Yorkshire Post

Scientists squeeze out healthier apple juice

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SCIENTISTS have discovered a new method of squeezing apple juice which may help to boost its health benefits.

The study found that it boosted polyphenol content by four times as much as regular apple juice.

Polyphenol­s are natural plant compounds found in fruit, red wine and cocoa which are antioxidan­ts, and are thought to have a range of health benefits for the heart and brain, and may protect against disease.

Researcher­s say they can maximise these compounds in the juice by using a new method called a spiral filter press, which actively takes out oxygen by vacuum-driven pressing.

Oxygen is excluded from all other processing steps, thereby reducing nutrient deteriorat­ion, according to the experts.

Past research has suggested that one group of polyphenol­s, called flavan-3-ols, may help improve blood pressure, cholestero­l concentrat­ions, and blood sugar.

Stefan Dussling, a co-researcher on the study, said: “Nutrient losses are commonly due to the presence of oxygen which quickly degrades some of the nutrients in apple juice like flavan-3-ols or vitamin C.

“This would happen when we juice apples at home or buy a readymade product.

“We hope that the new juicing method will be used more widely in the future to help people get more of these beneficial natural compounds simply by drinking one glass of juice.”

Dr Ana Rodriguez-Mateos, a reader in nutritiona­l sciences at King’s College London, who was not involved in the study, said: “I think the research is well conducted and very relevant.

“Finding a method that can retain more flavan-3-ols and vitamin C in apple juice during industrial processing is of great value, so people will have the choice to consume a healthier juice than the ones that are commercial­ly available.”

She warned that apple juice is high in sugar, but that the “normal apple juice processing has the same amount of sugar and less phytochemi­cals, so if someone were to consume apple juice anyway, it would be best to get the phytochemi­cal-rich juice than the normal one”.

The NHS recommends that someone’s combined total of drinks from fruit juice, vegetable juice and smoothies should not be more than 150ml a day – the equivalent of a small glass.

The study is published in the Food Research Internatio­nal journal.

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