Juicing is no healthier than eating raw fruits and vegetables.

Does juicing actually have benefits?
Juicer for fresh fruit and vegetable juice.

If you are like me, you have seen hundreds of advertisements pontificating the health benefits of juicing. Juicing is simply the act of extracting juice from fresh fruits and vegetables. I bought a juicer a couple of years ago and I juice up 3 or 4 times a week. It is nice throwing half a cucumber, 4 apples, 4 carrots, a good chunk of kale, a few broccoli florets, some celery, spinach and grapes into the machine and getting a small pitcher of great tasting, lick-smacking juice.

Supposedly, this was giving us all the benefits of these fruits and veggies and more because our bodies could more easily extract the vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients (plant chemicals) from of the juice than the solid food.  Ok.  I can buy that.  But the whole time I was thinking, “Hmmm.. does all the fiber leave with the “solids”.  I was hoping for over a year that, somehow, some of the fiber stuck around in the juice.

Then,  :(  I read this from the Mayo Clinic:

Juicing: What are the health benefits?

Is juicing healthier than eating whole fruits or vegetables?

Answers from Jennifer K. Nelson, R.D., L.D.
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Juicing probably is not any healthier than eating whole fruits and vegetables. Juicing extracts the juice from fresh fruits or vegetables. The resulting liquid contains most of the vitamins, minerals and plant chemicals (phytonutrients) found in the whole fruit. However, whole fruits and vegetables also have healthy fiber, which is lost during most juicing.

Some juicing proponents say that juicing is better for you than is eating whole fruits and vegetables because your body can absorb the nutrients better and it gives your digestive system a rest from working on fiber. They say that juicing can reduce your risk of cancer, boost your immune system, help you remove toxins from your body, aid digestion and help you lose weight.

However, there’s no sound scientific evidence that extracted juices are healthier than the juice you get by eating the fruit or vegetable itself.

On the other hand, if you don’t enjoy eating fresh fruits and vegetables, juicing may be a fun way to add them to your diet or to try fruits and vegetables you normally wouldn’t eat. You can find many juicing recipes online or mix up your own combinations of fruits and vegetables to suit your taste.

If you do try juicing, make only as much juice as you can drink at one time because fresh squeezed juice can quickly develop harmful bacteria. And when juicing, try to keep some of the pulp. Not only does it have healthy fiber, but it can help fill you up.

If you buy commercially produced fresh juice from a juicing stand or store, select a pasteurized product. Also keep in mind that juices may contain more sugar than you realize, and if you aren’t careful, these extra calories can lead to weight gain.

With

Jennifer K. Nelson, R.D., L.D.

found at: Mayo Clinic – link

So, now I know.  I still juice but I take a high quality fiber supplement when I do.  I mean, seriously.  I would never, at least in one sitting, eat half a cucumber, 4 apples, 4 carrots, a good chunk of kale, a few broccoli florets, some celery, spinach and grapes.  But I would drink a glass of it!  And getting it into the body is the main focus here!