Gcscoci Tastes Driven To Extractionby.s. Gabbay Those fast-selling juicers offer potent liquid nutrition and an adventure in flavor. I t mashes, pulverizes, and extracts, and it has captured the vitamin-starved hearts of the American people. Its the juicer, of course. Health-conscious Americans have already snapped up between three and five million of the devices this year— near- ly ten times as many as three years ago. The appliances, which extract essential liquids from vegetables and fruits, are hot enough to warrant a week's worth of attention in the pop- ular comic strip "Sally Forth" (Ted tries to convince Sally to purchase a juicer) and to fly off the shelves in local stores. Juicers and books about juicers have been "flying off the shelves," says Toula Patsalis, owner of Kitchen Glamor stores in Novi, Red- ford Township, Rochester and West Bloom- field. "In the summer, we couldn't keep them in stock," she adds. Why juice? First and foremost, it's nutri- tious. Unlike cooked or processed vegetables, juiced vegetables contain nearly all of the vitamins and minerals of the original food. Moreover, if you drink juice made from veg- etables and fruits that you normally might avoid, such as carrots or cabbage, you're in- gesting nutrients such as beta carotene that might otherwise escape you. (Found in car- rots and other yellow and orange vegetables, beta carotene is believed to counteract car- cinogenic activities in the body.) Juicing also allows you to ingest the nutri- ents of more vegetables than are normally eat- en in a day. Some even claim that juicing can cure specific medical conditions. Users of the Omega Juicer, made by Harrisburg, Pa. based Omega Products, have credited cucumber juice with relieving allergies, and broccoli juice Free-lancer Alyssa Gabbay is a frequent contributor to STYLE. with easing digestive problems. And in The Juiceman's Power ofJuicing, author Jay Ko- rdich (also known as "The juiceman" of tele- vision info-mercials fame) prescribes juices for conditions ranging from acne (the "Blem- ish Blaster''— a mixture of car ts and green peppers) to urinary tract infections ("Eve's Promise"— apples combined with pome- granates.) There's even a Hair Growth and Hair-Loss Prevention Tonic made from car- rots, alfalfa sprouts, and lettuce. But don't take those claims too much to heart, say nutritionists. Although some of the benefits may be based in fact— for example, greens are calcium rich, and calcium is good for the teeth, so drinking parsley or kale juice could, theoretically, ward off tooth decay they are not proven. In other words, don't ex- pect juicing to cure your yeast infection or stop your hair from falling out "Juices are a great way for people to have a balanced diet who do not eat enough fruits and vegetables," says Gail Posner, a nutri- tionist with Fambrook Medical Two in South- field. She explains that one cup of juice is equal to two servings of a fruit or vegetable. But juice is far from a complete diet Drink- ing only the juice of vegetables fails to provide you with the fiber that's a necessary part of a healthy diet— so you must supplement it elsewhere. Most nutritionists disapprove of juice fasts that some use to "cleanse" their STYLE • FALL 1992 .37