2.16.2012

Juicing for Weight Loss - How to Do It Right

By Audrey Nail


To eliminate the pulp from your home made juice, use a cheesecloth or coffee filter to strain the pulp out. If you choose to remove the pulp from your juice remember that you are also removing many vitamins and minerals. For the healthiest juice, drink it with pulp and all.

While you may want to keep some extra juice on hand in the fridge, remember that you should drink it soon. Valuable nutrients will begin to be lost as the juice sits. Make enough extra for your next snack time and keep it to that. Making juice for the next day will rob you of the nutrients you were juicing for in the first place.

The best kind of juicer to buy is one that will masticate the juice. This will allow you receive more of the natural vitamins, as well as let you store the juice for longer periods of time with out ruining anything. These types of juicers will basically "chew" the food till it is in juice form.

If you are diabetes or otherwise sensitive to sugar in your diet, be careful with juicing. Many fruit juices will be very high in sugar, resulting in a spike in your blood sugar levels, especially if you drink juice on an empty stomach. Try diluting your juices with water to reduce this issue.

Juicing is a lifestyle you dedicate yourself to, and you will notice if you miss a day. If something comes up and you're not able to buy some fresh produce for your juice, you should have something on hand that you can use instead. You can keep some items in the freezer just in case, or even freeze some juice to tide you over.

Wash your juicing equipment, immediately after you have finished juicing. If you don't wash your juicer straight away, left over pulp will get hard and be stuck onto the equipment, making it very difficult to clean later on. Additionally, the juice from some fruits and vegetables, can stain juicer jugs and blades.

Crumple up leafy greens, such as spinach, into tight balls before putting them in your juicer. Your juicer is primarily designed to deal with solid fruits and vegetables, not thin leaves. You will get better results from your juicer if you simulate this effect by squashing your leafy greens before juicing.

In clue the whole fruit whenever you can to increase the nutritional punch of the juice you're making. Apple skin, for example, holds more nutrients than all of the flesh combined! Some peels won't taste good, like oranges, but you could zest the outside which contains a ton of flavor.

Let color be your guide for variety. You will want to keep your juicing varied so as to not get bored with it. Incorporate a variety of colors in your fruits and vegetables as a sort of juicing palette from which to create. Just remember to know the nutrient content from each source and enjoy the rainbow.



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