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It's explained in this site somewhere.... I'll have a read and paste the relevant bit i a while.
This is why it�s better, particularly for children, to keep fruit juice to mealtimes and stick to either milk or water between meals.
I guess you could call it 'negative goodness' like 'negative calories', for example a carrot contains calories, but the energy your body uses to digest the carrot counteracts the original calorific value thus making it's calorie value negative.
You'd get goodness from one glass, but the sugar would negate the goodness as it would damage your teeth?
I don't know that for sure but that's what i assumed from reading the article.
I think the whole point of the 5-a-day scheme is to try to promote healthy eating of a variety of fruits and veg.
By deliberately discounting "multiple consumptions" (to use a phrase !!!) or certain veg (like potatoes), the intention is to prevent people thinking they have satisfied the 5-a-day criteria by having two bags of chips and three glasses of Sunny-Z.
Is there really such a thing as 'negative calorie foods'?
ALL foods contain some calories, but it is believed by many (including some doctors) that some foods take up more caloric energy to digest then the calories that are in them resulting in what is called the "negative calorie effect". The more "negative calorie effect" foods you eat, the more you may lose!
http://www.healthrecipes.com/negative_calories_list.htm
Gef, I have read this on various sites and have also read about it in magazines, I admit I haven't actually measured the energy used or directly researched it myself but the site above is good enough for me.
natalie, I have looked at the site and think it is a bit of a con. If you want the details you have to pay! I think it is saying that if you lived only on carrots (or cabbage soup) you would lose weight because your metabolism uses more calories to keep the body going than you can get from carrots alone.
To both of you, sorry for my previous short answer - it was not meant to be offensive.