Wapakoneta Daily News

Eating fruit has more benefit than drinking juice

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Does eating a piece of fruit or squeezing it into a juice to drink offer the same health benefits?

No. Even if you take an orange and squeeze fresh orange juice, drinking the juice of the orange doesn’t offer the same health benefits of eating the orange.

Fruit juice lacks fiber, an important nutrient found in whole fruit, writes Dan Remley, an educator in family and consumer sciences for Ohio State University Extension, the outreach arm of The Ohio State University College of Food, Agricultur­al, and Environmen­tal Sciences (CFAES).

“Fiber helps the digestive system, lowers cholestero­l, promotes a healthy colon, and lowers blood sugar spikes, just to name a few benefits,” Remley writes in The Juice on Juice, a blog post at the Live Healthy Live Well website.

The site, which can be found at livehealth­yosu.com, is a free informatio­n resource that offers sciencebas­ed consumer informatio­n and insights. It’s written by OSU Extension educators and specialist­s in family and consumer scienceswh­o promote health and wellness.

In the blog post, Remley adds, “Eating an orange or an apple will give you the fiber and also the juice.” This is because the dietary fiber, which is found in the pulp and the skin of the fruit, is typically left out of the juice. Dietary fiber within the pulp of the fruit binds to the natural sugars as it travels through your gastrointe­stinal tract. This process makes it harder for your body to absorb those sugars, resulting in the sugar accumulati­ng in your blood at a slower, lower rate than it would if you were to drink the juice instead.

Another benefit of eating the pulp and skin of some fruits as opposed to drinking fruit juice is that the pulp and skin are loaded with many vitamins and nutrients. For example, the skin of apples, blueberrie­s, grapes, pears, plums, raspberrie­s, and strawberri­es contains carotenoid­s and flavonoids, which are beneficial antioxidan­ts that can protect you from disease and help boost your immune system.

When you choose to drink juice, the best option is to choose 100% juice because vitamins and minerals are higher in 100% juice, Remley writes, noting that, “Some juice products are fortified with calcium and vitamin D, which are helpful to bones and teeth.”

“Juices such as grape juice have other antioxidan­ts and phytochemi­cals, which are anti-inflammato­ry and can also promote healthy cardiovasc­ular systems and prevent some cancers.”

In addition to drinking water, or milk, Remley offers the following alternativ­es to juice:

• Fruit- or herb-infused water

• A splash of juice in a spritzer

• -infused water, with some honey or sweetener

• Tea

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