Method Z — Zeolite Histamine Removal
Removes histamine from aqueous ingredients using zeolite (clinoptilolite) cation exchange. The aqueous phase is kept; zeolite pellet is discarded.
How It Works
Histamine is a positively charged molecule at food pH. Zeolite is a negatively charged aluminosilicate mineral with a lattice structure full of cation exchange sites. Histamine displaces the sodium/calcium ions sitting in those sites, binding to the zeolite. Centrifuge pellets the zeolite, histamine goes with it.
This is the same chemistry as a household water softener, just applied to food.
Why Not Salt at This Step
Salt (NaCl) competes directly with histamine for zeolite’s cation exchange sites. Adding salt and zeolite simultaneously loads the zeolite with sodium before it can pull histamine. Salt must come after the zeolite step.
Protocol
Ingredients
- High-histamine aqueous ingredient (juice, reconstituted powder, soy sauce, etc.)
- Food-grade zeolite (clinoptilolite) — ~1 tsp per cup of liquid as a starting point
- Clean water
Steps
- Reconstitute (if using freeze dried powder) in minimal water — concentrated solution improves extraction efficiency
- Add zeolite, agitate gently — avoid aggressive blending which introduces heat and oxidation
- Steep refrigerated — a few hours is sufficient; refrigeration minimizes microbial histamine buildup during the wait
- Centrifuge — zeolite pellets cleanly at moderate RPM; decant and keep the liquid
- Discard zeolite pellet — or set aside for recharging (see below)
Optional Next Steps
- Proceed to Method A — Salicylate Removal if the ingredient also has high salicylates
- Add electrolyte base mix if preparing for Recipe
- Portion into ice cube trays and freeze
Zeolite Recharging
Zeolite is rechargeable indefinitely. The recharge cycle swaps histamine out of the exchange sites and reloads with sodium.
- Rinse spent zeolite with clean water
- Soak in saturated NaCl (salt water) solution for several hours
- Rinse thoroughly to remove residual salt
- Air dry
- Ready to reuse
Note: after recharging, zeolite carries sodium ions rather than its original mineral mix. Fine for food applications — sodium is already present in most of these ingredients.
Candidate Ingredients
| Ingredient | Notes |
|---|---|
| Cherry juice / freeze dried cherry | High histamine, also high salicylate — stack with Method A |
| Peach juice / freeze dried peach | Moderate histamine, moderate salicylate |
| Soy sauce | High histamine, no salicylates — Method Z only |
| Fermented liquids generally | High histamine by definition |
What Zeolite Does NOT Remove
- Salicylates (lipophilic, not ionic — use Method A — Salicylate Removal)
- Lectins (large proteins — use pressure cooking)
- Flavor compounds (they are not positively charged amines — they stay in the liquid)
Notes on Zeolite vs Bentonite
Zeolite (clinoptilolite) is preferred over bentonite for this application:
- More selective for histamine specifically
- Cleaner separation in centrifuge
- Better documented for biogenic amine reduction (used commercially in winemaking)
- Bentonite can sometimes trigger histamine liberation in sensitive individuals