I don't have a slow juicer yet- plan on getting one for my birthday in november
For now I have been making my banana juice by running the banana through the green star juicer with no sieve, just to get the banana to a mushed form without using a blender. then I put it in a nut milk bag and squeeze the juice out. The part that's left in the bag is still moist fiber. I probably get 0.5 liter from 6-7 large bananas. Delicious, creamy.
I cannot find banana juice in the nutrient calculator. Can you tell me how many calories etc are in the banana juice? It cannot be as much as the whole bananas are- that's a lot. and 0.5l isn't that much. i could drink 1.5 liter of that in a day!
banana juice nutrient value
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Re: banana juice nutrient value
Im sorry, no data for that...
Re: banana juice nutrient value
I am also curious about the nutrient value of juices. I try to calculate my energy needs and, of course, I want to be sure I am eating (better: drinking) sufficient macro and micro nutrients.
How to estimate calories and nutrients from slow juiced - fruit? It seems to me the nutrient value of 500 gr whole banana differs from 500 gr banana juice? Should I put the before-juicing-weight of the juiced whole fruits (without peels of course) in the calculator?
How to estimate calories and nutrients from slow juiced - fruit? It seems to me the nutrient value of 500 gr whole banana differs from 500 gr banana juice? Should I put the before-juicing-weight of the juiced whole fruits (without peels of course) in the calculator?
Re: banana juice nutrient value
Yes, it differs, but how exactly is unpredictable.
Fiber content is down, so all others should be up theoretically, but there may be nutrient-fiber associations for specific nutrients.
Take OJ, for example:
Iron, potassium, B3 and sodium may be higher in juice vs whole oranges
Calcium, B2, B6 and B9 may be lower in juice vs whole oranges
But even the above may be very different for different types of oranges, ripeness, country of origin, etc.
For example, vitamin B1 and omega-3 fats may be higher in juice vs raw navels (whole oranges), and no difference in B9.
Fiber content is down, so all others should be up theoretically, but there may be nutrient-fiber associations for specific nutrients.
Take OJ, for example:
Iron, potassium, B3 and sodium may be higher in juice vs whole oranges
Calcium, B2, B6 and B9 may be lower in juice vs whole oranges
But even the above may be very different for different types of oranges, ripeness, country of origin, etc.
For example, vitamin B1 and omega-3 fats may be higher in juice vs raw navels (whole oranges), and no difference in B9.