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Scratchy Throat Soother

Image may contain Cup and Beverage
Photograph by Laura Murray

The medicinal properties of onions have been employed around the world for countless generations—they’re warming, rich in phytonutrients, and help get phlegm moving. Felicia Cocotzin Ruiz, a folk healer who educates on using food as medicine through her brand Kitchen Curandera, pairs alliums with ginger and honey for a soothing, savory-sweet syrup. “This has the same soothing feeling as chicken soup," she says, though she adds that “people dealing with a bad cough should go see a healthcare provider.” Cocotzin Ruiz makes this cough syrup with small, sweet I’itoi onions, which grow in the Sonoran Desert where she lives, but shallots can be substituted without compromise.

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