Juicing for Health

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  • heartnsoul76
    heartnsoul76 Member Posts: 1,648
    edited May 2011

    Hi all! I just wanted to tell you about the yummy smoothie I made today. I used about 1 cup of peaches, 1/2 frozen banana, some ice, a little agave nectar, 1 cup of coconut water, and 1 tbsp of bee pollen. It was delicious and the coconut water and bee pollen are supposed to help strengthen the immune system.

    So sorry about the blood clot RangerMom! My father used to get them and it is such a long process to get rid of them. Hope it goes away soon! Sorry, I don't know which veggies are high in Vit K.

    I want to get into making green smoothies again, since I feel like the chemo just wiped out my energy. So far, nothing else seems to make a difference - exercise, sleep, supplements...nada!

    My onc would probably say it just takes time. I never thought of myself as impatient before, but when it comes to waiting for my hair to grow out and waiting to be able to walk around the store without being exhausted, then I guess I am impatient! 

  • artiecat
    artiecat Member Posts: 257
    edited May 2011

    I am so happy to have found this thread!  I googled juicer recipes chemo and here you are!  I got the juicer bug today and am borrowing my dtr's to check it out...thanks!

  • dogsandjogs
    dogsandjogs Member Posts: 1,907
    edited May 2011

    Artiecat:  Good luck. I juice every day and just love it.  I have also lost some weight in the stomach area and feel more energetic! 

  • lorieg
    lorieg Member Posts: 802
    edited May 2011

    Rangermom,

    It is more important that you are consistent with your diet than avoiding specific foods.  Just FYI. 

    Good luck!

    Lori

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited May 2011

    started my daily juicing last week.  carrot, celery, kale, broccoli and spinach. 

    here's the two things i have learned:

     1.  You can use the stuff you used to throw away:  the stalk of the broccoli, the leaf of the celery, etc! Makes sense from an economy perspective.

    2.  I added a touch of salt...much tastier!  V-8 is FULL of salt, that's why it's so good (to me!).  So...this afternoon I'm going to add celery salt and horseradish.  Anyone see where I'm going with this??

  • dogsandjogs
    dogsandjogs Member Posts: 1,907
    edited May 2011

    I avoid salt due to high blood pressure. I really miss it though---

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited May 2011

    Getting into week two of juicing - have really developed a taste for it!  The key is adding carrots; for their sweetness.  Can't say whether I feel any goodness coming from it, other than feeling virtuous!

  • dogsandjogs
    dogsandjogs Member Posts: 1,907
    edited May 2011

    I've been juicing for over 2 weeks also - my skin looks a little better - not as dry and though I haven't lost any weight I've lost inches! 

  • marybast
    marybast Member Posts: 138
    edited May 2011

    Hi everyone. So glad to see this thread.

    I've been using a Braun centrifugal juicer on and off for 20 years but now that I'm juicing every day I'm considering a new juicer because this one balks at some things, is a mess to clean, and I sometimes have to stop half-way to clean the pulp -- it also wastes a lot of pulp. This is the best article I've found to explain the different types of juicers: http://discountjuicers.com/bestjuicer.html. They sell juicers but don't promote any particular one in the article. They don't mention the one I'm most interested in -- the NativeJuicer. Has anyone heard or tried that one?

    Also, I haven't been very innovative about creating juice combinations, so I've been collecting  recipes from The Creative Health Institute on Facebook. I'll find a place to post them all if anyone else is interested. Some weird combinations intrigue me, such as "Beet It!" which combines l orange (including the sliced flesh), 1 chopped carrot, 7 oz. of peeled/chopped raw beets and 2 oz. raw spinach. (I don't weigh stuff, just threw in a chopped-up beet and a handful of spinach.)

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited May 2011

    Weigh?  are they crazy?  it's a handful of this, a stalk of this.  whatever I've got in the fridge + whatever is on sale at the market!

     Here's today's observation on juicing:  many note what a pain the juicer is to clean and what a mess it makes of the kitchen.  I figured today that it's not much worse than the daily chore of cleaning out the coffee maker and disposing of the coffee grinds.  So if I quit drinking coffee, I just about break even! 

    only big difference is that I can go off to work with the coffee grinds still in the machine - I'm not going to leave my kitchen with rotting veggies all over the place this time of year!  

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited June 2011

    Question:  I've read that one shouldn't store the juice; always drink it fresh.  Has anyone had any experience with storing it 12-18 hours?  I'd like to run the juicer only once per day, ideally make two batches in the afternoon so that I have one ready for the next morning.  It's just too darn loud to run in the morning!

  • marybast
    marybast Member Posts: 138
    edited June 2011

    I've heard the same, and with my favorite mixture don't like how the texture changes after 20 minutes, so I've never tried storing it. Someone told me this past weekend that fresh vegetables lose much of their nutritional value after 3 days. Sorry, but I can't eat or drink it all in 3 days after a visit to the farmer's market or organic food store.

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited June 2011

    that's my problem too marybast - i just don't go shopping that frequently.  Don't live near the store, so it just doesn't make sense to.  There is one little market in town, and their veggies are aweful.  But just the last two weeks or so I've tried to change my way of thinking and stop in there just to buy whatever they have organic, preferable on sale.  Just buy one thing - to supplement what is at home.  One day last week I walked out empty handed!

  • 37antiques
    37antiques Member Posts: 643
    edited June 2011

    The basic concept is to start everything with a carrot base, and yes, drink it right down.  It loses all kinds of value (nutritional, antioxidant, vitamins etc) if you leave it around, freeze it, what have you.  Buy a big 40 LB bag of carrots to last the week, everything else is an option to suit your taste or whatever is handy.

    I had a big centrifugal juicer with inner liners like tissue paper, bought it at a restaurant suplly store.  No cutting peeling, dicing or slicing necessary (unless it was a whole melon or something), just dump whatever in and it juiced.  Toss the liner, rinse the machine.  It was dishwasher safe too.

  • KSkier
    KSkier Member Posts: 467
    edited June 2011

    @37antiques: I've heard that carrots have a "high glycemic index", meaning "full of sugar".  mmm, they are delicious and certainly sweeten up my juice, but I limit it to just three per juicing session.  What's your take on that?  Btw, I do use them in everything that I make for my kids just to get more veggies in their diet: anything liquid called for in baked goods, including pancakes, is half carrot juice in our house, and I also put carrot juice in their fruit smoothies.  But that's a different issue; I don't mind the kids getting natural sugars as long as they are getting some veggies. 

    This week I tried storing my juice overnight so I could enjoy the convenience the next morning.  It was drinkable, but I do have concern over it losing it's nutritional value.  I just watched an interview with Kris Carr in which she mentions having done the same thing - I guess it's better than no juice at all!  

    I'd love to find out more about the convenience of the liners!

  • 37antiques
    37antiques Member Posts: 643
    edited June 2011

    @KSkier, I've never heard of carrots having a high glycemic index, or if I did I have forgotten it (like everything else!).  The filter type juicer takes all the nasties out - pulp, seeds, peels, etc.  I think Waring, Olympic and Omega use them.  Juicing was a new new thing back when we started, and we followed the guidlines out of a book by Stephen Blauer (I think?), he had cancer and when treatment failed he started juicing and went into remission.  It had all kinds of recipes in it, I have been looking for that book since this thread started...I know it's here somewhere....

    I was told to never store it and I never did, just drank it down right away.  My brother insisted on that, and also insisted on using organic carrots (way back when you had to buy them at the special store).  I wonder if that is the difference in the glycemic index?

  • dogsandjogs
    dogsandjogs Member Posts: 1,907
    edited June 2011

    I have the Jack LaLanne model ($100 at Sears) which also filters everything out.

    I juice carrots, celery, cabbage, apples, half a lemon and whatever other veggie I have on hand. Yesterday I used half a cucumber (not that tasty) the day before I added some broccoli.

  • JP4550
    JP4550 Member Posts: 1
    edited March 2012

    From what I know, centrifugal juicers (like the jack lelanne) eliminate most of the enzymes in vegetables/fruits. Ive read that juicers such as the omega 8006, and others that press the juice out of the vegetables are much more effective and show really good results in cancer treatments. I recommend doing some research! 

  • kbram
    kbram Member Posts: 185
    edited March 2012

    I just bought a Health Master juicer that Montel Williams sells.  It is a vegetable/fruit emulisifer (sp?).  I haven't used it yet, but bought all my fruits and veggies to start tomorrow!  Cannot wait, really need to get more veggies in my diet.......and hopefully lose a little weight!

    Kathy

  • exbrnxgrl
    exbrnxgrl Member Posts: 12,424
    edited March 2012

    Most of what I've read does not emphasize a significant difference in nutrition from centrifugal vs. masticating juicers. The Omega 8006 is wonderful but pricey. The Breville compact juice fountain is great for 1-2 people and, for a juicer, has a relatively small footprint and a reasonable price on amazon.com

    Caryn

  • sarahlou1967
    sarahlou1967 Member Posts: 153
    edited August 2012

    Hi ladies,

    Don't know if I am repeating this but the queen of juicing is Kris Carr google her name and you will see, bought her book 'Crazy Sexy Diet' loads of juicing recipes in it as well as other info, well worth buying. I drink a pint of the green stuff daily here's a recipe from my blog site http://survivingthebeastwithin.blogspot.co.uk/ where I have other recipes:

    Green 'Jungle Juice'
    2 Celery sticks
    3-4 Carrots
    Half a cucumber
    1 x green apple or pear (include pips)
    10 Leaves of Kale (include stalks)
    10 florets of Broccoli (include stalks)
    Small piece of ginger (please note only add a small bit its very strong)
    Squeeze of fresh lime or lemon juice whatever you prefer again add to taste like the ginger.

    Drink green juice and enjoy

    Love and light to all

    sarahsweety xxxxx 

  • Denise-G
    Denise-G Member Posts: 1,777
    edited August 2012
  • leggo
    leggo Member Posts: 3,293
    edited August 2012

    Kskier, just noticed your post re: the V8. If you're trying to create a good low-sodium version of V8 (which I love too), try adding a bit of Mrs. Dash to the mix. Gives it a little bit of that V8 punch without the salt.

  • RangerMom
    RangerMom Member Posts: 604
    edited August 2013

    Hi All, I haven't been on here in a while. Am juicing again. I feel so much more energy when i am juicing daily.

  • Ariom
    Ariom Member Posts: 6,197
    edited August 2013

    Hi, I have been juicing for a long time with an Oscar cold press type juicer. I also use Norman Walker's book on juicing. He's said to be the Father of Juicing, and has specific recipes for different ailments.

    I go with the "eat your fruit and juice your vegetables" way of thinking, except for apple and strawberry with fresh mint, which is a fave after dinner!

  • Esmith
    Esmith Member Posts: 1
    edited October 2017

    Very informative thread.

  • Pei128
    Pei128 Member Posts: 31
    edited January 2018

    My mom's diabetic. Juicing becomes a little trickier for diabetics. For diabetics, I've realized you need to really cut down on the fruits used in juicing. So I only use 1 green apple everyday. I've been juicing for her daily ever since her stage 4 diagnosis from the get go. The good thing about juicing is that it's hard for her to eat 5 servings of veggies, but drinking is easier. Kale is a great vegetable, but it's bitter to taste, but my mom would take it when it's juiced.

    I also save all my spinach stems and use them for juicing. Mom would eat the leaves.

    My usual recipe -

    -Red Cabbage, Kale, 1 Green Apple, Ginger, Lime, 1 Carrot, Spinach Stems or Leaves.

  • Axolotl
    Axolotl Member Posts: 56
    edited January 2018

    I realize this is an old thread, but just thought I'd add - if you want to reduce fruits in your juices, try substituting with cucumber or jicama instead. I especially like jicama because it mellows out the juice with a hint of sweetness and is low on the glycemic index. Kiwi + lots of greens + jicama = delicious.

    Also, where I live I can easily buy fresh turmeric roots, and have been juicing them with lemon and ginger. I add a bit of water because the juice is quite strong undiluted. You can also add a little honey or juice an apple into it. Be warned, though, as turmeric stains everything bright orange, including your hands and finger nails, and it takes a bit more effort to clean the juicer after as turmeric sticks to the sides of the juicer. : ) I use a Kuvings slow juicer which comes with lots of brushes to make clean up a bit easier, and use gloves.

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