Juice in Polycarbonate water bottles
Posted by:
ezrac3isb
()
Date: August 29, 2007 12:04AM Polycarbonate is a high quality plastic that is used to make water bottles because it prevents the leeching of chemicals into your drinking water. I read that there is a slight risk of Bisphenol-A exposure after the bottles are worn out through dishwashing, heavy use, or exposed to alkaline substances. What I'm wondering is, can I store green juices in this water bottle? Is the alkalinity level of a green juice low enough that the plastic will remain resistant? Re: Juice in Polycarbonate water bottles
Posted by:
anaken
()
Date: August 29, 2007 12:24AM What kind of juicer? only the norwalk remains vital for multiple days I believe. I've never owned a greenstar but I hear you can keep those for a bit if you put it in the fridge immediately. I recommend storing in glass (no problem washing these), but I don't have an answer exactly to your question but I think juices are alkaline forming which is a bit different then in substance.
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Posted by:
ezrac3isb
()
Date: August 29, 2007 04:52AM Hi Anaken, I'm mixing smoothies in the vitamix and occasionally put the contents into a nutbag to extract pure juice.
So there is a difference between "alkaline forming" and "alkaline in composition", and green smoothies/juices fall into the former category? Can anyone confirm this? I have heard that vitamix oxidizes your juice quickly due to fast rpm.. Would oxidization affect the "alkaline composition" of a juice? Sorry, only registered users may post in this forum.
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