'what's wrong with dentistry', 'Whole Body...

Removing Root Canals

How long can a root canal last? In Part 1 of this two part article about root canals, I told the story of my first, traumatic, root canal on a front tooth more than thirty years ago. I still have that root canal right in the front of my mouth. Over the years it...

Learning to love liver to prevent a root canal

How far would you go to prevent a root canal? For a genuine super-food, liver gets a very bad rap but eating it helped me to prevent a root canal five years ago, and any significant cavities since then. I hated liver, and shuddered at the thought of eating it, but I...

How to heal cavities naturally

How to heal cavities naturally

Our natural inclination to heal cavities

Most people are surprised when they learn how easy it is to heal cavities naturally without fillings.  Small cavities are the easiest to heal because they come and go all the time in our teeth.

You probably never even realise that you have a most of the small cavities you’ve experienced because they have already been healed naturally before you feel pain or sensitivity. Cavities can come and go in a matter of a few weeks so if that happens in between dental checkups, no one will notice!

What causes small cavities to appear?

Cavities develop when something in your life causes your body to draw down the store of minerals out of your teeth enamel.

It might be an illness, a medication or a change in your diet.  

Often cavities can be triggered by a stressful move, job loss or breakup.

Pregnancy and breastfeeding place have long been recognsied as placing great demands on your teeth (there used to be a saying ‘for every baby a tooth’ because it was so common to lose a tooth with each child). 

What causes small cavities to disappear?

In the normal course of events when you are basically healthy and when your body is no longer under the stress that causes it draw on the strength of your enamel, it will automatically naturally start to remineralize.  

Certain glands produce hormones that drive the remineralization process. A healthy diet and low stress levels help to keep those glands functioning properly. 

A healthy body will start pushing nutrients back into the teeth as soon as its able to, and the cavity will remineralize leaving no evidence that it was even there. 

 

How to deliberately heal cavities naturally

What holistic teeth healing strategies do is harness that natural inclination of the body to heal small cavities. With deliberate effort we can accelerate and encourage the body’s natural remineralization processes.

In practice, that usually means adding in missing nutrients to nourish and replenish the teeth.

It also involves releasing physical and energetic blocks that may have been inhibiting the body’s natural healing functions.

When we can identify the underlying cause of the cavity, address that issue we are also able to prevent more cavities developing in the future.

All this can be done without any need for dental drilling, filling and billing!

 

Check out my Feed Your Teeth e-book to learn more about the types of food that support your body’s natural remineralization processes.

Meliors Simms headshot

Hello! I'm Meliors Simms, the Holistic Tooth Fairy.

As a natural oral health coach I have worked with hundreds of clients worldwide to avoid unnecessary dental procedures and have better experiences with the necessary ones. (Find out about my coaching services here).

After a diverse career (from research to counselling to arts) and a lifetime of terrible teeth, I stumbled on an Alt Oral approach which prevented what would have been my 7th root canal.

That inspired years of independent research and experimentation, eventually resulting in my uniquely holistic approach to oral health.

My new book The Secret Lives of Teeth is a comprehensive guide to healing teeth and gums with metaphysical perspective. Read a sample here for free

.

 

Alt Oral Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry® by Dr Mark Breiner

  Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry: A complete guide to understanding the impact of dentistry on total healthby Dr Mark A. Breiner DDS (2011)         In the small but horrifying Alt-Oral publishing sub-genre of 'what's wrong with dentistry', 'Whole Body...

Removing Root Canals

How long can a root canal last? In Part 1 of this two part article about root canals, I told the story of my first, traumatic, root canal on a front tooth more than thirty years ago. I still have that root canal right in the front of my mouth. Over the years it...

Learning to love liver to prevent a root canal

How far would you go to prevent a root canal? For a genuine super-food, liver gets a very bad rap but eating it helped me to prevent a root canal five years ago, and any significant cavities since then. I hated liver, and shuddered at the thought of eating it, but I...

How to cure tooth decay on a tight budget

How to cure tooth decay on a tight budget

Holistic strategies to cure tooth decay and prevent cavities will save you money, pain and unnecessary dental interventions. However, for those of us on a tight budget, the teeth healing diet in Ramiel Nagel’s book Cure Tooth Decay can seem out of reach at first glance.  This is the book that enabled me to prevent what would have been my seventh root canal  and any significant cavities for the past five years. It provides detailed instructions for an ‘ideal’ teeth healing diet which I have never followed strictly, due to the limitations of my own budget, local availability, preferences, intolerances or addictions.

What foods are the priority to cure your tooth decay?

Good quality food and supplements don’t come cheap, but that doesn’t have to mean holistic teeth healing is as expensive as good quality dental care. I’m often asked what I eat for my teeth and today’s post was prompted by a reader emailing me to ask what strategies I would prioritise on a tight budget. Since I’m naturally frugal, and under the constraints of starting a business right now, this is a very timely question. However, what works for my teeth, won’t necessarily work for yours. Every body’s body is different, and the causes of tooth decay are complex and personal. You will need to experiment and find the most effective strategies that work for you within your budget. I recommend refering to my teeth healing food ladder my FREE ebook, Feed Your Teeth.  I created this ladder both to summarise the main features of the teeth healing diet detailed in Cure Tooth Decay, and as a guide for interpreting it to suit your circumstances, whether you are vegan, broke, geographically unable to access fresh produce, or otherwise needing to compromise. The trick is to eat as high on the ladder as you can afford and have access to and to avoid the teeth harming foods at the bottom of the ladder as much as possible.

Inexpensive Teeth Healing Foods

Shop wisely

  • Liver and other organ meats
  • Canned fish such as tuna, salmon and sardines- eat the skin and bones as this is where much of the teeth healing value can be found
  • White rice instead of brown rice or quinoa or pasta etc
  • Seasonal local vegetables. Grow your own or seek out bargains such as greens from Asian grocers is often much cheaper than mainstream spinach or fashionable kale
  • Foraged, wild foods and ‘weeds’ such as nettle and dandelion which are mineral-rich, full of flavor and a regular part of my diet. To learn more about foraging for teeth healing herbs I recommend Alternatives to Dentists, a video course from Marjorie Wildcraft (affiliate link).

Cook from scratch

Making food from scratch is always going to be healthier and can often be cheaper than buying pre-prepared ingredients or meals.

  • Bone broth made into vegetable soup or risotto
  • Cooking and freezing or fermenting a glut of vegetables when in season. Fermented foods help your digestion to assimilate teeth healing nutrients from the rest of your food.
  • Stews. casseroles and soups made with cheap cuts of meat with the bone in eg goat shank, ox tail. The slow cooking helps to release teeth healing minerals from the bones and cartilage.

Investing a little extra to cure tooth decay

Where I do choose to invest more money for teeth healing nutrition is usually on a small selection of staple foods of very high, though not highest, quality, and one supplement.  As a household of two adults living in New Zealand, we spend about $75 per week on these foods (which is about $25 more than we could spend on less healing, or harmful, versions of these staples).

Cod Liver Oil

Nordic Naturals Arctic Cod Liver Oil (without added vitamin D) is cold-pressed so not quite as teeth healing as the fermented brands of Green Pastures and Rosita. However, it is the brand I healed, and have maintained, my teeth with so it works well enough for me at about $50 per month. I order it online from I-Herb which is the most affordable source of high quality supplements and has unbelievably cheap postage- even to New Zealand.  (This is a rewards link, so if you do choose to purchase from I-Herb you will receive 5% off of your order, and I may receive a small discount on my next order too. Win win!)

Non-organic, grass-fed Butter

I’m lucky to live in the heart of dairy country in New Zealand, where grass-fed butter is the norm. New Zealand’s Anchor butter is exported to many countries and is one of the most affordable high-quality fast-grass-growth butters. I look out for it on special and freeze it (about $4 per week).

Sourdough bread

Slow-ferment sourdough is the least teeth-harming bread, so if you are access to a good sourdough bakery, or time to make your own slow fermented loaves this is a worthwhile investment about $6 per week.

Raw milk

When I can get it, I invest about $14 /week in raw milk. Raw milk is illegal to sell retail in most parts of the world, but in many places people get around the rules with creative solutions such as co-owning herds or purchasing directly from the farmer. Because raw milk is one of the best sources of  Activator-X (the super teeth-healing nutrient found only in a very few foods) it is worth going to the trouble and expense of seeking it out. However, if raw milk is not an option, invest in the best possible pasteurized milk:

  • full-fat, whole milk as the most teeth healing nutrients are in the creamy milk fats
  • grass-fed milk, especially in spring and summer when the grass grows fastest producing Activator X
  • non-homogenised (homogenised milk may be actively harmful for teeth)
  • fresh (not UHT or powdered which are actively teeth harming)

Free range, pastured, eggs

Eggs are a great source of protein, especially when eaten raw (I blend them with raw milk for a breakfast smoothie every day). Eggs from chickens fed only grain will not be so teeth healing, so avoid ‘cage-free’ or battery eggs. Even if grain is the majority of a chicken’s diet, eggs from pastured chickens that also eat grass and insects will be more nutritious for your teeth than cheaper eggs at $16/week.

Organic pasteurized cheese

Mainland brand cheese in New Zealand sells a block of milk organic cheddar cheese. It’s usually a few dollars more expensive than the equivalent non-organic cheese, but it does a better job of helping to cure tooth decay by being reliably grass-fed and free from GM feeds, pesticides and herbicides all of which inhibit the body’s ability to create teeth healing hormones and proteins.  I look out for it on special and buy in bulk when I can for about $6/week.

Other affordable holistic strategies to cure tooth decay

Avoiding teeth harming foods at the bottom of the ladder in the Feed Your Teeth e-book can do almost as much to heal your teeth as adding in actively teeth healing foods. Cleaning your mouth with homemade toothpaste and mouthwash can be as effective as expensive alternatives and much cheaper. Relax your jaw daily with my curated list of TMJ self-help exercises on You Tube. This will help your teeth from cracking and chipping, keep them straighter, and save you money on a nightguard and even more expensive adjustments.

Note

All links on this page are to my affiliate partners. I only recommend products and sellers I use and love myself- and as a very frugal fairy, affordability is as important to me as quality. If you choose to purchase through any of these links I may receive a small payment or discount. Win win!

Meliors Simms headshot

Hello! I'm Meliors Simms, the Holistic Tooth Fairy.

As a natural oral health coach I have worked with hundreds of clients worldwide to avoid unnecessary dental procedures and have better experiences with the necessary ones. (Find out about my coaching services here).

After a diverse career (from research to counselling to arts) and a lifetime of terrible teeth, I stumbled on an Alt Oral approach which prevented what would have been my 7th root canal.

That inspired years of independent research and experimentation, eventually resulting in my uniquely holistic approach to oral health.

My new book The Secret Lives of Teeth is a comprehensive guide to healing teeth and gums with metaphysical perspective. Read a sample here for free

.

 

Alt Oral Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry® by Dr Mark Breiner

  Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry: A complete guide to understanding the impact of dentistry on total healthby Dr Mark A. Breiner DDS (2011)         In the small but horrifying Alt-Oral publishing sub-genre of 'what's wrong with dentistry', 'Whole Body...

Removing Root Canals

How long can a root canal last? In Part 1 of this two part article about root canals, I told the story of my first, traumatic, root canal on a front tooth more than thirty years ago. I still have that root canal right in the front of my mouth. Over the years it...

Learning to love liver to prevent a root canal

How far would you go to prevent a root canal? For a genuine super-food, liver gets a very bad rap but eating it helped me to prevent a root canal five years ago, and any significant cavities since then. I hated liver, and shuddered at the thought of eating it, but I...

Pleasurable eating: Foods that relieve tooth sensitivity

Pleasurable eating: Foods that relieve tooth sensitivity

Sensitive and tentative

I had just walked for two blissful hours along a beautiful coastline on a hot summer’s day and arrived at a beachside cafe famous for its homemade ice creams. Taking my time to select a scoop each of lemon sorbet and salted caramel, I carried my cone down to enjoy it on the warm sand.Licking the ice cream delicately, I tried to channel its sweetness along the centre of my tongue. But, inevitably an icy mouthful met my molars in a jolt of electric pain. Tears flooded my eyes as I winced and my shoulders tensed involuntarily, my happy mood spoiled.Despite special sensitive-teeth toothpaste, vigilant flossing and regular dental visits, food was an unreliable pleasure in those days. Hot soup, crunchy apples and honey on toast were all risky pleasures before I learned the secrets of holistic teeth health.

Feed your teeth

Then, five years ago I tried out a teeth healing diet in a desperate (and successful) attempt to avoid yet another root canal.  The same strategies which cured that root pain have made my teeth so strong and resilient that temperature sensitivity is now a thing of the past, along with cavities.

Nutrition is the key to hard, glassy tooth enamel because our teeth are alive and a healthy body constantly replenishes the enamel.  Nutrients flow from the digestive system, through vital organs producing hormones and proteins, to be delivered via the bloodstream into the roots of our teeth where they finally pulse outwards from the dentin to the enamel.

With the right nutrients flowing from the inside of the tooth to the surface, enamel remineralizes continuously. In healthy teeth, the sensitive nerves in the dentin are protected by a strong enamel shell which actively repels decay-forming bacteria.

Sensitivity caused by weak enamel and receding gums can be relieved by eating whole foods rich in fat-soluble vitamins A and D, vitamin C and minerals.  These nutrients contribute to teeth and gum health best when eaten as whole foods rather than isolated in supplements.

Foods to relieve tooth sensitivity

The teeth healing diet includes lots of animal protein in the form of grass-fed meat; organ meat especially liver; bone broth, raw dairy, and eggs along with fresh nutrient-dense vegetables and fruit. Although grains, beans, nuts and seeds, sugar and processed foods are mostly harmful for teeth, it is possible to relieve sensitivity just by adding the necessary nutrients without depriving yourself of foods you consider essential.

I found that regularly eating an abundance of the delicious food needed for teeth health gradually displaced my attachment to sweets and other teeth harming foods. (I avoid ice cream now, not because it’s cold, but because I have lost my sweet tooth!)

I’ve summarised the teeth healing diet that I follow into a short, user-friendly guide which you can download for free.

A few of the tastiest foods to relieve tooth sensitivity:

Grass Fed Butter

Your teeth love butter! It is rich in fat soluble Vitamin A which is essential for teeth healing, so feel free to slather it on vegetables and sourdough bread daily. In fact, full-fat dairy products in general are teeth healing. Try raw milk if you can get it, otherwise enjoy the creamy goodness of non-homogenised full-fat organic milk, double cream, yogurt and all kinds of cheese.

Pate

Chicken-liver pate is teeth healing dynamite! The combination of vitamin D-laden livers with the vitamin A in butter and cream makes this a treat to eat often.

Liver holds a special place in every traditional cuisine because it is essential for growth and health. Liver was often served to pregnant women and small children.

What was the traditional liver dish at your grandparent’s table? That’s the one you should be eating every week for your teeth.

Caviar

Caviar like all fish eggs,is packed with a powerful punch of teeth healing vitamin D, more by weight than most land animal eggs, meat or organs.

Indulge, celebrate, treat yourself to caviar, or look out for the more affordable fish roe sold in season at good fishmongers.  Its distinctive salty fishy taste is quite addictive and can be eaten as often as you want.

Bone Broth

Bone broth is liquid gold for teeth. Broth is enjoying stardom as a super food trend right now, for the same reason our grandmothers loved it.  Full of minerals, vitamins and collagen it is easy to digest and cheap to make.

Simmer leftover bones from meat, chicken or fish with a splash of vinegar to extract all the goodness. Drink it straight or use as a base for soup, risotto or sauces.  Up to 3 cups per day will see your teeth remineralising and sensitivity disappearing.

Originally published at Sixty and Me
Meliors Simms headshot

Hello! I'm Meliors Simms, the Holistic Tooth Fairy.

As a natural oral health coach I have worked with hundreds of clients worldwide to avoid unnecessary dental procedures and have better experiences with the necessary ones. (Find out about my coaching services here).

After a diverse career (from research to counselling to arts) and a lifetime of terrible teeth, I stumbled on an Alt Oral approach which prevented what would have been my 7th root canal.

That inspired years of independent research and experimentation, eventually resulting in my uniquely holistic approach to oral health.

My new book The Secret Lives of Teeth is a comprehensive guide to healing teeth and gums with metaphysical perspective. Read a sample here for free

.

 

Alt Oral Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry® by Dr Mark Breiner

  Book Review: Whole Body Dentistry: A complete guide to understanding the impact of dentistry on total healthby Dr Mark A. Breiner DDS (2011)         In the small but horrifying Alt-Oral publishing sub-genre of 'what's wrong with dentistry', 'Whole Body...

Removing Root Canals

How long can a root canal last? In Part 1 of this two part article about root canals, I told the story of my first, traumatic, root canal on a front tooth more than thirty years ago. I still have that root canal right in the front of my mouth. Over the years it...

Learning to love liver to prevent a root canal

How far would you go to prevent a root canal? For a genuine super-food, liver gets a very bad rap but eating it helped me to prevent a root canal five years ago, and any significant cavities since then. I hated liver, and shuddered at the thought of eating it, but I...