Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Polar seltzer or go home.
This guy seltzes!
Cranberry lime and Orange vanilla FTW.
Polar Orange Dry. I swear they put crack in those cans.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But if you are substituting LaCroix for Diet Coke or some other kind of flavored seltzer, or coffee, or lemon water...aren't they all destroying your teeth anyway? Isn't anything other than plain water destroying your teeth if you are just swigging away at it while you go about your day?
I see your point, but it's not an equal substitution. LaCroix addicts are tipping back 3-6 cans a day because it's zero cal and they think it's water (secretly women like that it makes them feel full, so they avoid eating).
I'm a coffee drinker, but only 1 cup at 8am. I don't know any LaCroix addicts who only have 1 can per day. And I don't know any LaCroix addicts who quit drinking coffee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Polar seltzer or go home.
This guy seltzes!
Cranberry lime and Orange vanilla FTW.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But if you are substituting LaCroix for Diet Coke or some other kind of flavored seltzer, or coffee, or lemon water...aren't they all destroying your teeth anyway? Isn't anything other than plain water destroying your teeth if you are just swigging away at it while you go about your day?
I see your point, but it's not an equal substitution. LaCroix addicts are tipping back 3-6 cans a day because it's zero cal and they think it's water (secretly women like that it makes them feel full, so they avoid eating).
I'm a coffee drinker, but only 1 cup at 8am. I don't know any LaCroix addicts who only have 1 can per day. And I don't know any LaCroix addicts who quit drinking coffee.
Anonymous wrote:Polar seltzer or go home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But if you are substituting LaCroix for Diet Coke or some other kind of flavored seltzer, or coffee, or lemon water...aren't they all destroying your teeth anyway? Isn't anything other than plain water destroying your teeth if you are just swigging away at it while you go about your day?
I see your point, but it's not an equal substitution. LaCroix addicts are tipping back 3-6 cans a day because it's zero cal and they think it's water (secretly women like that it makes them feel full, so they avoid eating).
I'm a coffee drinker, but only 1 cup at 8am. I don't know any LaCroix addicts who only have 1 can per day. And I don't know any LaCroix addicts who quit drinking coffee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer Whole Foods brand sparkling water myself, but just FYI, my dentist said seltzer water doesn't do anything to your teeth.
Your dentist is wrong.
Dentist here. Her dentist is right.
Regular carbonated water has only a slight pH change from regular water - not enough to affect your teeth. It's the citric acid that is in the "natural flavors" of the LaCroix that bring the pH way down to to danger zone (for tooth destruction, at least).
Hope that clears things up.
In other words: LaCroix is destroying your teeth.
Dentist again.
Yes, absolutely it is. But PP's dentist said seltzer (what I took to mean as plain seltzer) doesn't do anything to your teeth and s/he was correct.
Anonymous wrote:
But if you are substituting LaCroix for Diet Coke or some other kind of flavored seltzer, or coffee, or lemon water...aren't they all destroying your teeth anyway? Isn't anything other than plain water destroying your teeth if you are just swigging away at it while you go about your day?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer Whole Foods brand sparkling water myself, but just FYI, my dentist said seltzer water doesn't do anything to your teeth.
Your dentist is wrong.
Dentist here. Her dentist is right.
Regular carbonated water has only a slight pH change from regular water - not enough to affect your teeth. It's the citric acid that is in the "natural flavors" of the LaCroix that bring the pH way down to to danger zone (for tooth destruction, at least).
Hope that clears things up.
In other words: LaCroix is destroying your teeth.
Dentist again.
Yes, absolutely it is. But PP's dentist said seltzer (what I took to mean as plain seltzer) doesn't do anything to your teeth and s/he was correct.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I prefer Whole Foods brand sparkling water myself, but just FYI, my dentist said seltzer water doesn't do anything to your teeth.
Your dentist is wrong.
Dentist here. Her dentist is right.
Regular carbonated water has only a slight pH change from regular water - not enough to affect your teeth. It's the citric acid that is in the "natural flavors" of the LaCroix that bring the pH way down to to danger zone (for tooth destruction, at least).
Hope that clears things up.
In other words: LaCroix is destroying your teeth.