Drinking organic juices can boost your immune system. I like Lakewood fruit juices. I always drink the apple and lemon juice. I have never drink the aloe, mangosteen and cherry juice before and I want to buy it next time. I find that drinking 1 bottle of fruit juice per week will make it harder for me to get sick or get rashes.
Just remember that light and pasteurization DESTROY vitamin C. So anything packaged in a CLEAR glass bottle and pasteurized has little or no vitamin C. You would be far ahead to eat raw fruits where you get the full complement of vitamin C along with other things that help vitamin C work better in your body.
No. Drinking juice does not "boost your immune system" - that claim shows that you know nothing about biology, nor how the immune-system actually works. HOWEVER, placebo is a strong drug, and if drinking the juice makes you feel better, you might actually feel yourself better from potential non-lethal illnesses. But the juice has done nothing to your immune system whatsoever.
Fruit juice is liquid sugar with some decent minerals thrown in and some other trace elements from processing and growing like pesticides Organic Fruit juice is the same stuff but without the trace elements Want to boost your immune system? eat above ground vegetables, sleep properly, exercise, breath clean air, don't smoke etc You need to rethink where you're getting your health education from. I'm not sure it's the best source. oh the irony, no sooner had I saved my post than this came through
I know this is General Chat but why is this obvious spam tolerated? @Zirkon Kalti, how much are these companies paying you to spam this shit?
I agree with @sarahk, all I have ever heard or read is that "juicing" is not good for you as its all sugar. It can help you temporarily lose weight due to loss of bloating, but all that sugar will just give you diabetes in the end.
This is the Listerine "bottle on chest/passing out on the floor" guy, right? I do not think that there is a rational reason, including spamming, involved with these posts. I am not a psychiatrist, but I could probably play one on TV or in a forum and I think that these two threads are nuts.
Are there really people who believe that organic food is being produced now? That juice can not be organic, because it contains lots of impurities, stabilizers, dyes ..
Same question though, do a workout and then drink sugar - why does it reduce soreness? If you want a vitamin boost you'd drink vegetable juice but the science points to drinking a protein drink after exercise to aid recovery and orange juice has no protein.
You are right but i guess this is the reason it is recommended to have a citrus drink now it can be orange or lemon. Drinking lemon juice ease the stiffness and muscle soreness after exercise, Since lemon water is alkalizing in the body, drinking lemon water on a daily basis can help to reduce the buildup of lactic acid in the body and ease or even help prevent the achy type of soreness.
Which means what, exactly? Your grandmother was a registered dietician or sports physiologist? Your grandmother's endorsement of a product is important? What does it mean that your mother didn't? or that you don't mention her? What can we read into her not buying it?
Okay... first off, consuming sugar does not, by itself, "give you diabetes". Depending on what TYPE of diabetes (Type 1 or Type 2), it might have absolutely nothing to do with it at all. Type 1 is a hereditary disease, which is a defiency or complete breakdown of the insulin-producing beta-cells in the pancreas. If you're talking about Type 2, then yes, an excessive sugar intake can contribute to getting it, but Type 2 is known as a preventable disease, which is mainly age-related and/or a bi-product of being overweight. Sugar, in itself, does not contribute to diabetes.
drinking organic fruit juice is very good for heath. it can boost our immune system as well as our metabolic system. i makes us feel fresh. we can work more efficiently at work and it gives us a glowing skin.
Consuming carbs (ie sugar, fruit, bread) stimulates and insulin response and the body stores the excess as fat. In NZ we are seeing overweight teenagers with T2 diabetes - I don't imagine these kids have had a lot of fruit juice, probably coke and KFC - but T2 is related to dietary abuse. Being overweight is a symptom of the abuse and can be seen as a warning sign but it is not the cause of T2 diabetes. and drinking water doesn't?
Everything has there own uses and specialties. The amount of nutrition a juice can provide, water cannot provide.