It sounds like a crazy question, but fruit juice could be
worse for you than fizzy drinks.
Juice exudes health and vitality. It is officially one of
your 'five-a-day'. It's what they sell in juice bars, those yogafied temples of
wheatgrass.
But fruit juice is also, according to the American obesity
expert Robert Lustig, basically just sugar and is therefore, in his view, a
'poison'. Lustig is the author of Fat Chance: The Bitter Truth about Sugar (4th
Estate, £13.99), published earlier this year. He sees sugar as the major
culprit in the obesity crisis. Not so surprising, except for his shock
revelation that the worst sugars may be those that appear the healthiest.
'Calorie for calorie, 100 per cent orange juice is worse for you' than sugary
sodas, Lustig says.
This sounds alarmist, until you read some of the case
studies from Lustig's childhood obesity clinic in San Francisco. One
eight-year-old already has high blood pressure, thanks to a three-glasses-a-day
juice habit. A six-year-old Latino boy comes to the clinic weighing 100lb,
'wider than he is tall'. His mother, a poor farm worker, has been letting him
drink a gallon of juice a day because a government welfare programme gives them
the juice for free.
Obviously, most of us drink nothing like a gallon of juice a
day. But our juice portions are still out of whack. Over the past 30 years
consumption of fructose – the sugar in juice – has more than doubled. Juice
didn't used to be seen as something with which you quenched your thirst; it was
more like a vitamin shot, a tiny dose of goodness. A book from the 1920s on
feeding children by L Emmett Holt says that you should give toddlers just one
to four tablespoons (15-60ml) of fresh orange or peach juice. Compare this with
today's 200ml children's juice boxes, which contain about 17g sugar, the
equivalent of more than four teaspoons.
The biggest problem with juice, as far as Lustig is
concerned, is the lack of fibre. When you eat a whole apple, the sugar is
'nicely balanced' by the fibre, giving 'the liver a chance to fully metabolise
what's coming in'. When you down half a pint of apple juice it 'brings a huge
dose of energy straight to the liver'. Smoothies are not much better, no matter
how pretty the packaging, because when fruit is blended the insoluble fibre is
'torn to smithereens'.
This news is galling for righteous types like me, who in the
past have given their children lectures on the evils of fizzy drinks while
smugly feeding them 'pure not-from-concentrate juice'. If I tried to ban juice
in our family now, there'd be uproar. The most realistic course seems to be
moderating the dosage. I notice that the juice-box manufacturers have started
doing this too: Tropicana Kids cartons come with 25 per cent water added. But
you may as well do the diluting yourself. In our house, juice is – on a good
day, anyway – for breakfast only, with a third water to juice. What's striking
is how quickly drinking watered-down juice changes your palate.
Nowadays, when
I take a sip of the hard stuff, it tastes nearly as undrinkably sweet as
undiluted squash.
Im sure you're beginning to wonder "what on earth could then be good for us if scientists say everything is bad ?"
1:1! wow! that 's high
ReplyDelete