Juicing @ Home

abeene1
abeene1 Posts: 2 Member
edited November 9 in Introduce Yourself
I have several juicing recipes that I make in my Breville at home. How do you accurately account for calories? If I put in all of the ingredients, the calories are crazy high. Any and all guidance would be appreciated. Thanks!

Replies

  • tigersword
    tigersword Posts: 8,059 Member
    That would be because generally juice is high calorie. Concentrated sugars from fruit and all. One of the many reasons not to bother with it.
  • Mihani
    Mihani Posts: 4,098 Member
    googled and found a website that tells how to calculate the calories: thesweeterthejuice.com/how-many-calories-are-in-my-juice/ Hope it helps. I tried juicing briefly (I think I only made it 2 days) but I know several people who do quite well with it.
  • Sued0nim
    Sued0nim Posts: 17,456 Member
    abeene1 wrote: »
    I have several juicing recipes that I make in my Breville at home. How do you accurately account for calories? If I put in all of the ingredients, the calories are crazy high. Any and all guidance would be appreciated. Thanks!

    Put in all the calories and log those crazily high calories

  • vgbgunc
    vgbgunc Posts: 10 Member
    My wife tried to juice but now the Jack Llanelli juicer is an expensive recipe holder after 2 weeks.
    I do know you need to stay away from high glycemic fruits (OJ) & vegetables. You can also add some wheat germ and/or psyllium that will increase the fiber and also thicken the drink.
  • mykaylis
    mykaylis Posts: 320 Member
    yup, put in all the calories. juicing has almost the same calories as the original food, and none of the fibre, so if you juice 2 oranges and an apple, you won't get much juice but you'll get 3 fruit's worth of calories.

    not saying there's anything wrong with juicing, just that yeah, for the size of the end product, it's crazy high in calories.
  • abeene1
    abeene1 Posts: 2 Member
    Thanks All! Happy New Year!
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