Read The Everything Giant Book of Juicing Online
Authors: Teresa Kennedy
Mulberries are an excellent source of iron, which is a rare feature among berries, while gooseberries, like its cousin the currant, have significantly high amounts of the phenolic phytochemicals that have been found to have beneficial effects against cancer, aging, inflammation, and neurological diseases
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2 cups mulberries
2 cups gooseberries
Scientific studies have shown that consumption of mulberries have potential health effects against cancer, aging and neurological diseases, inflammation, diabetes, and bacterial infections. Although more than 100 species of mulberries exist, the top three are the white mulberry, native to eastern and central China; the red or American mulberry, native to the eastern United States; and the black mulberry, native to western Asia.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 264 | Fat: 3.4g | Protein: 5.2g | Sodium: 6mg | Carbohydrates: 61g | Sugar: 48g
Peaches, honeydew melon, and kiwi combine in this cool summer refresher
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3 large peaches, pitted
4 kiwi fruits
2 cups honeydew melon chunks, peeled and seeded
Though not as rich in nutrients as cantaloupe, honeydew melon supplies thiamine, niacin, pantothenic acid, folate, and vitamin B
6
, all of which are important for metabolism. Their high water content and subtle flavor makes them an excellent choice for combining with other fruits for juicing.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 459 | Fat: 2.5g | Protein: 8.3g | Sodium: 76mg | Carbohydrates: 113g | Sugar: 60g
Tomatoes are indeed a fruit and are available in many low-acid heirloom varieties. Combine them with other fruit treasures for a great tasting juice!
3 heirloom tomatoes, such as Yellow Pear or Cherokee Purple
2 sweet heirloom apples, such as Lady Sweet or Gala, cored
The resurgence of interest in heirloom varieties of fruits and vegetables has largely come about with the interest in locally grown foods. Commercial farming tends to erode varietals because of its emphasis on consistency. But heirloom varietals are essential, because they frequently have distinct regional characteristics in their ability to withstand climate conditions, pests, and diseases specific to different areas.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 220 | Fat: 1g | Protein: 4g | Sodium: 18mg | Carbohydrates: 55g | Sugar: 42g
Ugli fruit, native to Jamaica, gets its name from the unattractive pockmarked, thick skin. Ugli fruits range in color from pale green to dark orange. They are similar in size to a grapefruit and shaped like a pear. The citrusy flavor lends itself to juicing and has been a Jamaican favorite for hundreds of years
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2 ugli fruit, peeled and segmented
Ugli fruit can be cultivated or grown wild. It is said it comes from the accidental crossing of a Seville orange, a tangerine, and grapefruit, so be careful where you spit your seeds! An excellent source of vitamin C, ugli fruit also promotes oral health and fights cardiovascular disease. Some sources indicate it also protects against kidney stone formation.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 180 | Fat: 0g | Protein: 4g | Sodium: 0mg | Carbohydrates: 44g | Sugar: 32g
When it comes to fruit juicing, little can compare with plain old grapes! This trio provides a nice balance of flavor as the white and red grapes balance the more intense Concords
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1 cup Concord grapes
1 cup red globe grapes
1 cup white or green seedless grapes
Regarded in many cultures as “the queen of fruits,” grapes are incredibly rich in phytonutrients, antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals and are a rich source of micronutrient minerals like copper, iron, and manganese.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 312 | Fat: 0.7g | Protein: 3.2g | Sodium: 9mg | Carbohydrates: 81g | Sugar: 70g
Sweet and satisfying, this recipe contains nutrients that are believed to especially benefit the skin and can even help prevent sunburn!
1 cup pineapple chunks
1 bunch red grapes
PER SERVING:
Calories: 290 | Fat: 0.6g | Protein: 3g | Sodium: 7mg | Carbohydrates: 76g | Sugar: 63g
The more you eat of the ripened guava or its freshly extracted juice, the more health benefits you gain. Experts know the reddish-fleshed guava contains more nutrients than the white, so extract your juice from the pinkish or reddish-fleshed guava
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2 guavas, peeled
1 cup watermelon chunks
2 cups pineapple chunks
Guavas, like melons, smell fresh and fruity when they are ripe. Choose fruit that is heavy for its size.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 285 | Fat: 1.6g | Protein: 5.5g | Sodium: 7mg | Carbohydrates: 70g | Sugar: 51g
Kiwis have the added benefit of removing excess sodium from the body
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2 medium red apples, cored
3 kiwis
PER SERVING:
Calories: 244 | Fat: 1.2g | Protein: 2.8g | Sodium: 11mg | Carbohydrates: 61g | Sugar: 22g
Two great berries combine in one fine juice. In addition to their antioxidant benefits, these berries are also believed to have a beneficial effect on mood
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1 cup blueberries
1 cup blackberries
1
⁄
4
lemon, peeled
PER SERVING:
Calories: 150 | Fat: 1.2g | Protein: 3.2g | Sodium: 3.2mg | Carbohydrates: 36g | Sugar: 22g
A classic that will have you wanting to set up your own sidewalk stand!
3 lemons, peeled
6 Mexican limes
1 tablespoon raw honey
6 ounces water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 235 | Fat: 1.3g | Protein: 4.7g | Sodium: 12mg | Carbohydrates: 76g | Sugar: 28g
This juice is a great source of vitamin C. Honeydew melons are available year-round. When they are perfectly ripe, the skin is wrinkled
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1
⁄
2
honeydew melon, peeled
1
⁄
2
cup watermelon, peeled
1
⁄
2
orange, peeled
Research shows that many antioxidants interact with and protect each other. Vitamin C, for instance, can react with a damaged vitamin E molecule and convert it back to its antioxidant form, while the antioxidant glutathione can return vitamin C to its original form. Studies also show that vitamin C enhances the protective effects of vitamin E.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 233 | Fat: 0.8g | Protein: 3.7g | Sodium: 90mg | Carbohydrates: 58g | Sugar: 51g
No doubt about it, kids love juice! Even the pickiest eaters can get greedy when it comes to a wholesome, healthful glass of fresh juice, so don’t deprive them of all the benefits they need to build strong bodies. While experts recommend that babies and toddlers should avoid unpasteurized juices in favor of mother’s milk, older children can enjoy a myriad of benefits even if they don’t know it’s “good for them.”
Here are some rules to keep in mind when juicing for and with your kids. First, keep it simple. Don’t come at them with too many complex flavors and don’t think you can sneak in kale or turnips without them suspecting something. Those are strong flavors even for adults. Second, keep all flavors subtle and on the mild side. Bean sprouts, for example, have very little flavor but all the nutrition your child needs, even if they won’t touch green beans on the plate. Sweeten them up with an apple or some grapes and you’ll likely be more successful in your quest to get your vegetable hater some necessary nutrients. Third, dilute fresh juices with filtered water. Children’s digestive systems are more delicate, and some may be prone to allergies or sensitivities to untried foods. Just as some adults need time for their systems to adjust to fresh juice, so do kids, so take it easy. Fourth, NEVER put any child under the age of twelve on a juice fast. Developing systems and child-sized metabolisms are more easily thrown out of whack when too much of an emphasis is placed on one food group or another.
Finally, keep it fun. Ask them to help dream up their own imaginative combinations, and give your juices silly or kid-friendly names. Most children are far more likely to sample something called Green Goblin Juice than they are to try a Chlorophyll Cocktail.
Your Harry Potter fans will be delighted to learn that there really is a pumpkin juice, just like in the books!
1
⁄
2
cup fresh pumpkin chunks
1 carrot, trimmed
1 orange, peeled
1
⁄
4
teaspoon pumpkin pie spice
PER SERVING:
Calories: 106 | Fat: 0.3g | Protein: 2.4 | Sodium: 50mg | Carbohydrates: 26g | Sugar: 16g
For kids’ juice, milder apples like Delicious or Baldwin will do just fine
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4 Delicious or Golden Delicious apples, cored
1
⁄
2
cup filtered water
If your kids flatly refuse anything but their favorite apple juice, try adding just a few grapes or a bit of melon, a little at a time, until they get accustomed to the variation in flavor.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 164 | Fat: 0.5g | Protein: 0.8g | Sodium: 3.3mg | Carbohydrates: 46g | Sugar: 34g
This juice provides wonderful nutrition and doesn’t stain kids’ clothes like some other grape juices can
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2 cups white or green seedless grapes
1
⁄
2
cup filtered water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 208 | Fat: 0.4g | Protein: 2g | Sodium: 6mg | Carbohydrates: 54g | Sugar: 46g
Pronounced grape flavor and great green color. They’ll never suspect there’s spinach in there!
2 cups white or green seedless grapes
1
⁄
2
cup fresh spinach
1 cup filtered water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 211 | Fat: 0.5g | Protein: 2.6g | Sodium: 17mg | Carbohydrates: 55g | Sugar: 46g
Kids love watermelon, and the addition of a few cherries only makes it better!
2 cups watermelon chunks
1
⁄
2
cup sweet cherries, pitted
1 cup filtered water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 139 | Fat: 0.6g | Protein: 2.6g | Sodium: 3mg | Carbohydrates: 35g | Sugar: 28g
This juice is especially great in cold and flu season to arm your little ones with extra vitamin C
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2 kiwi fruit
2 pears, cored
1
⁄
2
cup water or skim milk
PER SERVING:
Calories: 264 | Fat: 1g | Protein: 2.6g | Sodium: 10mg | Carbohydrates: 68g | Sugar: 29g
An old standby with a new twist—mellow honeydew melon
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1 cup Concord grapes
1 cup honeydew melon
1
⁄
2
cup water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 165 | Fat: 0.5g | Protein: 2g | Sodium: 33mg | Carbohydrates: 42g | Sugar: 37g
Perennial favorites in kidland, this combination is a guaranteed winner with the younger set
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1 cup Concord grapes
2 apples, cored
1
⁄
2
cup water
PER SERVING:
Calories: 209 | Fat: 0.5g | Protein: 1.6g | Sodium: 3mg | Carbohydrates: 55g | Sugar: 45g
Imagine their faces when you ask them to taste, and then tell them there aren’t any oranges in this one!
3 or 4 tangerines or clementines, peeled
1
⁄
2
cup water
Tangerines or clementines have just as much nutrition and vitamin C as oranges, but are friendlier for younger kids, who may be sensitive to an orange’s higher acid content.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 139 | Fat: 0.8g | Protein: 2g | Sodium: 5mg | Carbohydrates: 35g | Sugar: 27g
Juice for dessert? Why not? A great way to introduce kids to juicing is by substituting juice for dessert after meals
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2 apples, cored
8 stalks celery, with leaves
Dash of cinnamon
PER SERVING:
Calories: 52 | Fat: 0.2g | Protein: 0.9g | Sodium: 85mg | Carbohydrates: 12g | Sugar: 9g
Kids who play hard need hydration, especially in the summer, and this one’s a great choice
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2 apples, cored
3 cups watermelon chunks
PER SERVING:
Calories: 80 | Fat: 0.3g | Protein: 1g | Sodium: 1.5mg | Carbohydrates: 20g | Sugar: 16g
An excellent choice for toddlers, this one is just right for a sippy cup
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2 pears, cored
1
⁄
2
cup filtered water
Kids are likely to enjoy their juice more when you let them pick their own combinations. Simply put an array of prepared fruits and veggies out on the table and let them make their choices.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 85 | Fat: 0.1g | Protein: 0.5g | Sodium: 1.4mg | Carbohydrates: 22g | Sugar: 14g
Sweet and minty. Most kids love the minty flavor, and will never suspect the chlorophyll and phytonutrients this juice contains
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2 cups pineapple chunks
1
⁄
2
cup fresh mint
1
⁄
2
cup filtered water or skim milk
Very young kids can have sensitivity to fresh pineapple, but you can use canned, packed in its own juice.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 95 | Fat: 0.3g | Protein: 1.6g | Sodium: 8mg | Carbohydrates: 23g | Sugar: 16g
Everyone knows that bunnies love carrots, right? This one will teach your little one to love them, too
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3 carrots, trimmed
1 Gala apple, cored
Process the carrots and apples through an electronic juicer according to the manufacturer’s directions and serve.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 70 | Fat: 0.3g | Protein: 1g | Sodium: 74mg | Carbohydrates: 17g | Sugar: 10g
There are times when a little reverse psychology works wonders when it comes to getting kids to try new things. Call it slime and dare them to try it—they’ll like it!
1
1
⁄
2
cups collard greens
1 lemon, peeled
2 tablespoons agave nectar
Agave nectar has become a popular alternative to artificial sweeteners, because it has little impact on blood sugar.
PER SERVING:
Calories: 53 | Fat: 0.1g | Protein: 0.6g | Sodium: 4.5mg | Carbohydrates: 14g | Sugar: 12g