Does juicing fruit alter the sugar content?? SW Smoothie Question
MinkyMoo13
Posts: 354 Member
So I like to blitz some fruit up for a smoothie and I just started Slimming World. I was told that you can eat raw fruit but you can't juice it as the way it breaks down the fruit it creates more of a sugar content. This sounds a bit odd to me. Can anyone clear this up?
Many Thanks
Many Thanks
0
Replies
-
if you juice it, i think you're removing parts of the fruit that aren't sugar, therefore it's more concentrated sugar. you aren't creating more sugar though. you are just throwing out the fiber and bulky parts.0
-
MinkyMoo13 wrote: »So I like to blitz some fruit up for a smoothie and I just started Slimming World. I was told that you can eat raw fruit but you can't juice it as the way it breaks down the fruit it creates more of a sugar content. This sounds a bit odd to me. Can anyone clear this up?
Many Thanks
Wow. No. No. This is so false that I would stop doing business with these people.
What might happen is this: Instead of eating 3 servings of fruit a day, you juice 6 servings. You will obviously get more sugar and calories that way. But in no way did you alter the chemical content of the fruit itself.
BTW: Sugar does not have any bearing on weight loss. CICO rules all. Don't let them tell you this isn't the case, that some calories are more calorie-er than others.0 -
obscuremusicreference wrote: »MinkyMoo13 wrote: »So I like to blitz some fruit up for a smoothie and I just started Slimming World. I was told that you can eat raw fruit but you can't juice it as the way it breaks down the fruit it creates more of a sugar content. This sounds a bit odd to me. Can anyone clear this up?
Many Thanks
Wow. No. No. This is so false that I would stop doing business with these people.
What might happen is this: Instead of eating 3 servings of fruit a day, you juice 6 servings. You will obviously get more sugar and calories that way. But in no way did you alter the chemical content of the fruit itself.
BTW: Sugar does not have any bearing on weight loss. CICO rules all. Don't let them tell you this isn't the case, that some calories are more calorie-er than others.
or it's likely that the o.p. misunderstood what they said in the first place.0 -
yea they said if you juice it you should count it as syns as you likely to have more and the way it breaks down the sugar means it's worse for you. They also said that cooked fruit would be the same. I said but if I eat 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries or juice 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries the fruit will have the same sugar content either way? They said it would be a syn..
I'm muchos confused0 -
This content has been removed.
-
MinkyMoo13 wrote: »yea they said if you juice it you should count it as syns as you likely to have more and the way it breaks down the sugar means it's worse for you. They also said that cooked fruit would be the same. I said but if I eat 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries or juice 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries the fruit will have the same sugar content either way? They said it would be a syn..
I'm muchos confused
what is syn?
i don't know about cooking, but i doubt that juicing does this. you break it down into juice when you digest it or even chew it. this is no different.0 -
-
MinkyMoo13 wrote: »yea they said if you juice it you should count it as syns as you likely to have more and the way it breaks down the sugar means it's worse for you. They also said that cooked fruit would be the same. I said but if I eat 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries or juice 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries the fruit will have the same sugar content either way? They said it would be a syn..
I'm muchos confused
what is syn?
i don't know about cooking, but i doubt that juicing does this. you break it down into juice when you digest it or even chew it. this is no different.
That's exactly what I said!!
0 -
Maybe SW are just trying to put us off juicing as like they say we can consume more but then that's a contradiction as al fruit is free anyway.. oh idk.. I might just continue with the smoothies0
-
I just googled "syn" + "slimming world" and no no no no no. Just no. You are not adding calories to raw ingredients by cooking/juicing/whatever.
In fact, cooking makes some nutrients easier to digest (like the beta carotene in carrots.)
0 -
Also, Weight Watchers should sue them for stealing their "some vegetables are free" schtick.0
-
MinkyMoo13 wrote: »yea they said if you juice it you should count it as syns as you likely to have more and the way it breaks down the sugar means it's worse for you. They also said that cooked fruit would be the same. I said but if I eat 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries or juice 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries the fruit will have the same sugar content either way? They said it would be a syn..
I'm muchos confused
I believe the difference they are getting at is the fiber content. Fiber helps slow down the absorption of sugar.0 -
Juicing removes the fiber from the fruit/veggies which makes the sugars in them hit your bloodstream quicker. It does not alter the sugar or calories, it just alters how quickly you metabolize them.0
-
3dogsrunning wrote: »MinkyMoo13 wrote: »yea they said if you juice it you should count it as syns as you likely to have more and the way it breaks down the sugar means it's worse for you. They also said that cooked fruit would be the same. I said but if I eat 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries or juice 1 banana, 1 apple and 4 strawberries the fruit will have the same sugar content either way? They said it would be a syn..
I'm muchos confused
I believe the difference they are getting at is the fiber content. Fiber helps slow down the absorption of sugar.
Yes I just googled and found a found an article on raw vs cooked. It just mentions that it removes some of the qualities of the vitamins etc that are in the foods. So maybe it's a syn as your not getting the full goodness from it?0 -
Juicing removes the fiber from the fruit/veggies which makes the sugars in them hit your bloodstream quicker. It does not alter the sugar or calories, it just alters how quickly you metabolize them.
Thanks, I know it can't add calories but I didn't understand why someone told me it creates more sugar.. surely sugar content can't be altered in a food.. that was my confusion.
Thanks for clearing up!0 -
obscuremusicreference wrote: »I just googled "syn" + "slimming world" and no no no no no. Just no. You are not adding calories to raw ingredients by cooking/juicing/whatever.
In fact, cooking makes some nutrients easier to digest (like the beta carotene in carrots.)
I know it can't add calories.. guess someone who didn't know what they were talking about tried badly to explain it to me lol. I'm taking this all with a pinch of salt
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.4K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.2K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.4K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 424 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.5K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.7K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions