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There isn't enough information available to know if miracle fruit is safe.
More evidence is needed to rate the effectiveness of miracle fruit for these uses.
The berry of the miracle fruit plant is used as medicine.
Omar talks about how the miracle fruit makes other food taste better.
At this time there is not enough scientific information to determine an appropriate range of doses for miracle fruit.
In Japan, miracle fruit is popular among patients with diabetes and dieters.
Chris and Aaron talk about how important the miracle fruit is to Omar.
Flavor tripping occurs when you consume a berry known as miracle fruit.
Miracle fruit contains a chemical that affects taste receptors in the tongue.
People take miracle fruit to treat diabetes and correct chemotherapy-related taste disturbances.
Miracle fruit is an evergreen shrub that grows in West Africa.
In foods, miracle fruit is used as a low-calorie sugar-free sweetener.
The appropriate dose of miracle fruit depends on several factors such as the user's age, health, and several other conditions.
Miracle fruit or magic beans, anyone?
Two grams of lettuce leaves produced roughly the same amount of miraculin as in one miracle fruit berry.
Sweet taste induced by miracle fruit (Synsepalum dulcificum).
The 'miracle fruit,' Synsepalum dulcificum is also in Sapotaceae.
Ben and Omar talk about how amazing the Miracle Fruit is and some strange side effects from testing it.
Pregnancy and breast-feeding: Not enough is known about the use of miracle fruit during pregnancy and breast-feeding.
Synsepalum dulcificum (Miracle Fruit, as P. dulcifica)
Miracle fruit, or miracle berry plant (Synsepalum dulcificum), which produces berries that, when eaten, cause sour foods subsequently consumed to taste sweet.
"Cortical Representation of Taste-Modifying Action of Miracle Fruit in Humans."
Magical Fruit LLC, a company in USA selling miracle fruit tablets.
Since the New York Times reported on the phenomenon in May 2008, orders for miracle fruit have surged, as everyone wants in on the tongue tripping action.
Despite the part used being the leaf, one common name of this species is miracle fruit, a name shared by two other species: Synsepalum dulcificum and Thaumatococcus daniellii.
Miraculin is a non-heat-stable protein, subject to denaturation from heating, and thus miracle berries are not taste-bud active when cooked.
He brought her a handful of nuts one time, small sweet berries at another.
Come back downstairs, and we'll do it while we eat the sweet berries."
Through my binoculars I could see them gorging on the sticky, sweet berries.
For example, Philodendron bipinnatifidum white sweet berries are known to be used.
She lived on sweet berries of many colors.
If you have perfectly ripe, sweet berries, you may reduce the sugar called for by half.
She lived on sweet berries of many colors, which always tasted wonderful, and all she wanted or needed was to be happy.
Only after his stomach was full of succulent fish and sweet berries did he feel capable of thinking at all.
Iceland relies on imports for almost any type of sweet fruit except sweet berries.
In August everyone gathers the sweet berries and makes the jam that serves to top the flaky crust all winter long.
After quick negotiations with a vendor, she ripped a few slips from the book and traded them for two pints of the sweet berries.
But the thornless plants that produce the sweet berries Americans prefer to eat are not completely thornless.
She took two bowls from the cupboard of the neat, well-appointed kitchen, then sat down at the table and began to hull the tiny sweet berries.
There is a Gaelic proverb which observes that some of the sweetest berries grow among the sharpest thorns.
These extra-ripe wines have been called jammy, briary, and brambly, having aromas of sweet berries.
CAKES, pies and puddings are dense with sweet berries.
The mutton and tripes were better, as were the cheeses, both hard and soft; some of the last had sweet berries stirred through them.
Spooning up porridge - there were slices of dried plum and some kind of sweet berries in hers - Egwene considered.
'Thank you, no.' I reached for some tiny sweet berries, topping them with something halfway between thick cream and underpressed cheese that, remarkably enough, didn't taste of goat.
Sometimes they returned carrying fruit or sweet berries; sometimes the stickiness around their mouths revealed that they had been milking aphids of their "honeydew".
Sometimes we hit na trees with sticks, making the sweet berries fall, and Tuka would chase me round and round, laughing and yelling like a madman.
"I'm the Lady of the Sea in the musical The Pirate's Pleasure',' Larissa said, finishing the last of the wonder- fully sweet berries.
Dairy farmers were converted to growing the sweet berries that flourish in Finland's 20-hour summer days, simultaneously reducing artery-clogging milk fat and adding heart-friendly vitamin C to diets.
BONA fide strawberry lovers manage to keep their appetites for lush, sweet berries in check until June, when the local crop begins to perfume the fields and farm stands.
For gardeners and the pick-your-owm market, 'Ben Sarek', 'Ben Connan' and 'Big Ben' were introduced and have large, sweet berries.
Sweet taste induced by miracle fruit (Synsepalum dulcificum).
Synsepalum dulcificum, also known as the miracle berry, has the distinctive ability to take away the tongue's ability to detect sour and bitter.
Synsepalum dulcificum (as S. dulcificum )
Synsepalum dulcificum (Miracle Fruit, as P. dulcifica)
Miracle fruit, or miracle berry plant (Synsepalum dulcificum), which produces berries that, when eaten, cause sour foods subsequently consumed to taste sweet.
Synsepalum dulcificum, also known as the miracle fruit, is a plant with a berry that, when eaten, causes sour foods (such as lemons and limes) subsequently consumed to taste sweet.
Bakeriella dulcifica, Bumelia dulcifica, Fruit Miracle, Miracle Berry, Miraculin, Miraculous Berry, Richadellla dulcifica, Sideroxylon dulcificum, Synsepalum dulcificum.
(EUROPEAN FIVE-FINGER GRASS) synonyms Ziziphus sativa (JUJUBE) Synsepalum dulcificum.
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