I dont eat many vegitables, but lately ive been buying v8 juice to replace them. Is this a good replacement? Or am i missing out on something?
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I dont eat many vegitables, but lately ive been buying v8 juice to replace them. Is this a good replacement? Or am i missing out on something?
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by bgzee [/i]
[B]I dont eat many vegetables, but lately I've been buying V8 juice to replace them. Is this a good replacement? Or am I missing out on something?[/B][/QUOTE]
I love V8, but I think it has perhaps a little too much salt if anything.
Better than drinking normal carbonated drinks though.
v8 is a good drink, but not a good replacement for veggies..
did you guys know that as soon as the vegetable is removed from its life source its nutrional value rapidly drops. by the time the farmers process it and get it to the stores and after it sits at the stores for a while and by the time you get it home and cook it there are only trace amounts of vitamins and minerals. So basically all thats left is the fiber. And if you over cook it then the fiber is gone too along with whatever vitamins and minerals. So basically its just the fiber you're getting and we all know there are much better sources for fiber. You have to eat tons of veggies to get a decent amount of fiber.
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]did you guys know that as soon as the vegetable is removed from its life source its nutrional value rapidly drops. by the time the farmers process it and get it to the stores and after it sits at the stores for a while and by the time you get it home and cook it there are only trace amounts of vitamins and minerals. So basically all thats left is the fiber. And if you over cook it then the fiber is gone too along with whatever vitamins and minerals. So basically its just the fiber you're getting and we all know there are much better sources for fiber. You have to eat tons of veggies to get a decent amount of fiber. [/B][/QUOTE]
Sir, where did you hear all this bull****?
I read it. It was a scientific study. Look on google. You'll see.
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]I read it. It was a scientific study. Look on google. You'll see. [/B][/QUOTE]
scientific studies can often be wrong.
which side is wrong, the 300 studies supporting soy, or the 300 rejecting soy?
basically what your post is saying is it is pointless eating vegetables because they have become nutritionally worthless. this is not true because plants continue to grow even after being cut. they are also chilled to prevent decomposition. when you take a raw pumpkin and leave it on the shelf for 30 days it gets better..not worse.
heating does damage overall nutrients to a certain extent, but that is the same with all foods.
take another example, canned fruit has been shown to have an increased nutrient content then that of fresh fruit. from what you say, this can not be true.
if i brought up a post saying that after an animal is killed, its meat decomposes and all its nutrients are lost i am sure you wouldn't believe that...then if i said the heat makes (all) the fats rancid and (all) the proteins denature, that would also not be true.
You're wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong and I never said anything about meats.
Since when do plants grow when you remove them from their life source? They begin to die dumbass when they tap out all their stored resources which happens quickly.
And don't you know that manufacturers put additives and preservatives in canned goods?
Yeah I eat veggies, but I don't count the vitamins and minerals. I can only count some carbs and maybe a couple grams of fiber usually. I eat them just for texture and TASTE in my food and eye candy in dishes.
You also said freezing helps preserve, but you know how long they have already been removed from their life source before freezing, probably a long time.
The best way to get all the nutrients out of your veggies is to grow them in your own garden. Cut some when you need it and cook it immediately.
IMO, veggies are worthless unless I had my own garden. There are much better sources of carbs and fiber. You'd have to eat so damn many in one sitting it would be rediculous and expensive.
One Word
FIBER!!
The Juice is Missing The Fiber.
SOL- I hear ya on the "Reason you Eat Veggies"
I only Eat Them because i can Eat a Ton and only get like 10 Carbs and a Full Feeling instead of a Loaf of Bread and about 200 Carbs.
Oh yeah, The Fiber Helps too!!!lol
I eat the full vegies. Got to have that fiber. There are studies that show that vegetable juice should be consumed within 24 hours after made or the macronutrients decline rapidly. I use my own juicer to make fresh vegetable juice. See if I cant dig up some references. Also eat my veggies raw because they lose alot of the macronutrients when cooked.
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]did you guys know that as soon as the vegetable is removed from its life source its nutrional value rapidly drops. by the time the farmers process it and get it to the stores and after it sits at the stores for a while and by the time you get it home and cook it there are only trace amounts of vitamins and minerals. So basically all thats left is the fiber. And if you over cook it then the fiber is gone too along with whatever vitamins and minerals. So basically its just the fiber you're getting and we all know there are much better sources for fiber. You have to eat tons of veggies to get a decent amount of fiber. [/B][/QUOTE]
Wrong.
Big bump on the FIBER
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by BoxerUK [/i]
[B]Wrong. [/B][/QUOTE]
i had typed up a massive reply and then deleted it all cause i figure it's pointless trying to reason...
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by ronmolina [/i]
[B]I eat the full vegies. Got to have that fiber. There are studies that show that vegetable juice should be consumed within 24 hours after made or the macronutrients decline rapidly. I use my own juicer to make fresh vegetable juice. See if I cant dig up some references. Also eat my veggies raw because they lose alot of the macronutrients when cooked. [/B][/QUOTE]
who cares about the macronutrients in veggies...its the micronutrients that count.
less macronutrients = lower cals
V8 does have fibre in it...2 grams I believe.
I should have typed micro.
V8 is a good drink, but it to vegetables what supplements are to real food; don't use it as a replacement! Add it on top of a good diet as it is, because it will not be as beneficial as real veggies.
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[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]did you guys know that as soon as the vegetable is removed from its life source its nutrional value rapidly drops. by the time the farmers process it and get it to the stores and after it sits at the stores for a while and by the time you get it home and cook it there are only trace amounts of vitamins and minerals. So basically all thats left is the fiber.[/B][/QUOTE]
Only some of the nutrients get "depleted"
Minerals will be teh same from the time it is picked till you eat it
Some of the vitamins will change form at different rates than other ones.
The best choice would be to take the time learn how to grow plants really well and grown your own fruits and vegetables. If you know what you are doing, you can grow stuff that has higher nutrient content and better taste than the stuff you can buy at the store.
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]So basically its just the fiber you're getting and we all know there are much better sources for fiber.[/B][/QUOTE]
much better sources for fiber, huh?
Whole grains and beans stupid.
hey, Fruits and veggies have to develop to eat them, you dont hear or see people eating green tomatoes or green banannas, you have to wait to eat them.
What about potatoes, you eat them right out the ground, what about corn? you eat it when its hard!
[QUOTE][i]Originally posted by Sol [/i]
[B]Whole grains and beans stupid. [/B][/QUOTE]
you get more than just fiber in vegetables he-man.
a class of v8 everyday will help out some :) but i would try to get SOME veggies in on top of that lol, just don't cut them totally out
damn I really shouldn't speak on this since I never eat veggies lol
[QUOTE=Sol;2509179]You're wrong wrong wrong wrong wrong and I never said anything about meats.
Since when do plants grow when you remove them from their life source? They begin to die dumbass when they tap out all their stored resources which happens quickly.
And don't you know that manufacturers put additives and preservatives in canned goods?
Yeah I eat veggies, but I don't count the vitamins and minerals. I can only count some carbs and maybe a couple grams of fiber usually. I eat them just for texture and TASTE in my food and eye candy in dishes.
You also said freezing helps preserve, but you know how long they have already been removed from their life source before freezing, probably a long time.
The best way to get all the nutrients out of your veggies is to grow them in your own garden. Cut some when you need it and cook it immediately.
IMO, veggies are worthless unless I had my own garden. There are much better sources of carbs and fiber. You'd have to eat so damn many in one sitting it would be rediculous and expensive.[/QUOTE]
You my friend, have no clue what you are talking about... Vegetables don't magically lose all nutritional value just because they are harvested. They lose nutritional value as they decompose. Produce you find at the store is still packed full of nutrients. What do you think vegetables are made out of? The actual tissue that makes up these foods are what contain the nutritional value. If what you say is true, we'd all be in big trouble if we didn't take a multivitamin every single day. Fruits and veggies are the #1 best source for a majority of the micronutrients we need. And by your logic, fruits would be no different and they too would contain virtually no micronutrients.
And most canned produce doesn't have any preservatives, zero, nada, nothing... That's the point of canning them. It locks out the atmosphere and prevents decomposition thus preserving nutritional value. Not that that is true for all canned produce, I'm sure some do indeed contain preservatives of some sort, but the vast majority don't.
Oh yeah, and plants do continue living after being harvested. And yes, some even continue growing. Why do you think Potatoes sprout after a month or two or storage? What do you call that? That's right, it's growing. Speaking of which, potatoes are a great example. You can store a potato for a month and then eat it. It will still be full of Iron, potassium and Vitamin C. These micronutrients don't just "leave" the potato because it's not in the ground anymore.
strong first post to a 9 year old thread
[QUOTE=Sol;2518856]Whole grains and beans stupid.[/QUOTE]How is this goon still green??
[QUOTE=cumminslifter;1069123901]strong first post to a 9 year old thread[/QUOTE]LOL, sh!t, I just noticed. Can I get those 5 minutes back I just spent reading all this nonsense?
[QUOTE=cumminslifter;1069123901]strong first post to a 9 year old thread[/QUOTE]
you should give him some credits for taking his time to write those. :)
[QUOTE=Enilder;1069134211]you should give him some credits for taking his time to write those. :)[/QUOTE]
Several months later.........Digitydog wonders if Sol is even alive to see the this belated 9 year old comment.
"Buh it lax teh fibr"!!!111!!!
Um....then mix some metamucil in there
I dunno