Anonymous wrote:FYI pediatricians said no juice to prevent kids from having that icky faux juice that is actually just sugar syrup colored with dye. There is now some concern that kids who don’t get exposed to different types of fruit juices young have a more limited palate for fruits and vegetables. In fact, your post that OJ is a little “thick and sweet” is highlighting my point. A little OJ now and then is okay for kids. I make my kids fresh fruit smoothies and give them OJ every two weeks or so, and I drink oj (in a tiny euro sized glass) about 2 times a week. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:FYI pediatricians said no juice to prevent kids from having that icky faux juice that is actually just sugar syrup colored with dye. There is now some concern that kids who don’t get exposed to different types of fruit juices young have a more limited palate for fruits and vegetables. In fact, your post that OJ is a little “thick and sweet” is highlighting my point. A little OJ now and then is okay for kids. I make my kids fresh fruit smoothies and give them OJ every two weeks or so, and I drink oj (in a tiny euro sized glass) about 2 times a week. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:FYI pediatricians said no juice to prevent kids from having that icky faux juice that is actually just sugar syrup colored with dye. There is now some concern that kids who don’t get exposed to different types of fruit juices young have a more limited palate for fruits and vegetables. In fact, your post that OJ is a little “thick and sweet” is highlighting my point. A little OJ now and then is okay for kids. I make my kids fresh fruit smoothies and give them OJ every two weeks or so, and I drink oj (in a tiny euro sized glass) about 2 times a week. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:But what if it's NOT filtered water? Then you are pure garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That's my point. Cutting/diluting orange juice has trashy roots -- poor families would add water to the jug to "stretch" what was left in the container, right?
OP, where did you grow up, and what is your family heritage and socio-economic background? I'd like to know where you picked up the use of "trashy" as a shorthand for poor. Tell us more.
Anonymous wrote:That's my point. Cutting/diluting orange juice has trashy roots -- poor families would add water to the jug to "stretch" what was left in the container, right?
Anonymous wrote:Depends who you are.
Short cut for you - If you do something to save money because you are poor, it’s trashy according to DCUM. If you do something to save money because you are a cheapskate, but you are also rich, it’s not trashy - you are smart. If you do it to save calories and you are fat - it’s trashy because DCUM thinks being fat is trashy and you don’t deserve the small joy juice brings you so you shouldn’t have it at all. If you are thin and you do it to save calories (and you also write a comment on every NYT Cooking article to say the recipe is “too sweet”) then it’s not trashy, you are better than all of us disgusting slobs who like sweet things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's on the trashy side if, say, you are a hotel that advertises breakfast with orange juice, but you water it down to save money without acknowledging that to your guests.
If you are doing it for yourself, or for other people not paying for it and expecting undiluted then it isn't trashy. It's just diluted.
That's my point. Cutting/diluting orange juice has trashy roots -- poor families would add water to the jug to "stretch" what was left in the container, right?
WOW, OP. Seriously?
Anonymous wrote:But what if it's NOT filtered water? Then you are pure garbage.
Anonymous wrote:Depends who you are.
Short cut for you - If you do something to save money because you are poor, it’s trashy according to DCUM. If you do something to save money because you are a cheapskate, but you are also rich, it’s not trashy - you are smart. If you do it to save calories and you are fat - it’s trashy because DCUM thinks being fat is trashy and you don’t deserve the small joy juice brings you so you shouldn’t have it at all. If you are thin and you do it to save calories (and you also write a comment on every NYT Cooking article to say the recipe is “too sweet”) then it’s not trashy, you are better than all of us disgusting slobs who like sweet things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's on the trashy side if, say, you are a hotel that advertises breakfast with orange juice, but you water it down to save money without acknowledging that to your guests.
If you are doing it for yourself, or for other people not paying for it and expecting undiluted then it isn't trashy. It's just diluted.
That's my point. Cutting/diluting orange juice has trashy roots -- poor families would add water to the jug to "stretch" what was left in the container, right?