Guest guest Posted December 11, 2004 Report Share Posted December 11, 2004 Hi Jamie, First, i think ew might have a couple of juicer recipes in the files - i got one a couple of christmases (?sp) ago and think i found a few good ones then. As a rule you can juice pretty much any fruit or veg. But *never* try a potato! Apple is a good way of sweetening if you're addintg something bitter like celery. Tomato can be quite sweet too. Here's a few recipes i found that look similar to what i used to do. Must get my juicer out again! Mixed Fruit and Veg Juice by Janet Brinkworth from Good Food Live Ingredients 3-4 carrots 3 large tomatoes, chopped 1/2 medium cucumber, chopped 2 apples, chopped into chunks 2 oranges, peeled and cut into pieces Method 1. Pass the carrots, tomatoes, cucumber, apples and oranges through a juicer. 2. Stir the resulting juice thoroughly, pour into 2 glasses and serve at once. Summer Cleanser (ignore the title!) by Simon Brown from Good Food Live Ingredients main 3 carrots 1/2 apple 1/2 orange, peeled 1/2 boiled beetroot 1 celery stick 2 large kale leaves Method 1. Using a juicer, juice the carrots, apple, orange, beetroot, celery and kale. 2. Serve at once. Apple Carrot Zinger www.veganchef.com 1/2 lbs. carrots, washed well 3/4 lb. apples (approximately 2 large), washed well 1-inch piece ginger Begin by trimming the ends off the carrots and then cut them into 4-inch pieces that will fit through your juicer. Next, core the apples, discarding the seeds, and cut the apples into pieces that will fit through your juicer. Remove some of the peel from the piece of ginger. Turn on your juicer, and juice in the following order: half of the carrots, the piece of ginger, all of the apple, and then the remaining half of the carrots. This will allow the flavors to blend while juicing. Serve immediately to retain as many of the nutrients as possible. If necessary, store the juice in an airtight container in the refrigerator, and use within 2 days. Hope these are useful! ~* Laura *~ ReadingFairy Set your books free! http://bookcrossing.com/friend/Reading-Fairy Still a Vegan Vixen! Currently Reading: Them: Adventures with extremists - Jon Ronson ALL-NEW Messenger - all new features - even more fun! Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 10, 2005 Report Share Posted February 10, 2005 Juicing has been used as a way to combat diseases for a long time. Your body generally lacks enzymes because of the cooking and processing done in most everything we eat in the US. Enzymes are destroyed in practically any processing which leaves you deficient in what your body actually needs to perform all its natural functions. I find it very odd that very few people even consider enzymes but spend thousands on vitamins and minerals. I'd suggest reading up on what enzymes do in the body for starters. Certain Juicers are not so good to use because they tear apart the molecules of the food at high speed (centrifugal juicers like Mr. Juiceman) and also heats (cooks) the enzymes making them of little use in the body. One of the main purposes of juicing is that you can greatly increase the enzyme intake and your body doesn't have to deal with all the massive amount of fiber in your digestive tract. Imagine chewing on 5 lbs of carrots compared to an 8 oz. glass of carrot juice. There's a world to be said about juicing for sure. Just not enough time here. Tom Guidry Ralph [rsole] Thursday, February 10, 2005 8:14 AM juicer Tom, I would enjoy hearing your feelings about juicing, is it just a way to consume more fruits and veggies? Thanks, Ralph Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 Well, It is a subject I have studied a little. This is my take on it. The Greenstar is a very good machine, If you are raw then you probably won't use the pasta kit. The GS 2000 or GS 1000 would be a very good machine the rpm is 110 absolutely excellent. Does wheatgrass too. You can get it on the internet at give or take $350-$375. no shipping. try 1-800-578-5939 You might also want to ask about the Kempo Pro E1303 110 volt. Goes at 160 rpm also a very excellent machine (I have this machine for the last 2.1/2 years, wonderful) They probably sell it for $325-$330. Comes with a 10 year warranty. You won't go wrong with either machine. Robert W > > " kefir_king " <kefir_king > 2006/03/27 Mon AM 09:30:46 PST > rawfood > [Raw Food] Juicer > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 Robrt...thanks for your reply. I have heard that the Green Star produces foam when it does wheatgrass...do you have any info on that? thanks rbwest01 wrote: Well, It is a subject I have studied a little. This is my take on it. The Greenstar is a very good machine, If you are raw then you probably won't use the pasta kit. The GS 2000 or GS 1000 would be a very good machine the rpm is 110 absolutely excellent. Does wheatgrass too. You can get it on the internet at give or take $350-$375. no shipping. try 1-800-578-5939 You might also want to ask about the Kempo Pro E1303 110 volt. Goes at 160 rpm also a very excellent machine (I have this machine for the last 2.1/2 years, wonderful) They probably sell it for $325-$330. Comes with a 10 year warranty. You won't go wrong with either machine. Robert W > > " kefir_king " <kefir_king > 2006/03/27 Mon AM 09:30:46 PST > rawfood > [Raw Food] Juicer > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 At 12:30 PM 3/27/2006, KK wrote: >Hi All >I am thinking of getting a juicer, and considering the Green Star >Juicer. I want to use it for wheat grass, vegtables as well as fruit. i hate the greenstar twin gear it can't do soft pears it can only do a quart or two before having to be unclogged it wastes too much fruit juice its cumbersome to use and clean the only reason why i use it is because its the best one i could find jaear Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 27, 2006 Report Share Posted March 27, 2006 At Mon, 27 Mar 2006 it looks like rahtymz composed: > At 12:30 PM 3/27/2006, KK wrote: > >Hi All > >I am thinking of getting a juicer, and considering the Green Star > >Juicer. I want to use it for wheat grass, vegtables as well as fruit. > > i hate the greenstar twin gear > it can't do soft pears > it can only do a quart or two before having to be unclogged > it wastes too much fruit juice > its cumbersome to use and clean > the only reason why i use it is because its the best one i could find > I use a Samson Juicer http://www.fernsnutrition.com/samson_juicer.html which has worked for me, it's not a commercial grade juicer that costs alot and it's sooooooooooo easy to clean, comes apart in 5 seconds and has one single auger. It does juice, veggies, pasta etc. And of course there is the other full range of juicers http://www.fernsnutrition.com/wheatgrass.html Fern's Nutrition has great customer service too -- Bill Schoolcraft | http://wiliweld.com " If your life was full of nothing but sunshine, you would just be a desert. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 28, 2006 Report Share Posted March 28, 2006 Yes, but not excessive, it's one of the reasons why I liked the Kempo PRO a little better. But both machines work very well though. I much prefer the twin auger system over the single auger, I don't like the centrigufal system at all and the masticating (Champion juicer) if also good but does not do grasses. On the GS and the Kempo PRO I like the magnetic thingies that will keep your juice longer fresh, in case that you have to take some juice with you. I am sure everybody loves their own juicer and that is okay. In my case I have not found a juicer whose pulp comes out drier then the Kempo PRO. At a low rpm so your juice does not heat up. Hope this helps. Robert W> > kefir king <kefir_king > 2006/03/27 Mon AM 11:04:55 PST > rawfood > Re: [Raw Food] Juicer > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2007 Report Share Posted February 2, 2007 I have a juiceman Jr. and I love it. rawfood , wolkenmeer wrote: > > Hi there, I am looking for a new juicer and do > not know which to take. Up to now I had a German > version of the Champion juicer that I like very much, but > it does not work with 110 V here in the USA. Would > the Green Life oder Green Power be a better juicer? > Please let me know what you think. Thanks, Wolkenmeer > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2007 Report Share Posted February 2, 2007 well I can tel you this....DO NOT buy a Hamilton beach model from walmart...LOL! My hubby, in his most loving and best interests, knew I was in the market for a juicer, and he " surprised " me with one from walmart. (SIGH)!!! What a hunk of junk...lol...talk about a mess and waste of fruit! I am trying to figure out how to replace it with out hurting his feelings, he meant well, but his juicer is a disaster with toooooooooooooo many pieces to clean and it doesnt get much juice out, just leaves a wet pulpy mess. THe only thing it does well is carrot juice! That said, I recomend if you are going to buy a juicer, make sure you spend the money to get one that will serve its purpose, and be easy to clean. I still want a juicer and have been comparing prices and different models, I like the looks of the champion and the fact that it does frozen bananas, does anyone have one of Jack LeLanes Juicers? Is it easy to clean and does it do frozen bananas? I have a chance to pick one up for only $50 which is a steal, but as my hubby has already demonstrated, you get what you pay for, so any input would be welcome! Thanks! " Don't be flakey. Get Mail for Mobile and always stay connected to friends. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2007 Report Share Posted February 2, 2007 If you are looking for a moderate price juicer that will liquid from the fibrous pulp go with a centrifugal juicer. Kenwood and Philips are some of the more known brands. The best juicer to get for home is a Masticating pressure juicer because they will give you a high quality juice and little pulp. These are expensive. Usually over $400 And the best juicer to get ever is a Hydraulic juicer and usually resturants and bars own these type of juicers. They are better than the last two I mentioned and they squeeze pulp into a teeny tiny flat card board ... leaving virtually nothing behind. I think you can even the put cores in these without it hurting the machine. Although realistically the Masticating pressure juicer can do pretty much as well as the hydraulic for at home recipes. ~ Sexy Mama! ~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 2, 2007 Report Share Posted February 2, 2007 I got the Breville Juicer, its pretty cool. A little noisy though. Check out these sites for juicer comparisons: http://www.healthyjuicecentral.info/juicing-equipment/ http://housewares.about.com/od/smallappliances/p/citristar_RO.htm http://www.juicingshack.com/juicers.html Shalu. rawfood , " Hank " <hank wrote: > > I seem to remember some discussion about juicers awhile back. I > think most people use the Champion and most of my recipes specify > it. Is there a particular model I need to get? > > Thanks. > > Tammy > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2007 Report Share Posted February 3, 2007 Bless Champion! There is only one model. They change the name every so often, but all of the parts are interchangeable, even if your juicer is from the 70s, as mine is. The booklet that comes with it has been re-formatted, but it contains the same info that my 1976 booklet has. If you can find a Champion on ebay, do it (I got mine for $100) Otherwise, the one you find in the store is the latest " model " , which just means that it is a modern color and has a plastic " jammer " (the older ones,like mine, have wood ones) I think the ones in stores cost around $200-$250. Bid on something on ebay for less than that. If you can't get one within two weeks, then go and get one from the store. (only, be careful on ebay, and scroll down to make sure that you can see that they are including all the parts-- I almost accidentally bought replacement parts) My Champion is from the mid-70s (judging by the booklet's copyright date). It works great. I love it. I wrote to Champion about model numbers and they told me that model numbers basically just tell them when the product was made. Serial numbers do that, too. their parts work on every model. Margaret rawfood , " Hank " <hank wrote: > > I seem to remember some discussion about juicers awhile back. I > think most people use the Champion and most of my recipes specify > it. Is there a particular model I need to get? > > Thanks. > > Tammy > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2007 Report Share Posted February 3, 2007 Actually, I believe there are two models. Definitely get the " professional " one. Elchanan _____ rawfood [rawfood ] On Behalf Of Margaret Gamez Friday, February 02, 2007 7:56 PM rawfood [Raw Food] Re: juicer Bless Champion! There is only one model. They change the name every so often, but all of the parts are interchangeable, even if your juicer is from the 70s, as mine is. The booklet that comes with it has been re-formatted, but it contains the same info that my 1976 booklet has. If you can find a Champion on ebay, do it (I got mine for $100) Otherwise, the one you find in the store is the latest " model " , which just means that it is a modern color and has a plastic " jammer " (the older ones,like mine, have wood ones) I think the ones in stores cost around $200-$250. Bid on something on ebay for less than that. If you can't get one within two weeks, then go and get one from the store. (only, be careful on ebay, and scroll down to make sure that you can see that they are including all the parts-- I almost accidentally bought replacement parts) My Champion is from the mid-70s (judging by the booklet's copyright date). It works great. I love it. I wrote to Champion about model numbers and they told me that model numbers basically just tell them when the product was made. Serial numbers do that, too. their parts work on every model. Margaret rawfood@ <rawfood%40> .com, " Hank " <hank wrote: > > I seem to remember some discussion about juicers awhile back. I > think most people use the Champion and most of my recipes specify > it. Is there a particular model I need to get? > > Thanks. > > Tammy > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 3, 2007 Report Share Posted February 3, 2007 I have a Jack LaLane that I picked up at a yard sale for $15 practically brand new. The only thing that you really need to take time cleaning is the basket which you have to use a brush on. The juicer came with a brush. I wouldn't say it takes that long but I would rather just eat the fruit whole instead of mess with the juicer. It does get quite a bit of the juice out. Kim rawfood , Dobby the house elf <dobeythehouseelf wrote: > > well I can tel you this....DO NOT buy a Hamilton beach model from walmart...LOL! > > My hubby, in his most loving and best interests, knew I was in the market for a juicer, and he " surprised " me with one from walmart. (SIGH)!!! > > What a hunk of junk...lol...talk about a mess and waste of fruit! > > I am trying to figure out how to replace it with out hurting his feelings, he meant well, but his juicer is a disaster with toooooooooooooo many pieces to clean and it doesnt get much juice out, just leaves a wet pulpy mess. > > THe only thing it does well is carrot juice! > > That said, I recomend if you are going to buy a juicer, make sure you spend the money to get one that will serve its purpose, and be easy to clean. > > I still want a juicer and have been comparing prices and different models, I like the looks of the champion and the fact that it does frozen bananas, does anyone have one of Jack LeLanes Juicers? Is it easy to clean and does it do frozen bananas? I have a chance to pick one up for only $50 which is a steal, but as my hubby has already demonstrated, you get what you pay for, so any input would be welcome! > > Thanks! > > > " > > > > Don't be flakey. Get Mail for Mobile and > always stay connected to friends. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2007 Report Share Posted February 4, 2007 Dobby: go to ebay and bid on a Champion! You can most often, if you are diligent, and with some luck, get one for around $100. There is really little point in getting a cheaper one, as I see it. I still have a Braun sitting on the shelf -- that is, by me, one of the top of the line centifugal juicers, but... there is no comparison... there is the champion, and there is the Green Star. the Green Star rarely comes available for cheap, like the Champion does (no clue why). I am not ready to toss my Champion anytime soon.... you can buy one from the 70s (like the one I got last spring) and the replacement parts the company offers, and any replacement parts you find on sale online will work with it. (that's one cool company) I mean, if you can get a Twin Star cheaper, get that one, otherwise, if you are planning to make juices of any sort or " ice creams " from frozen fruit, the Champion is the way to go. For " our " needs, as raw foodists, a centrifugal juicer just won't be worth it in the long run (i.e., my Champion has been going since the mid-70s-- somebody died and I got it on ebay!) I just went on ebay and saw one just like mine(even same color) for (right now) under $100. there were others for different prices. If you decide to do ebay, look at what they are asking for in shipping, and figure that into your top price... what would you be willing to pay for that Champion in your house? The one that looks like mine right now has a $49 shipping price. High, but the current bid is somewhere around $40. Were I to bid on my machine's twin, I would definitely go as high as $120 (thinking about that shipping, that would make me bid maybe $80. then I would sit around and wait to see what happened bid-wise and make my decisions.... You can always bid for another one.... Judy has told me that she has gotten several Champions for under $100. Margaret Dobby wrote: > I am trying to figure out how to replace it with out hurting his > feelings <snip> > THe only thing it does well is carrot juice! <snip> > I like the looks of the champion and the fact that it does frozen > bananas Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2007 Report Share Posted February 4, 2007 Elchanan wrote: > Actually, I believe there are two models. Definitely get the " professional " one. aha! Yes. I actually wrote to the company to ask them about that. they said that the works are the same. as in... if you get a champion, you get a champion. It is a work-horse. It is not the same thing you might see in a juice bar, but it is that same champion that you will see anywhere. At least, that is what they told me when I asked them. Margaret > _____ > > rawfood [rawfood ] On Behalf Of > Margaret Gamez > Friday, February 02, 2007 7:56 PM > rawfood > [Raw Food] Re: juicer > > > > Bless Champion! There is only one model. > They change the name every so often, but all of the parts are > interchangeable, even if your juicer is from the 70s, as mine is. > The booklet that comes with it has been re-formatted, but it contains > the same info that my 1976 booklet has. > If you can find a Champion on ebay, do it (I got mine for $100) > Otherwise, the one you find in the store is the latest " model " , which > just means that it is a modern color and has a plastic " jammer " (the > older ones,like mine, have wood ones) > I think the ones in stores cost around $200-$250. Bid on something on > ebay for less than that. If you can't get one within two weeks, then > go and get one from the store. (only, be careful on ebay, and scroll > down to make sure that you can see that they are including all the > parts-- I almost accidentally bought replacement parts) > My Champion is from the mid-70s (judging by the booklet's copyright > date). It works great. I love it. > I wrote to Champion about model numbers and they told me that model > numbers basically just tell them when the product was made. Serial > numbers do that, too. their parts work on every model. > Margaret > > rawfood@ <rawfood%40> .com, > " Hank@ " <hank@> wrote: > > > > I seem to remember some discussion about juicers awhile back. I > > think most people use the Champion and most of my recipes specify > > it. Is there a particular model I need to get? > > > > Thanks. > > > > Tammy > > > > > > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2007 Report Share Posted February 4, 2007 rawfood , " Hank " <hank wrote: > > I seem to remember some discussion about juicers awhile back. I > think most people use the Champion and most of my recipes specify > it. Is there a particular model I need to get? > > Thanks. > > Tammy If it's price your not concerned about then quality is the only thing left. Grant both come hand n hand. But out of all the messages I lQQked over, depends on your homework on the juicer-is your favorite. > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 4, 2007 Report Share Posted February 4, 2007 We just got a norwalk. Ordered it because our puppy had cancer....but it didn't come in time to help him. It makes the best juice that we have ever tasted. The price tag seems high, but it has a 12 year guarantee, is easy to clean, and the juice lasts. I was using my parent's greenstar, which was also very good, but the Norwalk juice tastes better. heather -- meetyourmeat.com Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 5, 2007 Report Share Posted February 5, 2007 In a message dated 2/5/2007 11:19:01 A.M. Central Standard Time, meetyourmeat.com writes: We just got a norwalk. Ordered it because our puppy had cancer....but it didn't come in time to help him. Does anyone know about the Jack LaLane juicer? Thanks, ~Mimi~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 7, 2007 Report Share Posted February 7, 2007 In a message dated 2/7/2007 1:21:48 P.M. Central Standard Time, jennifersmith writes: I have a Jack LeLane Juicer and I LOOOOVE it Thanks so much Jenn... My family had ordered it for me. I was so hoping it was a good one. ~Mimi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted February 7, 2007 Report Share Posted February 7, 2007 I have a Jack LeLane Juicer and I LOOOOVE it. I'm new to RF so I haven't tried to do things like wheat grass, but it does a really good job of all of the fruits and veggies I've tried. It extracts a ton of juice, so the pulp is very dry and can be used in other recipes. The only downside? The feeder hole isn't as big as they say, so you have to quarter apples, and you MUST cut the rind off of all oranges and the like. Hope this helps. If you have other questions, you can always email me privately. Jenn rawfood , NeimanBarkusAR wrote: > > Does anyone know about the Jack LaLane juicer? > Thanks, > ~Mimi~ > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 Juicer is a great idea. Not sure about the B & D Model. If you are not planning to use it daily it will probably be fine. From experience if you juice a 1 Pound bag of carrots it will yield about 2 cups of juice. Juicing is great you do not get the moldy oranges like they use in commercial juices. Plus raw fruit and veggie juices taste so good. Also you will want to filter the juice after if you do not like lots of pulp. Good Luck Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 We got the Jack LaLanne one & got a very good price on ebay. It's easy to clean and makes great juice. It's funny how the fresh real juice looks and tastes nothing like the store-bought ones. I can't buy tomato juice anymore. Peace, Diane , " Michelle Dixon " <Petagoatjunction wrote: > > My husband has decided he wants a juicer to juice fruits and > vegetables. I saw a Black and Decker juicer at Wal-mart today. Has > anyone used this? What are your reviews of it? > > Here's a link to the one I saw today. > > http://www.bdappliancestore.com/product_detail.asp? > T1=APP+JE2050 & SKW=APPJUICER > > Thanks > Michelle > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2009 Report Share Posted January 11, 2009 I love the Jack LaLanne juicer, our sweetie pie member Ginger gave it to me via Freecycle. It works like a charm. I make juice everyday and take to my Mom. Donna --- On Sun, 1/11/09, strayfeather1 <otherbox2001 wrote: strayfeather1 <otherbox2001 Re: juicer Sunday, January 11, 2009, 10:53 AM We got the Jack LaLanne one & got a very good price on ebay. It's easy to clean and makes great juice. It's funny how the fresh real juice looks and tastes nothing like the store-bought ones. I can't buy tomato juice anymore. Peace, Diane , " Michelle Dixon " <Petagoatjunction@ ...> wrote: > > My husband has decided he wants a juicer to juice fruits and > vegetables. I saw a Black and Decker juicer at Wal-mart today. Has > anyone used this? What are your reviews of it? > > Here's a link to the one I saw today. > > http://www.bdapplia ncestore. com/product_ detail.asp? > T1=APP+JE2050 & SKW=APPJUICER > > Thanks > Michelle > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted May 8, 2010 Report Share Posted May 8, 2010 Hi everybody, I'm thinking about getting a juicer but don't want to spend a lot on one. I really prefer to use whole foods in a blender but would like the option of juicing for a few days once and a while. I could use the blender and a nut bag but am not sure if the blender would handle carrots and such (would it?). So anyway...... I was looking at a Juiceman Jr. that is on sale. Does anyone know if they are any good? Thanks, Lorri Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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