Lemon water vs regular

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Replies

  • kimny72
    kimny72 Posts: 16,011 Member
    edited January 2020
    It's called Nestle Splash lemon water. I guess I'm just confused because I was reading about the intermittent fasting that seems to be the big thing now. It talks about in order to do a clean fast water can't be flavored. So I thought what am I missing? I thought water was water?

    You're really asking two different questions here:

    1. Does flavored water break your fast? In the vast majority of protocols, some minimum amount of calories is needed to break your fast. Since this product is 0 calorie, all but the most out there versions of IF would consider it fine. Unfortunately, there are all sorts of people out there promoting their own sets of rules, many with little basis. The primary and most evidence based benefit of IF is (for some people) appetite control. If you can drink 0 calorie beverages and it doesn't make you hungry, I can't imagine why you shouldn't drink them.

    2. Is it clean? "Clean eating" is another vague term that you will find a ton of different ideas as to what is and isn't clean. However, I'd guess that most people who care about eating clean wouldn't consider artificial sweeteners clean. However, sweeteners are perfectly safe to consume and eating "clean" is not necessary to lose weight or be healthy. And EVEN if you feel the need to try to eat "clean", nobody needs to be perfect, and if drinking this stuff gets you properly hydrated, I'd say the benefits are worth the exception. Most people aim for 80/20 anyway, not 100% :smiley: I drink a Coke Zero every day.

    And just to clarify, eating clean and doing IF do not have to go hand in hand. Even people I've heard advertise some pretty out there health benefits to IF tie them to the time-constrained eating, not what you eat.

    Eating at the right calorie level and getting to (and maintaining) a healthy weight is light years more important than when or what type of food you eat. Find a way and schedule of eating that gets you there as easily as possible, and you'll be golden :innocent:
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,097 Member
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Are we talking about zero-calorie lemon-flavored water that is being sold for human consumption? How could it be bad for you? (Proviso: I see it's from Nestle. Since you're typing on the Internet, I'm assuming you're not an infant and you are using it for purposes of hydration. That's fine. Please do not substitute it for baby formula or use it to dilute baby formula.)

    source.gif

    Apparently you never heard about this.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestl%C3%A9_boycott


    TL;DR -- For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition. I'm sorry James Franco is so ill-informed.

    I guess I just don't see how there's any connection with baby formula having too much water in it and a question about whether or not lemon water is just as good as regular water.

    The specific brand mentioned in the OP was Nestle. That's just the rabbit hole my mind went down in trying to imagine any reason why the lemon-flavored water could possibly be bad for you, as the OP suggested.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,097 Member
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Are we talking about zero-calorie lemon-flavored water that is being sold for human consumption? How could it be bad for you? (Proviso: I see it's from Nestle. Since you're typing on the Internet, I'm assuming you're not an infant and you are using it for purposes of hydration. That's fine. Please do not substitute it for baby formula or use it to dilute baby formula.)

    source.gif

    Apparently you never heard about this.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestl%C3%A9_boycott


    TL;DR -- For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition. I'm sorry James Franco is so ill-informed.

    this is not the place for your soapbox

    How is a thread about whether flavored water is "clean" not a a place for a soapbox? Much cleaner with soap.

    well we are talking about whether lemon water breaks a fast. whether or not lemon water counts toward water intake or as something elsed

    not the moral or ethical habits of a company who happens to make flavored water. you want to talk about that. go make your own thread. we already have a thread about ethical consumption. maybe start one about ethical drinking. or wedge into the consumption thread

    You're the one who keeps coming back to it. I change the subject and you go back. I'm just trying to figure out how flavored water is bad.
  • earlnabby
    earlnabby Posts: 8,171 Member
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    mbaker566 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Are we talking about zero-calorie lemon-flavored water that is being sold for human consumption? How could it be bad for you? (Proviso: I see it's from Nestle. Since you're typing on the Internet, I'm assuming you're not an infant and you are using it for purposes of hydration. That's fine. Please do not substitute it for baby formula or use it to dilute baby formula.)

    source.gif

    Apparently you never heard about this.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestl%C3%A9_boycott


    TL;DR -- For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition. I'm sorry James Franco is so ill-informed.

    this is not the place for your soapbox

    How is a thread about whether flavored water is "clean" not a a place for a soapbox? Much cleaner with soap.

    well we are talking about whether lemon water breaks a fast. whether or not lemon water counts toward water intake or as something elsed

    not the moral or ethical habits of a company who happens to make flavored water. you want to talk about that. go make your own thread. we already have a thread about ethical consumption. maybe start one about ethical drinking. or wedge into the consumption thread

    You're the one who keeps coming back to it. I change the subject and you go back. I'm just trying to figure out how flavored water is bad.

    Back when I was doing some religious fasts (late 70's and 80's) we were told that water with lemon juice in it was breaking the fast because it had nutrition (minimal but still . . . ) flavored seltzer was not breaking the fast because there was no nutrition since the flavoring comes from tiny amounts of extract.
  • kshama2001
    kshama2001 Posts: 28,052 Member
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Are we talking about zero-calorie lemon-flavored water that is being sold for human consumption? How could it be bad for you? (Proviso: I see it's from Nestle. Since you're typing on the Internet, I'm assuming you're not an infant and you are using it for purposes of hydration. That's fine. Please do not substitute it for baby formula or use it to dilute baby formula.)

    source.gif

    Apparently you never heard about this.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestl%C3%A9_boycott


    TL;DR -- For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition. I'm sorry James Franco is so ill-informed.

    I guess I just don't see how there's any connection with baby formula having too much water in it and a question about whether or not lemon water is just as good as regular water.

    While one could make a case that Nestle should be boycotted because of their unethical marketing practices, I don't think that's the point Lynn was trying to make. However, I appreciate this info and will indeed keep it in mind when I shop:

    "For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition."

    My mom is still good friends with two women she met when she was in La Leche League back in the 60s and pregnant with me.
  • lynn_glenmont
    lynn_glenmont Posts: 10,097 Member
    kshama2001 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Carlos_421 wrote: »
    Are we talking about zero-calorie lemon-flavored water that is being sold for human consumption? How could it be bad for you? (Proviso: I see it's from Nestle. Since you're typing on the Internet, I'm assuming you're not an infant and you are using it for purposes of hydration. That's fine. Please do not substitute it for baby formula or use it to dilute baby formula.)

    source.gif

    Apparently you never heard about this.


    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nestl%C3%A9_boycott


    TL;DR -- For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition. I'm sorry James Franco is so ill-informed.

    I guess I just don't see how there's any connection with baby formula having too much water in it and a question about whether or not lemon water is just as good as regular water.

    While one could make a case that Nestle should be boycotted because of their unethical marketing practices, I don't think that's the point Lynn was trying to make. However, I appreciate this info and will indeed keep it in mind when I shop:

    "For more than 40 years, a variety of advocacy groups and government entities have criticized Nestle's marketing of infant formula in poor communities. Among the many issues raised is that poor mothers are given formula free in the hospital, so their milk dries up, and then they have to purchase formula they can't afford, whose directions they may not be able to read, and dilute it too much when mixing it because they couldn't possible afford as much as they would need to give their babies adequate nutrition."

    My mom is still good friends with two women she met when she was in La Leche League back in the 60s and pregnant with me.

    Thank you. I wasn't making an argument for boycotting Nestle. (If I did, it would probably be more on the basis of their knowing support of child labor, child trafficking (abduction) for labor, and child labor for chocolate harvesting. But that's not just Nestle. :smile: ) I was just free associating in trying to figure out some logically defensible reason to consider a lemon-flavored drink "bad."

    Look. There's a moo cow coming down the road. I think I'll have some milk.