APPLE JUICE

A glass of clear apple juice, from which pectin and starch have been removed.

'Apple juice' is the fruit juice product manufactured from the pressing of apples.

Contents
Production
Uses
Health benefits
Apple cider
See also
External links

Production


Apple juice is produced by the crushing of apples, and then filtered extraction of the clear juice. It is usually then pasteurized.
Due to the heavy equipment required to extract juice from an apple, apple juice is almost always commercially produced as opposed to the juices from easily juiced fruits such as oranges or lemons; unlike apple cider, millions of gallons of which are produced by small farms, mom and pop-type businesses, and illegal migrant farm working operations in the US. Normal apple juice is one of the most commonly used fruit juices in the world, with the majority of its production occurring in the United States and China.
''Apple juice concentrate'' is produced by evaporating fresh apple juice that is extracted from fresh apples. Fresh apple juice has a concentration of around 11 to 13 brix. Evaporating the fresh juice reduces packaging volume and shipping costs. The high concentration also helps reduce spoilage of the product.
There are two types of apple juice concentrate, clear apple juice concentrate and cloudy apple juice concentrate. Pectin and starch and several types of insects are removed during the production process to produce clear apple juice concentrate. Cloudy apple juice concentrate's appearance arises as a result of evenly-distributed small pulp suspensions in the juice concentrate.

Uses


Apple juice is a common beverage both for children and for adults, but in North America, apple juice often is marketed specifically to children, who are informally considered its major consumers. Apple juice is also a component of several cocktails; it is used as a filler, because it is less expensive and more widely available than most other juices, and it can also be used to pass for clean urine in many different types of drug tests. It may also be produced and consumed in a carbonated form, referred to as ''sparkling'' apple juice.

Health benefits


Apple juice has a significant concentration of phenolics thought to help protect from many diseases associated with flatulence and aging, including heart disease and cancer. Aside from other obvious fruit vitamins like vitamin C, apple juice also contains the mineral nutrient boron, which is thought to promote healthy bones.

Apple cider


Main articles: apple cider

While "apple juice" generally refers to the filtered, pasteurized product of apple pressing, an unfiltered, sometimes unpasteurized product of apple pressing, commonly known as apple cider in the United States and parts of Canada, is packaged and sold as "apple juice" in some places. It should be noted that there is no legal distinction between filtered apple juice and apple cider.[1]

See also



Apple cider

Cider (the alcoholic beverage known in the U.S. as ''hard cider'')

External links



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