sign up for the momlogic newsletter

I Ate My Baby's Placenta!

Friday, April 10, 2009
filed under: family

Here's why.

Sandwhich

The practice of placentophagia, eating the placenta, is practiced in many parts of the world, and is said to stem postpartum depression and help to contract the uterus after the birth.

After Chrissy Schilling had her first baby over the weekend, her twin sister Kathy cooked up the placenta and they had a feast. They put it on pasta and on a sandwich. They even put pictures of the meal on Facebook!

Sure, some people thought it was gross -- but that didn't deter the sisters. "I think people being grossed out by this is mostly just 'fear of the unknown,'" Kathy says. "It's the same sort of reaction people have when it even comes to the cuisine of other cultures--what's normal in another culture can seem repulsive to one's own. Happens all the time! Most of the Western world can't even fathom having duck head on the menu, but it doesn't make the food any less acceptable as a meal."

She continues: "When Chrissy first brought up the idea about cooking the placenta, I looked around online and found the most inspiring article about it. The writer's attitude was just all-around positive and even a little playful about the subject, and I thought, 'Hey, this isn't such a big deal after all!' Other medical/health articles about placenta-eating shared the same general consensus--as long as the mother is good and healthy, no harm can come from eating the placenta."

What does she say to the haters? "I think the fact that the placenta is unquestionably attached to the concept of 'baby' (and who doesn't like a cute baby?) probably makes people take the matter personally and forget to look at it more objectively," she says. "The placenta became a simple piece of meat for cooking. And no babies were harmed in the process. That's my take on it."

What are their thoughts on the "meal" itself?

Twin sister Kathy says:

I would say that the placenta is so nourishing for the baby during pregnancy that there is still much to gain from it even after the birth. It's a good 6 lbs of meat that's just chock full of lingering blood, vitamins, and hormones that can still in part be transferred upon eating -- even through cooking. When I cooked it, I cleaned the surface blood off of it, but kept anything that seaped out of it into the sauce. I know I was feeling pretty giddy while eating, so maybe that was some of the happy hormones effects taking place.

The "recipe" was pretty simple, but preparation was very fun! First, I washed off any clots and snipped/tore away the membrane. Websites suggested this, and I imagine it's because it'd be chewy. The umbilical cord required a pair of scissors to cut through and I had to marvel at how incredible tough that piece was! After it was pretty clean, I sliced it into bite-size chunks, and cooked it with the basic ingredients I mentioned on my Facebook album. The taste of the meat itself was surprisingly tasteful (I thought it'd be bland, but it absorbed the flavors of the ingredients very well). It wasn't TOUGH, but not sloppy either. Just the right kind of texture that I like.

New mom Chrissy says:

The placenta is such an amazing organ in all its done for my baby that it didn't seem right to simply throw it away. My thought was "being the only organ that the human body makes that naturally exits the body, why not take advantage of it?"

By taking it in again, it was symbolic for me as a way to truly say "good-bye" to my 9-month pregnancy and "hello" to an exciting (albeit challenging) new chapter in my life. While eating it, I thought a lot about what my pregnancy had demanded of me all those months -- how careful I'd been in my diet, trying to give my body and baby only the best, how I practiced relaxation techniques to encourage a stress-free environment for my baby in her internal world, and how all that careful attention had resulted in this healthy organ and subsequently healthy baby girl.

Physiologically speaking, the placenta is still so rich in iron and hormones even after it's shed that I knew it'd help me in my immediate recovery from my long labor (24 hours). And it did! My daughter was born at 10:34pm, so it was far too late to eat the placenta that night--I was exhausted as was my sister (the chef). So we froze it and ended up eating it two days later for dinner. The energy levels I had before and after the consumption were immediately noticible to me. The first 24 hours after my daughter's birth, I would nurse on the move around the apartment, showing her around, but would have to take frequent breaks to sit because of how light-headed I felt. But after that second night, with a belly full of placenta, those dizzy spells completely vanished! Also, that same night my milk came in--pretty soon comparatively speaking--and I like to think that can be attributed to that extra burst of nutrients I got...all from something I completely manufactured from scratch!

They say it also helps with abating postpartum depression and though it may be too soon to tell, I feel like I'm on Cloud 9 and have the feeling it's going to stay like that!

What do you think about eating the placenta? Did you eat yours?




previous: Your Bra Size: The Truth May Surprise You
next: Baby Born from 21-Year-Old Sperm

filed under: family

228 comments so far | Post a comment now >>

 
All these people who are supposedly grossed out by this will probably be stuffing themselves with processed food, fast food, corporate restaurant food and not see how disgusting that is. Americans are so provincial sometimes that it’s downright embarrassing to be one.
- Red Rooster
Posted 04/26/09 07:20 PM
 
“Although the placenta is revered in many cultures, very few customarily eat the placenta after the newborn’s birth. Those who advocate placentophagy in humans, mostly in modern America and Europe, Mexico, Hawaii, China, and the Pacific Islands, believe that eating the placenta prevents postpartum depression and other pregnancy complications”-wikipedia My husband made jokes about eating the placenta. These are the kind of wacko freaks that make the rest of us eco-concious natural parents look crazy.
- Kjwd
Posted 04/27/09 10:21 AM
 
Yessss….I’ve been waitting a lifetime for this! I AM ALL IN!! I would love to have the burger….supersized!! Yummy yummy in the tumy! My mouth is watering as I type!! Tyler D.
- Tyler D.
Posted 04/28/09 03:11 PM
 
Red Rooster: American cannibals make me embarrassed for Americans.
- Gail Cooke
Posted 04/28/09 04:47 PM
 
It is no more gross than eating meat from an animal.
- Lynne
Posted 04/30/09 11:10 AM
 
Good for you.. and you are correct .. It is the “fear of unknown” that grosses people out.. We had placenta roast after our daughter was born…we also encapsulated some and buried the umbilical cord and membranes…
- Crystal New
Posted 04/30/09 06:48 PM
 
That actually looks kind of tasty! I may have to make a line of funny onesies with placenta eating as the topic :)
- Steve
Posted 05/09/09 04:02 PM
 
GAG!!!!!!
- Dee
Posted 05/09/09 09:28 PM
 
Ok, so eating a Chicken’s placenta (egg yolk) is perfectly fine, but eating a human’s is disgusting and revolting? Why the discrimination? Seriously: think, do some research, intrigue yourself to this instead of limiting your curiosity by shouting “ewww! gross!” like an immature child. Just because it COULD bear the label of cannibalism (though, by technical definition, it does not; research it) does not suddenly make its benefits worthless, or that engaging in it means we are taking a step backwards from “civilized society”. What is found in the placenta and the benefits it provides cannot be duplicated by anything man-made in our “civilized society” anyway. Besides, as someone else stated, cannibalism would be barbaric if someone was murdered for it, or the part was taken without consent; but it is from your own body, with your own consent, it’s no longer needed, and it’s debatable whether or not it is even an organ (is egg yolk an organ?). Also, the non-analogy that we should eat our feces, drink our pee(though, that is practiced too, look it up), or even eat our babies just because we eat the placenta is an illogical, weak, pointless and (especially the part about the babies) stupid argument. Response to that argument: eating the placenta is beneficial, eating stool is not. Do your research!
- noteverythingisblackandwhite
Posted 05/17/09 05:14 PM
 
WOW….I cannot believe all the judgmental Minds in the U.S. I don’t understand why people do not investigate this before they pass there judgment. There are no cures for this in the US. There are people around the world treating their ailments with placenta. I suffer from vitaligo. My skin blisters and burns in the Sun. My skin is turning white. I love being in the Sun. If you have a cure let me know. IF NOT KEEP YOUR JUDGEMENTAL COMENTS TO YOUR SELF!!!!!!!!!!!
- Mom
Posted 05/19/09 02:34 PM
 
WOW WOW WOW you are freaks! cannibalism with a twist. this time you are eating yourself!
- WTF
Posted 05/29/09 04:04 PM
 
the pictures were not necessary. Looking at them is making me gag. quite disturbing.
- Anonymous
Posted 06/04/09 03:04 PM
 
Ok, so eating a Chicken’s placenta (egg yolk) is perfectly fine, but eating a human’s is disgusting and revolting? Why the discrimination? Seriously: think, do some research, intrigue yourself to this instead of limiting your curiosity by shouting “ewww! gross!” like an immature child. Just because it COULD bear the label of cannibalism (though, by technical definition, it does not; research it) does not suddenly make its benefits worthless, or that engaging in it means we are taking a step backwards from “civilized society”. What is found in the placenta and the benefits it provides cannot be duplicated by anything man-made in our “civilized society” anyway. Besides, as someone else stated, cannibalism would be barbaric if someone was murdered for it, or the part was taken without consent; but it is from your own body, with your own consent, it’s no longer needed, and it’s debatable whether or not it is even an organ (is egg yolk an organ?). Also, the non-analogy that we should eat our feces, drink our pee(though, that is practiced too, look it up), or even eat our babies just because we eat the placenta is an illogical, weak, pointless and (especially the part about the babies) stupid argument. Response to that argument: eating the placenta is beneficial, eating stool is not. Do your research! - noteverythingisblackandwhite blah blah blah. its f’ing gross and you know it ! quit trying to sound intelligent and open minded.
- Anonymous
Posted 06/04/09 03:09 PM
 
“blah blah blah. its f’ing gross and you know it ! quit trying to sound intelligent and open minded.” I’m not *trying* to sound anything, why do the nay-sayers on here keep playing that card? I’m just stating what I feel: that people should actually research it instead of just refusing any kind of unbiased information while shouting “gross!”, and berating those who even give it a second thought, and to top it all off don’t even offer any kind of sound argument for their views. It feels like trying to reason with a child who is covering their ears and saying “lalalala I can’t hear you lalalala I’m right and you’re wrong!”
- noteverythingisblackandwhite
Posted 06/05/09 09:10 AM
 
and sure, it would seem disgusting to people like us, wouldn’t it? I admit it, but only to illustrate that that is the only argument you have, and how weak it is. For my other rebuttals, see my other post you quoted, unless it’s too “intelligent and open-minded”-sounding for you.
- noteverythingisblackandwhite
Posted 06/05/09 09:21 AM
 
Jennifer, This has nothing to do with being open minded. We’re all open minded enough to realize that some people, and some cultures find this acceptable, and we’re all open minded enough to make a judgment for ourselves (that being that this is disgusting). But just because 99% of the population finds this revolting, you cannot fall back to that tired attack of us being close minded. You could use that argument for anything that the majority finds unacceptable. John Wayne Gacy could have said that the jury that found him guilty was just not being open minded. What would you say to that?
- Jim
Posted 06/05/09 11:19 AM
 
DePnRS comment1 ,
- Injwdxih
Posted 06/22/09 07:23 PM
 
7I2ErQ comment1 ,
- Hnrcgxft
Posted 06/23/09 05:02 AM
 
intro to health thinks this is nasty and borderline if not end of the line cannibalism. you need psychological help. there are many ways to keep healthy.
- INTRO CLASS TO HEALTH
Posted 06/24/09 01:42 PM
 
Could you help me. Curiosity killed the cat, but for a while I was a suspect. I am from Sri and also now’m speaking English, give please true I wrote the following sentence: “When dusting dark specks off your pet fur always try to check it out as they could be flea dirt.” Thanks for the help ;), Soterios.
- Soterios
Posted 07/02/09 12:44 AM

Comment Page: << ...  10   >>

(not displayed)
  remember me?      
 

Avoid clicking “Post” more than once.

experts resources bloggers staff
follow us on twitter resource guides follow us on twitter staff
newsletter videos games twitter
newsletter sign up video gallery Momlogic games follow us on twitter
advertisement

WIN IT! This new game has some serious bite!
Enter Here
advertisement

WIN IT! This new game has some serious bite!

enter here

Join the Momlogic community!

 

momlogic community logo

 

Sign Up
Login
Enter without joining

 
coupons       More special offers     momsview coupons  

Maclaren Stroller Recall

find out more