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Brain Teaser: What Aromatherapy Oil am I?
By Michelle Clampit

Can you identify what plant this essential oil comes from?

Joey Dee and The Starlighters sang a Top-10 hit about me called "______ Twist" in 1962.
Traditional folk remedy uses me as a digestive aid.
I was the first LifeSavers flavor.
Clinical studies have shown that I significantly reduced the pain in irritable bowel syndrome.
In India they hang fresh bunches in doorways and open windows allowing the breeze to carry the scent throughout
the house. The aroma is said to symbolize hospitality.
I am a popular toothpaste flavor.
My leaves were given as an “after dinner mint.”
Even one of Charlie Brown's friend's is named after me!
Some people rub me on their foreheads and temples to ease a headache.
I am one of the world's oldest medicinal herbs, with use documented in ancient Egypt, Greece, and Rome.
A mojito just wouldn’t be as clean or refreshing without me.
A red and white striped candy is made with me during the Christmas holidays.
To view this brain teaser with graphics, click here.

If you haven’t guessed by now, I’m the ever popular, peppermint oil. This oil is used both for health benefits as well as
for flavoring. Many people think it is not safe to eat any essential oils, and they are partially correct. Just as there are
some plants that are poisonous, there are some essential oils that should never be eaten. Peppermint, however, is
not one of them. Not only is peppermint oil safe to eat, assuming that you buy a pure grade oil, it is one of the most
popular flavorings around. Think that is a coincidence? Think again. There is a reason after dinner mints are so popular.

Peppermint oil helps to stimulate bile, thereby aiding digestion. It reduces indigestion and colonic spasms by reducing
the gastro colic reflex. So next time you eat something that doesn’t agree with you, consider the health benefits of
peppermint oil. Something as simple as a strong breath mint or a drop of peppermint oil in water just might feel as
refreshing to your body as it does to your breathe.

Resources:
1. Dew MJ, Evans BK, Rhodes J. Peppermint oil for the irritable bowel syndrome: a multicentre trial. Br J Clin Pract. 1984;
(11–12):394, 398.
2. Spirling LI, Daniels IR. Botanical perspectives on health peppermint: more than just an after-dinner mint. J R Soc
Health. 2001 Mar;121(1):62-3.

For recipes using peppermint oil or to see the Brain Teaser Oil of the Week for fun trivia, go to
http://www.
healthyaromas.com.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/