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Should You Be Juicing or Munching on Celery?
Another new year means another new food deemed worthy for a place under the coveted list of healing superfoods. You’ve likely had a long history with this trending superfood. As a child, you’ve seen it smothered with peanut butter with carefully placed raisins to resemble “ants on a log,” it’s been a supporting act on veggie platters as the best tool for dipping into guilty pleasure ranch and blue-cheese dressings, but have you ever thought of the humble celery as a superfood?
Celery juice has recently gotten ALL of the hype, especially with the restart and detox atmosphere of the new year along with a strong celeb backing (you know it's legit when there's a Pinterest board filled with celebrities and their juices) with the likes of Miranda Kerr, Pharrell, and Hannah Bronfman.
“when I first started with celery juice I saw lots of impurities come to the surface of my skin, meaning a lot of the toxins were being purged from the inside out.” - Hannah Bronfman
Benefits of Celery Juice
The benefits of celery juice has even got a dedicated Instagram account with the handle, @celeryjuicebenefits garnering an impressive 95.4K following.
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The movement all started with the Medical Medium aka Anthony William — whose NY Times Best Selling book is definitely worth a read. Celery Juice’s list of benefits seems as endless as your list of unqualified potential partners and left swipes. Below are only a couple of its benefits according to the originator of the celery juice movement:
But just as any other item put under the superfood spotlight, it’s gonna get a couple haters or shall we say, skeptics. Coveteur has put celery juice first on their list of “Wellness Trends to Leave Behind in 2018.” The article claims that there are little evidence to prove the benefits of celery juice and that “you’re probably better off snacking on a stalk and getting the benefits of the fiber than drinking the juice.”
So is it really worth it to go through all the trouble of juicing an entire stalk of celery everyday? And will you really get the benefits without the fibers? According to William, “eating celery stalks, while very healthy and important, is not the same as drinking pure celery juice. When celery is juiced, the pulp (fiber) is removed, and its healing benefits become much more powerful and bioavailable, especially for someone with chronic illness.”
Now whether these claims about pulp are fiction or not, there’s nothing better than determining the benefits IRL. If you’re truly curious as to how celery juicing will affect your body, make sure that you drink the juice without the combination of any other fruits or vegetables. So if you want to sip celery out of a straw or munch the days away. Either way, we’ll definitely be incorporating celery into our diets more often this new year in hopes of riding that same fountain of youth as Pharrell.
If you’ve read this far, I assume you’re a celery connoisseur, now’s the time to broaden your culinary horizon...
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5 comments
Can drinking 16 cups of pure celery juice from a juicer raise blood pressure?
Can drinking 16 cups of pure celery juice from a juicer raise blood pressure?
Juicing is best at all times.
When celery is juiced, the pulp (fiber) is removed, and its healing benefits become much more powerful and bioavailable, especially for someone with chronic illness.”
Totally unproven
From what I have learned.Juicing is Best because you get more nutrients in a glass of something a.k.a. celery juice versus eating one or two celery sticks. The difference is that your juicing a whole stock, maybe seven or eight sticks. So of course drinking the juice of seven or eight sticks is better than eating one celery stick. But if you are drinking a smoothie with spinach and kale and broccoli etc. that you don’t have to juice, Then In my opinion snacking on one or two celery sticks is better than juicing celery