You are not serious
about your health until you juice combinations of fruits and vegetables,
according to those that pray at the Church of Blended Plants. You exchange
recipes online and discuss the best juicers and blenders on the market and tell
the world of nature’s wonders. But will juicing elevate your health beyond the
capabilities of the original ingredients?
Juicing is a relatively
new concept, with the popularity growing over the last 30 years. The great
thing is that you can develop your own creative formulas and in an instant you
have a tasty and nutritious drink that you can down in seconds before you go to
work, or sip while you check emails.
Don’t forget the pulp
Well-known Australian
Food Coach Judy Davie has her favourite juice. She says it is perfect for keeping her “regular”, even if she
doesn’t include the pulp. Well, she probably eats lots of other fibre foods
too.
Now, one criticism
about juicing is that the fibrous pulp is often discarded and plant fibre is
excellent for your insides. Judy reserves the pulp for using in muffins. Smart
idea. Those healthy bacteria in your intestines get particularly upset if you don’t
include their favourite food (they eat the fibre to produce protective
compounds and nutrients in your large intestine).
Enzyme hoax
Some people will tell
you that juices contain enzymes, or even “live” enzymes (do they socialise and
swap orchard stories?). As an enzyme is a protein and all consumed proteins
encounter protease enzymes in the small intestine, it makes no difference if
they are alive or semi-conscious because they are all going to be chopped up
into small chains of amino acids. It may sound like a horrible death, but that
is the cruelty of nature I’m afraid. Enzymes are proteins. We eat them. They
die. Then their amino acids get made into human proteins we can use and bingo!,
they’ve become useful to us.
Another favourite line
is that juices “detox” the body. Nope, and that’s a definite. What detoxifies
your body are the lungs, liver and kidneys and they work around the clock doing
a fabulous job for eight or ten decades, with luck, providing you give them
good care. Detox anythings are a scam. Eating well is normal, leaving your body
to do its own detoxification and “cleansing”.
Drinking vs chewing
Enjoy your homemade
juice but don’t make that the only way you get two fruits and five veggies
inside you. One clear benefit from eating fruit and veg the traditional way (ie
chewing) is that it takes longer than drinking. Chewing food takes time, and
taking time over food means that you are better able to control your appetite
and less likely to overeat.
Commercial juices from
the supermarket are likely to be devoid of fibre, possibly be more dilute than
comes out of your juicer, and won’t contain the love and flavour of your
homemade version. Fruit juices are generally 12% sugar (12g per 100mL), which
is the same as a regular soft drink, so it becomes a very easy way to drink
quite a few Calories as juice. Knocking back 300mL (10oz) of juice will give
you 145 Cals/600 kJs, about the same as eating three medium apples. The juice
won’t make much of dent in your appetite, eating three apples will.
What does it all mean?
Juices and juicing can
be a neat way to get nutrients from fruit and vegetables, especially if you are
in a hurry. Juicing can also be a refreshing drink that you are confident is
“good for you”. Try and include the whole food where possible to avoid peeling.
For example, the peel of an apple has 60-100% of its antioxidant flavonols.
Just don’t rely on juicing
to get all your fruits and vegetables, and don’t think you have moved up to a
higher plane, because all those non-juicers who just chew their plant food will
be equally wholesome and well.
3 comments:
Love your blog, can I follow you on any social media sites?
Thanks Emma. I have started to comment on https://www.facebook.com/nutritionimpact. Hope you can connect. Glenn
You exchange recipes online and discuss the best juicers and blenders on the market and tell the world of nature's wonders. But will juicing ... juicerblender.blogspot.com
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