Juicing Book

Complete Guide To Juicing Fruits and Vegetables — Free To Read


Responsible Juicing

Responsible juicing — what is it?

Responsible juicing is what juicingbook.com is all about. But, what does this mean to you?

Well, quite honestly, it means you need to juice in a non–reckless way. You need to become aware of what you are doing when you juice and what impact it can have on the body.

Unfortunately, there have been a lot of infomercials, books and other promotional tools which only purpose is to sell a juicer rather than to promote responsible juicing. These infomercials, as an example, make juicing look exciting and fun. To be quite honest, responsible juicing is boring and dull.

The problem with the infomercials that make juicing exciting and fun is that their only purpose is to sell juicers. Not only is it their job to sell juice machines, but to sell as many as they can and as quick as they can. The result can be information that doesn't promote responsible juicing.

Responsible juicing is important because when you juice, you are drinking concentrated nutrition. In a way, you are drinking a herbal concoction when you drink fresh juice. This is because herbal medicine works by providing your body with nutrition. It is the nutrition in the herbs that helps your body heal, recover and stay healthy.

If you juice irresponsibly then you can potentially overwhelm your body with nutrition causing you to stimulate something in your body too much, feel not so good, create negative effects, etc. Nutrition is fuel for the body and it is said that the difference between medicine and poison is all in the dose:

"All things are poison and nothing is without poison. It is the dose that makes a thing poisonous."

Paracelsus, 16th century pharmacologist

Many people, when trying wheatgrass for the first time, drink too much and then get a headache. I know because I experienced this headache the first time I drank wheatgrass juice, as have many others. But I thought to myself — "What am I doing? A headache is a sign that I am drinking too much wheatgrass causing my body to detoxify faster than it is capable of eliminating the toxins. A headache is not what I want. I want to experience positive benefits, not negative."

When we juice, we do not want to juice recklessly and with abandonment of good, wholesome common sense. We do not want to overwhelm our body with nutrition. Instead, we simply want to provide our body with extra, easily assimilated nutrition.

Ultimately, we want to become consciously aware of the power that the vegetables and fruits can and do have on our body. Certain vegetables can have profound affects. For example, celery is a natural diuretic as is parsley. Dandelion leaves really stimulate the liver. Beets can move your bowels in a way you never knew was possible. If you juice these and other vegetables or fruits in an irresponsible manner then you will be doing your body no favours and instead of experiencing the positive benefits, you will be experiencing negative benefits.

Coming from Canada, a place with lots of wildlife, I am reminded of an interesting statistic — believe it or not, but more people are killed every year in Canada by deer rather than by bears! But how could this be considering that deer are herbivores (vegetarians) while bears are omnivores (eat everything and anything).

Well here's why more people die from deer attacks — people think that because deer are herbivores that they can walk up and pet them. But this is a wrong thought and belief. While a herbivore, such as a deer, may only eat vegetation they can and do kill for protection. So the deer, seeing the human as a potential threat, uses their antlers to stab the human. Now granted, the deer won't eat the human like a bear potentially would, but the human is now dead because the human saw the deer as a cute and friendly vegetarian eating animal and underestimated its true capabilities. The human was blind as to why the deer had antlers — for protection.

Bears, because they are known for their strength, power and ability to hunt and kill, are avoided by most humans. When a bear sees a human, the bear will usually walk away and the human will do the same.

How does this all apply to juicing? Well, responsible juicing means you don't underestimate the power of the vegetables and fruits you juice — just as you should not underestimate the deer. It's so obvious that you should avoid the bear, but not so obvious that you should avoid the deer more so than the bear.

Vegetables and fruits seem so innocent, but always remember — the difference between poison and medicine is in the dose.

While many that sell juicers and juice machine may make juicing sound exciting and a miracle cure for all that ails you, I could not, in good consciousness tell you this is the case. Juicing is part of a healthy lifestyle when done responsibly. Juicing is not the cure, but rather part of the solution.

"Let thy medicine by thy food and thy food be thy medicine."

Hippocrates, the father of modern medicine

When juicing responsibly, we become aware of the amount of sugar in the juice we are drinking. Juicing responsibly means you emphasize vegetable juices and only juice fruits occasionally as a treat or as needed.

Juicing responsibly means you generally focus more on vegetables that grow above ground rather than below ground. The vegetables that grow below ground are higher in sugar content than those that grow above ground.

Juicing responsibly means you do not stop eating food.

Juicing responsibly means you don't expect juicing to cure you but rather realize it's part of the solution and not the solution itself.

Juicing responsibly means you don't drink too much juice too fast. Instead your start slow and juicing responsibly means you do not become fanatical nor do you juice with a kamikaze attitude.

Juicing responsibly means you become aware of good food combining and don't mix fruits with vegetables.

Juicing responsibly means nothing more than common sense.

Juicing responsibly means you might only drink half a pint (200 mL) of vegetable juice daily. While this might sound like common sense, I have received multiple emails over the years of people who are drinking 2 pints (1 liter) or more a day and to make things worse, the people are primarily drinking only fruit juice which is high in sugar.

When purchasing a juicer, I tell people to be cautious of the information and recipes provided with the juicer because the information usually promotes irresponsible juicing rather than responsible juicing.

Few people are aware, as an example, that juicing while pregnant can actually cause your newborn problems. Why might this be? Because while the mother is carrying the child, if she juices, then the fetus is getting extra nutrition. First, this nutrition can be too much of a certain vitamin or mineral which could possibly cause harm. But more importantly, it can also cause the newborn child to become nutritionally deficient fast. Studies have shown, as an example, that a mother who takes a lot of vitamin C while pregnant may give birth to a child who then suffers from scurvy. Why would this happen? Because once born, the child is getting less vitamin C than it is used to causing it to be vitamin C deficient.

Responsible juicing is the approach I like to encourage. When you juice responsibly, then you don't overload the body and instead, you allow the body to work gently and smoothly.


Hatha Yoga

Have you been wanting to do hatha yoga (stretching) but have found it either too difficult or you are not that flexible? If yes, and even if no, watch Jesse do some pure hatha yoga routines.

Unlike flow yoga, each pose in pure or traditional hatha yoga is held for a few minutes. While holding the pose, you focus the mind on the stretch. When you focus the mind, that's when you find silence.

Jesse is not flexible — never has been and probably never will be flexible like others. But it doesn't matter. In pure hatha yoga, how flexible you are makes no difference. It's all about loving the pose and focussing the mind on the stretch.

If you want to learn pure hatha yoga, now you can by following Jesse on a series of hatha yoga routines.

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Random Questions That Have Been Asked:

  1. Please comment on a report that says beet juice can improve exercise endurance?
  2. Do you have some tips for IBS, constipation and gallstones?
  3. What's the difference between eating fruits and juicing fruits?
  4. Is Eating Whole Fruit Okay Even Though It Is High In Sugar?
  5. How much juice should I drink?
  6. What juice will clean my colon of old fecal matter?
  7. I Got Ill, For A Short Time, While Juicing
  8. Juicing strategy for overall health and wellness.
  9. Can I drink more than 1/2 pint (1 cup) of juice per day?
  10. What is the healthiest juice I can make?
  11. Juicing and Weight Loss
  12. Warts and Juicing
  13. Juicing and Detoxification
  14. Hypoglycemia, General Detox and Colds
  15. Putting Vegetables On Ice Before Juicing
  16. What can help with my hemorrhoids, fissures and inflammation?
  17. Does pickling remove the benefits?
  18. How much juice should I drink?
  19. Blanching vegetables before freezing
  20. Can I freeze the juice and drink it later?
  21. I Got Ill, For A Short Time, While Juicing
  22. Juicing Gave Me An Upset Stomach
  23. How Can I Help Reverse Acne For My Son?
  24. How Much Nutrition Is In Pulp?
  25. Juicing Combination Review
  26. Receding Gums and Juicing
  27. My Husband Got A Stomach Ache From His Juice?
  28. What Vegetables or Fruits Can Help With Soft Stools or Diarrhea?
  29. Which Juices Would Be Good For Depression?
  30. How Can I Store Vegetables?
  31. Are There Harmful Side Effects To Juicing One Type of Juice Daily?
  32. Juice Combination For Liver, Kidneys, Bile and Overall Health
  33. Should some vegetables be cooked before juicing?
  34. What's the difference between eating fruits and juicing fruits?
  35. What is the healthiest juice I can make?
  36. Why are only apples the only fruit that can be mixed with vegetables while juicing?
  37. Can the body detoxify too fast?
  38. Juicing strategy for overall health and wellness.
  39. What are good juicing combinations? What juicing combinations should be avoided?
  40. What can I juice or do to help with my excessive sweating (hyperhidrosis)?
  41. My apple juice turns brown, is it okay?
  42. Juicing while pregnant and breastfeeding (nursing).
  43. Do you have some tips for IBS, constipation and gallstones?
  44. How often should I juice to get enough nutrition?
  45. How important is a slow speed juicer compared to fast speed?
  46. What juice can help with arthritis and joint pain?
  47. Hypolycemia — blurred vision and tiredness while juicing.
  48. What juice will clean my colon of old fecal matter?
  49. Can I juice carrot greens?
  50. How long to wait after juicing before eating?
  51. What is your take on juice fasting?
  52. Can I drink more than 1/2 pint (1 cup) of juice per day?
  53. Is a pint of juice too much?
  54. Can juicing cause constipation and hemorrhoids?
  55. Did not realize that pears and beets are high in sugar!
  56. Do you have a recipe that includes pears and beets?
  57. Do you have any tips for Cystic Fibrosis, asthma and respiratory illnesses?
  58. Can I add Salba seeds to my juice?
  59. Can I juice beets everyday?
  60. Is it okay to store juice and drink it later?
  61. Please comment on a report that says beet juice can improve exercise endurance?
  62. Should I peel beets for juicing them or just wash them?
  63. What Do You Recommend for high blood pressure and high cholesterol?
  64. Is Eating Whole Fruit Okay Even Though It Is High In Sugar?
  65. Is It Okay To Mix Apples With Vegetable Juice?