enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Orange juice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_juice

    Common orange juice is made from the sweet orange. Different cultivars (for example, Valencia, Hamlin) have different properties, and a producer may mix cultivar juices to get the desired taste. Orange juice usually varies between shades of orange and yellow, although some ruby red or blood orange varieties are a reddish-orange or even pinkish.

  3. Wait, Is Orange Juice Actually Healthy? Here's What ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/wait-orange-juice-actually-healthy...

    Orange juice can definitely be a healthy addition to a well-balanced diet, but not all orange juice is created the same,” she warns. ... Look for labels that say ‘100% juice’ or ‘not ...

  4. Hi-C - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hi-C

    1958 sales team promotional newsletter excerpts. Niles Foster, a former bakery and bottling plant owner, created Hi-C in 1946. It took Foster over a year to develop the ideal formula for Hi-C orange drink; the formula contains orange juice concentrate, peel oil and orange essences, sugar, water, citric acid and ascorbic acid (vitamin C).

  5. To stay healthy, eat more foods with vitamin D, nutrition ...

    www.aol.com/stay-healthy-eat-more-foods...

    It's best to check the nutrition labels of cereal and orange juice to see how much extra vitamin D can be added to a morning meal, experts say. Original article source: To stay healthy, eat more ...

  6. SunnyD - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SunnyD

    SunnyD (named Sunny Delight prior to 2000) is an orange drink developed in 1963 by Doric Foods of Mount Dora, Florida, United States. [1] Additional plants were built in California and Ohio in 1974 and 1978, respectively.

  7. Food labelling in Canada - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Food_labelling_in_Canada

    The name by which the food is formally known (for example: orange juice) The name of the product must also be displayed on the main label in both English and French with a minimum height of 1/16 of an inch (1.6 mm). [6] Exemptions from declaring a common name on the label:

  8. Orange drink - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orange_drink

    The term orange drink refers to a sweet, sugary, sometimes carbonated, orange-flavored drink. Typically such beverages contain little or no orange juice and are mainly composed of water, sugar or sweeteners, flavor, coloring, and additives. Although many orange drinks are fortified with Vitamin C, they are typically very low in nutritional ...

  9. Five Alive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five_Alive

    The Nutrition Facts label on the Canadian 341 mL ready-to-serve can of Five Alive claims the beverage contains 140% of the recommended daily intake of vitamin C. Five Alive contains 110 calories and 27 grams of sugar per 240 mL. U.S. Five Alive labels list 41% fruit juice, with high-fructose corn syrup as an ingredient after filtered water. [1]