The Orange Juice Test.

Status
Not open for further replies.

GoodNews!

Moved On
Oct 25, 2013
577
136
Vaping, USA
Also, keep in mind, orange juice can pretty much vary from orange to orange to company to company. Most manufactered orange juice has a very high acidity, I don't care what anyone says. Certainly more so than grape juice or lemon juice, which are more alkaline in form, in terms of mass production.

Organic orange juice is quite smooth and probably wouldn't work for this test.
 

Ld3441

Super Member
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Sep 29, 2013
736
715
Florida, USA

Diogenes

Moved On
Nov 5, 2013
381
847
Justice, IL
I see that you didn't include orange juice on that list. Please stop spreading lies.

Orange juice is way more acidic than lemon juice is. And it isn't a palette cleanser, it's a taste bud muter. The PH difference between orange juice and lemon juice is night and day, dolt.

What is the pH level of orange apple and lemon juice

Before you go calling people names, maybe you should do some research. Citric acid makes up 5 percent to 6 percent of the lemons content. Oranges have .08 to 1 percent citric acid. Therefore, lemons are more acidic.

EDIT - Research:

Typical range of PH for various fruits:

Lemon Juice - 2.00 - 2.60
Orange Juice - 3.30 - 4.19
Bananas - 4.50 - 5.20

The lower the number, the more acidic it is. The higher the number, the more base it is. The pH scale is logarithmic and as a result, each whole pH value below 7 is ten times more acidic than the next higher value. For example, pH 4 is ten times more acidic than pH 5 and 100 times (10 times 10) more acidic than pH 6. The same holds true for pH values above 7, each of which is ten times more alkaline (another way to say basic) than the next lower whole value. For example, pH 10 is ten times more alkaline than pH 9 and 100 times (10 times 10) more alkaline than pH 8. So as you can plainly see, lemon juice is approx. 10 times more acidic than orange juice.


If you want to taste your juice, you need a clean palate. And sir, it is "palate" and not "palette." A palette is something an artist uses to lay and mix his paint colors.
 
Last edited:

Diogenes

Moved On
Nov 5, 2013
381
847
Justice, IL
Also, keep in mind, orange juice can pretty much vary from orange to orange to company to company. Most manufactered orange juice has a very high acidity, I don't care what anyone says. Certainly more so than grape juice or lemon juice, which are more alkaline in form, in terms of mass production.

Organic orange juice is quite smooth and probably wouldn't work for this test.

Really?? We had *no* idea at all....
 

GoodNews!

Moved On
Oct 25, 2013
577
136
Vaping, USA
Before you go calling people names, maybe you should do some research. Citric acid makes up 5 percent to 6 percent of the lemons content. Oranges have .08 to 1 percent citric acid. Therefore, lemons are more acidic.

If you want to taste your juice, you need a clean palate. And sir, it is "palate" and not "palette." A palette is something an artist uses to lay and mix his paint colors.

Depends on what the companies are putting in the orange juice. Eating a regular orange will not work in the way I described the test, and that's why I said to drink orange juice, not to eat an orange.

I can eat an orange and it doesn't make my tongue dry in the least. Orange juice sure does. Depending on how organic it is.

There's more factors about this effect out there than just the PH scale imo. Then again, it could be the alkaline, I may have just been mistaken. I just know that orange juice isn't considered to be a palate cleanser in our hobby. Grape juices, coffees, and lemon juices are more preferred, and I think there's a reason why. Again, could have been my mix up between acidity and alkaline, and in that case, I was pretty much right with wrong terms. So there was no real reason to behave any different than if my information was correct. The effect is the SAME.

Go ahead ya'll try and sip a bit of orange juice with your vape, bet you won't vape after it. If my assumptions are correct, half the folks are running around here vaping metal ions and nasty tasting chemicals made from the gunking of propylene glycol, if ya'll want to vape that, go ahead, I'm just giving people a test where they can do it to improve their own atomizers and have a realistic idea of what they're really vaping. I bet everyone will feel a little like me after they try it, they'll taste weird stuff and will have no clue why.

But if your atomizer is clean, I bet you'll taste nothing but vapor. Can be a nice way to gauge.
 
Last edited:

Kopfstimmen

Ultra Member
ECF Veteran
May 12, 2012
2,732
3,025
On-topic note here, has anyone tried raspberry for this experiment? My in-laws pureed raspberries as a desert topping, and it literally hurt my tongue. I won't be trying it again. It just hurt - it didn't do anything to assist in tasting silicate or metal, which I can't imagine doing on purpose anyway.
Off-topic: I apologize to the mods. I try to be good, but some things I just can't resist. I know you guys do a good job, but some things are too hard to pass up. :)
 

Diogenes

Moved On
Nov 5, 2013
381
847
Justice, IL
  • Deleted by retired1
  • Reason: Attempting to evade forum filters

Robino1

Resting in Peace
ECF Veteran
Sep 7, 2012
27,447
110,404
Treasure Coast, Florida
Quantitative Assessment of Citric Acid in Lemon Juice, Lime Juice, and Commercially-Available Fruit Juice Products

Trying to see if the page that has the information will show up here.

If you click on TABLE 1 and the click on it again, it gives you the content of citric acid in each fruit. Notice they add citric acid to Tropicana orange juice? Juice from the fruit of the orange actually has less citric acid. Interesting. But even though citric acid is added, there is still quite less than what is in the fruit of the lemon etc...

You have to love Google. It takes some digging, but you can still find reputable sources of information.
 

Diogenes

Moved On
Nov 5, 2013
381
847
Justice, IL
On-topic note here, has anyone tried raspberry for this experiment? My in-laws pureed raspberries as a desert topping, and it literally hurt my tongue. I won't be trying it again. It just hurt - it didn't do anything to assist in tasting silicate or metal, which I can't imagine doing on purpose anyway.
Off-topic: I apologize to the mods. I try to be good, but some things I just can't resist. I know you guys do a good job, but some things are too hard to pass up. :)

That was the ground up glass they put in it. I'm sorry to be the one to tell you, but frankly, your in-laws just don't like you.
 

edyle

ECF Guru
ECF Veteran
Verified Member
Oct 23, 2013
14,199
7,195
Port-of-Spain, Trinidad & Tobago
Well, then it's the alkaline, big whoop. But lower PH doesn't mean less acidity, it can just mean more alkaline. Matters more the average of the two, if I'm not totally mistaken.

Oh; that clears up my question :)

Lower PH means more acidic or less alkaline.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Users who are viewing this thread