Ok, I have no doubt that as you read the title of this article that you have deduced the answer to my question. Which one is best for you? Obviously water is the clear winner, but why?
Allow me to explain.
Water,
and when I say water, I mean city water, not the stuff that is bottled, is a
great way to ensure that you stay hydrated, it's calorie free, no carbohydrates,
no sugar, and no chemicals that are foreign to your body. Now, I know what you're thinking and yes, chlorine
and fluoride (commonly found in municipal water sources) are naturally occurring
chemicals. As a matter of fact chlorine
is essential for the formation of most life forms, including humans!
A word
on bottled water. There are no
regulations on bottled water so, some (many in fact) companies simply bottle
water straight from the city taps and call it spring water. Dasani, a Coke product, was doing that very
thing until an employee told the rest of the world. As a result, they then began purifying the
city water through reverse osmosis to prevent a worldwide boycott. Again, not because it was illegal, good for
their customers, or sound science but because they wanted to ensure folks kept
buying their product.
There
is a marketing story surrounding the sale of bottled water, I don't know if
it's true or not but it certainly is interesting. Is goes something like this. One marketing genius is having lunch with
another marketing guru. During their
conversation one says to the other, I'll be you could bottle water and sell
it! (As a joke) The other marketing genius says, wow, that's
a great idea! The first bottled water
was sold by Evian, the word naive spelled backwards. By the packaging and marketing alone, they sold
the image of health and purity,
meanwhile they were insulting their customers, and laughing all the way to the
bank.
True or
not, it makes a good point, we are buying and idea, an image; not the reality
of a truly healthy product. Additionally,
the waste produced to make RO (Reverse Osmosis) water is significant. The chemicals used to activate the filter and
the concentration of toxins in the unusable water is flushed right back into
the lakes and streams that it's taken from.
Not only that but the empty plastic bottles are filling up the landfills
at alarming rates. There is even a guy
that has used nylon mesh to hold together 250,000 empties, placed ply-wood on
top of them added soil on top of that and has his own floating island. Here is a website with his story - http://ecoble.com/2007/11/18/250000-bottles-amazing-recycled-mexican-island-paradise/
The
point is this. Bottled water is bad for
the environment on every level, the PCBs used to make the plastic is highly
toxic, the caps and bottles that are left over is an absolute waste of
resources, the runoff of the RO units making the water is polluting the
remaining water sources, and lakes and rivers are drying up because of the
companies that are shipping the bottled water all over the world which disrupts
the natural global water vapor distribution.
Let's face it, city water is healthy, cheap, and better for the
environment on many levels.
Now
that we understand the negatives of bottled water let's use the tap water that
everyone one of us have access to.
Now
let's compare that water resource to juice and diet sodas.
Let's
start with the diet sodas. Taken from
LiveStrong.com " Five
artificial sweeteners have been tested and approved by the FDA as safe for
consumption. They are acesulfame potassium, neotame, saccharin, sucralose and
aspartame. Of these, only aspartame can be digested by the body, and all but
neotame are used to make brand name grocery products. Diet sodas may contain
more than one of these sweeteners. For example, Diet Pepsi contains acesulfame
potassium, but Pepsi Max and Diet Sierra Mist have both acesulfame and
aspartame. Pepsi One has acesulfame potassium and sucralose, as does Diet
Montain Dew, which also contains aspartame." - Read more at: http://www.livestrong.com/article/408129-sweeteners-in-diet-sodas/#ixzz1z7AHktjy
There
have been many studies done on the ill effects of artificial sweeteners and in
NY there is one that states that "if you drink one diet soda a day you
increase your risk for a stroke or heart tack by 61%". From a soda, just one per day! - This
article can be found at: http://www.nbcmiami.com/news/health/Daily_diet_soda_tied_to_higher_heart_attack_risk-115659744.html
The
point? Diet sweeteners are as dangerous
and toxic as anything that we could ingest.
They are unnatural and our bodies are simply not designed to deal with
these chemicals. If you MUST have a
soda, and I'll be the first to admit, I need to get my Mountain Dew on from
time to time, go with one that is flavored with natural sugar, not corn syrup
or the like. Natural is ALWAYS better!
Now
let's look at juice. When I mention
juice, I am not talking about squeezing your own juice from your own organically
raised fruits. I'm talking about store
bought juice, those from concentrate and those that are not from concentrate.
All
juice is pressed using a mechanical press.
In and of itself, no big deal.
However, the reality is that most juice is made from fruit that has
already started rotting and is already on the ground. Once the apples or oranges or whatever you're
drinking is harvested from the trees/bushes, the fallen fruit is then gathered
and processed into juice. So straight
away you are dealing with a subpar product where nutrition has already begun
the degrading process. Once pressed, the
juice is placed in holding tanks for months on end. While in storage, the juice continues to lose
its nutritional value due to oxidation and temperature variance.
To
keep the juice stable and to prevent it from fermenting an additive is
added. This additive is not on the list
of ingredients. Why? Great question! The FDA does not require it. Why? Another great question! The FDA is made up of former agribusiness
CEOs and they make the rules for their previous employers and business
associates.
By
the time the juice is deposited into the plastic bottles it is mixed with other
batches of juice that has been stored for sometimes a year or longer. This it is sent to your local grocery store
and placed on a shelf that is berated with UV light until whatever nutritional
value that remains is utterly depleted.
So
when we think of fruit juice, we normally think that it's healthy for us than
water because of the antioxidants and nutrients. Unfortunately, that is far from the
truth. Not only that, but there is so
much sugar in juice that it contains hundreds more calories than you would
imagine. A single serving of orange
juice contains 28 carbs, and over 110 calories not to mentions the additional
sodium.
I'm
not knocking juice entirely. There are
some decent organic stores that do carry good organic juice that is very good
for you. However, if you are thirsty for
orange juice, eat an orange. The pith is
what contains most of the vitamin C and the fiber is great for your digestive
tract. All of which is lost in the
pressing and storing process.
At
the end of the day, the human body is between 75% and 50% water (Depending on
age, body mass and gender). We are designed
to consume water, not chemicals. If you
were to cut out all sodas, diet or regular, for 6 months, drink 1 serving of REAL
fruit juice a day and 8, 8oz glasses of water per day, you'd be amazed at how much
better you feel, how easily your body heals and loses weight.
So,
stop buying bottled water, stop buying the regular store juices, eat fresh
fruit, and drink lots of water. It's
good you and the environment.
Chef Pat @ CFL
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