The Science

Real ingredients. Real research.
Good gut health — the way nature intended.

Every snack pack (5 gummies, one serving a day) is built around four working parts — a prebiotic to feed the good bacteria, a probiotic that actually survives your stomach, a fermented postbiotic, and a calming herbal stack. Here's what each one does, and the studies that back it up.

How it works

Four ingredients, working together — every day.

01
Prebiotic
The food
Soluble fibers feed your beneficial gut bacteria.
02
Probiotic
The reinforcements
Spore-forming strain that survives stomach acid.
03
Postbiotic
The byproducts
Fermented strawberry compounds support your gut lining.
04
Herbal
The calm
Ginger, lemon balm & chamomile soothe digestion.
Agave inulin
Agave inulin — the natural source of our prebiotic fiber
Agave tequilana
01
The Prebiotic

Prebiotic Fiber.

Agave inulin, tapioca fiber & citrus fiber
Feeds the good guys.
So they can do their job — naturally.

Prebiotics are the food your beneficial gut bacteria need to thrive. Without them, even the best probiotic won't take root. Our prebiotic blend is built on agave inulin — one of the most-studied prebiotic fibers in the world — paired with tapioca fiber and citrus fiber. Together they selectively nourish the bacterial strains your gut already wants more of, supporting regularity and comfort from the inside out.*

  • Agave inulin selectively nourishes beneficial bacteria like Bifidobacterium*
  • Supports regularity and stool consistency*
  • Promotes short-chain fatty acid production — fuel for your gut lining*
  • Sourced from agave, tapioca & citrus — no synthetics
Cited research
[1] Slavin, J. (2013) — Fiber and Prebiotics: Mechanisms and Health Benefits. Nutrients.
Real-fruit gummy
Real-fruit gummy — strawberry, naturally colored
2 billion CFU Bacillus coagulans per snack pack
02
The Probiotic

Bacillus coagulans.

2 billion CFU — the spore-forming strain
The probiotic that actually survives the trip.
2 billion CFU. Every snack pack.

Most probiotic strains die in stomach acid before they ever reach your gut. Bacillus coagulans is different. It's a spore-forming bacterium — each cell is wrapped in a protective shell that survives heat, acid, and shelf time. Multiple randomized, placebo-controlled clinical trials have shown 2 billion CFU/day of B. coagulans significantly improves IBS symptoms including bloating, abdominal discomfort, and stool frequency.*

  • Spore-forming — protected through gastric transit, so it arrives alive*
  • Shelf-stable at room temperature, no refrigeration required
  • Clinically studied at 2 billion CFU/day for digestive comfort*
  • Researched for support of immune response and the gut–brain axis*
Cited research
[2] Madempudi et al. (2019) — Randomized clinical trial: B. coagulans Unique IS2 vs. placebo in IBS. Scientific Reports.
[3] Majeed et al. (2018) — B. coagulans MTCC 5856 multi-centre clinical study. Food & Nutrition Research.
Why ours is different

Bacillus coagulans vs. ordinary probiotics.

Most probiotic strains die on the way to your gut. Ours is a spore-former — built to survive.

Darlin'B. coagulans
Most other
probiotics
Survives stomach acid
Spore-forming shell protects through gastric transit
Stable at room temperature
No refrigeration required — ever
Reaches the gut alive
Most strains lose 90%+ of cells before arriving
~
Shelf-stable for 24+ months
Common lactobacillus strains degrade in 3–6 months
Studied in randomized trials for IBS, bloating & regularity
Multiple peer-reviewed RCTs at 2B CFU/day
~
Real organic strawberries
Real organic strawberries, fermented whole
Fragaria × ananassa
03
The Postbiotic

Real organic fermented strawberries.

Whole-fruit fermentation — beneficial metabolites
Postbiotics — the work the bacteria leave behind.
The newest frontier in gut science.

When beneficial bacteria ferment whole fruit, they leave behind a rich mix of bioactive compounds — short-chain fatty acids, organic acids, polyphenols, and peptides. These postbiotics are part of what gives fermented foods their gut-health reputation, and they don't depend on bacteria staying alive in the bottle to work. The ISAPP (International Scientific Association of Probiotics and Prebiotics) formally defined this category in 2021. We use real organic strawberries — fermented whole — for natural flavor and real-fruit postbiotic benefits.*

  • Bioactive compounds from whole-fruit fermentation
  • Supports intestinal barrier function and gut lining health*
  • Naturally rich in polyphenols and antioxidants from real strawberries
  • No artificial flavor — just the fermentation of real fruit
Cited research
[4] Salminen et al. (2021) — ISAPP consensus statement on postbiotics. Nature Reviews Gastroenterology & Hepatology.
04
The Herbal Stack

Three time-tested herbs
for digestive calm.

Folk medicine knew. Now the clinical literature does too.

Ginger Root
Ginger Root
Zingiber officinale
Settles
upset stomachs & keeps things moving

The herb your grandmother gave you for an upset stomach — with the clinical research to back it up. In a randomized, double-blind trial, ginger cut gastric emptying time by nearly 25%. In plain English: food moves through your stomach faster. Less sitting. Less heaviness. Things keep moving the way they should.*

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Lemon Balm Leaf
Lemon Balm Leaf
Melissa officinalis
Calms
the gut–brain axis

Lemon balm has been used since the Middle Ages to settle the stomach and steady the nerves. Pilot clinical research has linked Melissa officinalis extract to improvements in mood, stress, and mild anxiety symptoms — important because stress is one of the biggest drivers of gut discomfort.*

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Chamomile Flower
Chamomile Flower
Matricaria chamomilla
Soothes
digestion & tension

University of Pennsylvania researchers ran a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of chamomile and found significant reductions in anxiety symptoms over 8 weeks. Traditionally used to relax smooth muscle in the GI tract — a perfect finish to the stack.*

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References

The cited research, in full.

We cite peer-reviewed clinical trials and systematic reviews. Click any reference to read the source.

  1. 1

    Slavin, J. Fiber and Prebiotics: Mechanisms and Health Benefits. Nutrients. 2013 Apr 22;5(4):1417-35. doi:10.3390/nu5041417.

    Read source →
  2. 2

    Madempudi RS, Ahire JJ, Neelamraju J, Tripathi A, Nanal S. Randomized clinical trial: the effect of probiotic Bacillus coagulans Unique IS2 vs. placebo on the symptoms management of irritable bowel syndrome in adults. Scientific Reports. 2019;9:12210.

    Read source →
  3. 3

    Majeed M, Nagabhushanam K, Arumugam S, Majeed S, Ali F. Bacillus coagulans MTCC 5856 for the management of major depression with irritable bowel syndrome: a randomised, double-blind, placebo controlled, multi-centre, pilot clinical study. Food & Nutrition Research. 2018;62:1218.

    Read source →
  4. 4

    Salminen S, Collado MC, Endo A, Hill C, Lebeer S, Quigley EMM, Sanders ME, Shamir R, Swann JR, Szajewska H, Vinderola G. The International Scientific Association of Probiotics and Prebiotics (ISAPP) consensus statement on the definition and scope of postbiotics. Nat Rev Gastroenterol Hepatol. 2021 Sep;18(9):649-667.

    Read source →
  5. 5

    Hu ML, Rayner CK, Wu KL, Chuah SK, Tai WC, Chou YP, Liu YW, Lai KH, Wang JH. Effect of ginger on gastric motility and symptoms of functional dyspepsia. World J Gastroenterol. 2011 Jan 7;17(1):105-10. doi:10.3748/wjg.v17.i1.105.

    Read source →
  6. 6

    Cases J, Ibarra A, Feuillère N, Roller M, Sukkar SG. Pilot trial of Melissa officinalis L. leaf extract in the treatment of volunteers suffering from mild-to-moderate anxiety disorders and sleep disturbances. Med J Nutrition Metab. 2011 Dec;4(3):211-218.

    Read source →
  7. 7

    Amsterdam JD, Li Y, Soeller I, Rockwell K, Mao JJ, Shults J. A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of oral Matricaria recutita (chamomile) extract therapy of generalized anxiety disorder. J Clin Psychopharmacol. 2009 Aug;29(4):378-82.

    Read source →
  8. 8

    Mao JJ, Xie SX, Keefe JR, Soeller I, Li QS, Amsterdam JD. Long-term chamomile (Matricaria chamomilla L.) treatment for generalized anxiety disorder: A randomized clinical trial. Phytomedicine. 2016 Dec 15;23(14):1735-1742.

    Read source →

Now you know the science.
Time to feel the difference, darlin'.

One snack pack a day — five real-fruit gummies. Real ingredients. Real research.

Shop now
*
Important disclaimer

*These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Information on this page is intended for general educational purposes and does not constitute medical advice. Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any supplement, especially if you are pregnant, nursing, taking medication, or have a medical condition. Individual results may vary.