markbnj 13 hours ago

The John McPhee article that the author references was expanded into a book, and it's a great read for anyone that finds this story interesting: https://www.amazon.com/Oranges-John-McPhee-ebook/dp/B005E8AN...

  • floodfx 9 hours ago

    Seconded. Interesting read.

  • jhbadger 8 hours ago

    John McPhee is a great underrated non-fiction author, up there with the late Tracy Kidder. I particularly like McPhee's "The Curve of Binding Energy" about the physicist Theodore B. Taylor.

    • globnomulous 3 hours ago

      He may have little name recognition, but he's considered, at a minimum, one of the most important, influential, masterful nonfiction writers of his generation.

pjc50 1 day ago

This reminds me of the collapse of the Gros Michel banana variety, also due to disease. Near-100% loss of a food crop, even a luxury one, is an alarming thing to see though.

(I was wondering if climate change would be mentioned, but that doesn't seem to be critical there yet. Starting to be noticed in European grape terroir.)

  • HugoTea 1 day ago

    They mention it as a critical factor, the disease is spread by insects, which is spread by hurricanes. The areas they grow the oranges never used to get hurricanes.

    > Hurricanes turned out to be a vector for spreading the little winged bug. The wind carried the psyllid all over the state, dropping it off in hundreds of thousands of acres of groves.

    > It was the perfect storm. And then, of course, there were the actual perfect storms, the high-caliber hurricanes that, before climate change, didn’t come to the Ridge: Irma, Ian, Milton, massive cells, all direct hits on the groves.

    • treis 9 hours ago

      Do you really believe parts of Florida never got hurricanes until recently?

      • zdragnar 8 hours ago

        To be charitable, they merely pointed out what the article said, even if it is obviously, objectively false.

        • jibal 6 hours ago

          It's not objectively false, people just can't read.

          > the high-caliber hurricanes that, before climate change, didn’t come to the Ridge

          • caminante 5 hours ago

            You're making the parent's point.

            These recent storms only got to Cat4.

            Similar storms hit the aforementioned areas in 2004-05 including Cat4.

            How do these revelations not contradict the article?

      • HugoTea 18 minutes ago

        I have no idea what Florida's weather patterns are

    • tgarrett 9 hours ago

      >The areas they grow the oranges never used to get hurricanes.

      That's not correct: we have good data going back to 1851:

      https://www.aoml.noaa.gov/hrd/hurdat/All_U.S._Hurricanes.htm...

      Search for "FL": hurricanes have been hitting Florida frequently for the last 175 years.

      • acdha 8 hours ago

        That's not the point being made: the article clearly states that those areas did not previously get hit by storms at this level. Climate change is making hurricanes stronger and wetter, so even though they've been a phenomenon for as long as humans have lived there that doesn't mean that the frequency of damaging storms over an area can't change in a way which makes it worse for agriculture. There's an inflation-adjusted list of weather events which caused the equivalent of a billion dollars or more in damages, and the upward trend is pretty clear — it's like dismissing the impact of the machine gun because people used to have long rifles.

        https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/billions/state-summary/FL

        You get a similar problem with saltwater intrusion where, yes, it's never not been a phenomenon but now it's affecting a lot more people than it used to:

        https://southeastfloridaclimatecompact.org/initiative/climat...

        • slibhb 7 hours ago

          Hurricanes do more dollars in damage because we're richer and there's more capital near the coast.

          The idea that climate change caused hurricanes which spread insects is not impossible but seems unlikely. I don't think the statistical methods exist to prove it.

          • caminante 5 hours ago

            Valuations have skyrocketed and insurance premiums are insane.

            I love the stories about people in FL self-insuring now because it's cheaper to repair drywall than pay premiums.

        • caminante 5 hours ago

          OK so the grandparent's comment was clumsy.

          Now, I see a slate of historical hurricanes in FL from 2004-05 that hit the Ridge area. This contradicts the article as these weren't baby storms.

          The issue is clearly the rise of this blight bacteria that has made the groves less resilient to storms and has weakend production.

          • cineticdaffodil 4 hours ago

            The meta reason is a missunderstanding of nature. Even the industry basically considers it a tamed beast of burden, while environmentalist usually consider it as a sort of gaia godess raped by industrial mankind. Nature is war and fast adaption of wha works. The trees war the grass for shade. And every mono culture, be they cloned crab or planted orchard, is a giant dice inviting disaster with every yearly throw. And on that scale adaption and transportation yields rewards for those animals and plants transporting anti-man properties fast. We are running a adveserial breeding program for anti-human critters. And when they exist, as they do and did in all places with longstanding human populations and agriculture- they take the invite on speed dial. We simply are dragged back into the eternal conflict. We always where a part of nature and this is how it feels like to be a part of that. Counter measures? Lets ask the statisticians.. anything that eats dice throws of the advesaries.

        • tgarrett 5 hours ago

          > That's not the point being made: the article clearly states that those areas did not previously get hit by storms at this level.

          This is the conventional wisdom, and it is completely falsified by the actual data that I linked to. I wrote a python script to go process and plot it, and there has been zero increase in Cat 1, 2, 3, or 4 storms hitting the US since 1851 (there are only 4 Cat 5s listed total).

          Try it for yourself.

          • caminante 5 hours ago

            As @zdragnar pointed out below, people are talking past each other whether it's claimed in the article v. whether the article is right.

            It seems many are jumping to biases about climate change without reviewing the data as you did.

            And the article should've been written with more nuance.

            • tgarrett 5 hours ago

              Yeah, exploring data is always interesting, sometimes super interesting, and it's also healthy to approach things with a mixture of open-mindedness and skepticism - a sort of zen habit you can get better at with practice. Ideas serve me, not the other way around.

          • fnordpiglet 3 hours ago

            This is obtuse. The assertion was a deviation in the areas of Florida experiencing hurricane penetration. This is a localized effect. You’re discussing the gross effects of an entire nation, in this comment, of an entire state in the prior. However no one is discussing Florida or the US. They’re discussing the orange growing regions of Florida, which is a region that has not historically had hurricanes, but has had them recently.

            It’s like saying the UV radiation hitting the earth is the same as it was historically so therefore an ozone hole in Australia didn’t exist and cataracts can’t be higher there.

            • tgarrett 3 hours ago

              So what you are saying is that, yes there has not been an overall increase in hurricanes hitting the US over the last 175 years, but climate change has been specifically and precisely steering the hurricanes towards the orange growing regions of Florida in recent years, and is therefore to blame for the crop failures.

              You have to diagnose a problem correctly in order to have a chance at solving it.

              • JumpCrisscross 35 minutes ago

                Well now I'm thoroughly confused. Because your data does seem to overturn the conventional wisdom.

                Do actual climate scientists claim we're getting more, and stronger, hurricanes now than we did before?

  • onlyrealcuzzo 14 hours ago

    Did this banana have seeds!? I've never seen one, but it looks awful. They were actually good?

    • mech422 13 hours ago

      I never had one, but apperently they tasted much better then the current variety (which IIRC, is in danger of suffering the same fate)

      IIRC, there was actually a huge marketing push because people wouldn't each the current variety ?

      PS - the old one didn't go 100% extinct, and you can get small numbers of them from specialty growers. Youtube has videos of people trying them (1)

      1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9ZtvpBoXzI

    • advisedwang 11 hours ago

      No, it didn't have seeds either.

      Have you ever had "banana flavor" candy that doesn't really taste like bananas? The flavoring is Isoamyl acetate, and I've heard suggestion that people called it banana flavor because it tasted more like Gros Michel. After switching to Cavendish banana the flavor name no longer made as much sense. Not sure how true it is though.

      • advisedwang 11 hours ago

        Someone in the thread linked to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=I9ZtvpBoXzI, where Hank Green tells this same story... and tries a Gros Michel banana and says it doesn't taste like "banana flavor"

        • tomrod 9 hours ago

          I had them. They are wonderful, and even creamy.

          I still love tiny red bananas though, they are so sweet!

    • xenadu02 7 hours ago

      Most edible bananas are seedless and most cultivars (human grown) bananas are genetic mutants with triploid chromosomes (though a few are tetrapolid or diploid). Getting them to produce functional reproductive structures at all let alone viable seeds is very difficult. There are ongoing efforts to cross-breed with their wild cousins and to preserve genetic diversity.

    • calebh 6 hours ago

      You can buy a Gros Michel banana from Miami Fruit, although they are quite expensive (almost $40 for a single banana). There are reviews of the banana on YouTube as well - I highly recommend the Weird Explorer channel if you want video reviews of all sorts of strange fruit.

  • schlauerfox 9 hours ago

    Or the death of the American Chestnut the generation before, once so common its causually in a Christmas song, now all but gone.

  • renewiltord 5 hours ago

    This banana has reached mythical banana status because of rarity. The flavor of various tropical bananas is way better. Both Taiwan and India have many varieties substantially better tasting than Gros Michel.

wazoox 8 minutes ago

The whole article insists on the insect, but the conclusion is very different:

What did he think of all this, I asked him. What happened to the Florida orange?

“I think they killed it themselves, with chemicals. That’s a fact,” Gunther said. In my time in Florida, I’d found a more complicated story, but down here, everyone had their theories, their longing for citrus nirvana, and their anger at the loss.

“They sprayed so much chemicals, the damn grass don’t even grow here anymore—you can quote me,” Gunther said. “I knew it back in 1990. I said, ‘They’re sprayin’ so much chemicals it’s gonna be the end.’ And it’s the end.”

leke 1 hour ago

I find these stories fascinating. Since it mentioned the orange originally came from China, I wonder if there are varieties that are resistant while still tasting good.

firesteelrain 10 hours ago

My great uncle got busted for peyote during the Canker Wars because Florida was going around to all the known growers and greenhouses looking for canker. Charges were dropped because they didn’t have a warrant. He also grew legitimate plants.

  • pstuart 10 hours ago

    He sounds like a great uncle!

    • firesteelrain 10 hours ago

      He fought in WW2 but by the time I knew him his mind was gone mostly due to PTSD. I miss my great aunt and uncle

throw0101d 14 hours ago

Meta: giving oranges as gifts at Christmas was a bit of a thing in the past when they used to be much more rare during winter: from Valencia/Ivrea for Europeans, and California/Florida in the US.

* https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/why-we-should-br...

In the US the Interstate system helped reduce shipping and logistic costs across state lines, and so oranges became more prevalent and less 'special' post-WW2.

roysting 26 minutes ago

Quite the irony that a non-native species (oranges) are being decimated by another invasive non-native bacterial disease.

I was just talking about the devastation that invasive species and diseases have caused not just in America, even though it’s most acute there in many ways, but also all over the whole planet. I don’t think people really have any understanding for just how decimated the planet is due to invasive species, arguably including the rapacious types of humans were have.

Orange are just a tiny little example of that; forest the farms devastated the natural ecosystems, then monoculture and pesticides destroyed native species, and now a disease from the old country is devastating the invasive oranges. Left behind will be what, more luxury condos?

CobrastanJorji 14 hours ago

Fascinating story. I wonder how much the earlier pesticides contributed to the problem. The story mentions it as a thing that was passing, and it makes me curious what would have happened without the pesticides.

I'm also curious whether the bugs would survive if you cut down every orange tree in Florida, waited a couple of years, and then planted new groves.

eth0up 7 hours ago

I just want to proudly, but also sadly, boast that Polk county once produced more oranges than the entire state of California.

Florida was a beautiful place not long ago, but a very peculiar and aggressively anti indigenous development is redefining it daily. Things have become so strange that squalid retention ponds qualify as wetland restoration.

I could rant for a while, but won't. Sarasota once produced more celery than possibly all states combined, and that helped us get through the Depression locally. But we sure did grow some oranges, and how wonderful the scent of orange blossoms are. It's something to behold.

  • lovich 5 hours ago

    Florida is a democracy. Florida voted for leaders who ignore these problems because of “woke”.

    Floridians deserve the results.

    I will grant clemency for anyone who was born there and isn’t wealthy enough to move out.

    I will grant 10x hate for anyone who moved there for the politics and complains about the results.

    • eth0up 3 hours ago

      Born here. And for me, the government is the pine flats, the oaks and palmetto scrubs, the springs, the sea, the spirit of the Timucua, sandhill cranes, thunderstorms.

      If Billy Bowlegs or Geronimo come back, I'll vote for them. I'd consider voting for someone who actually respected this place, but I'm not sure anyone does. I've been to nearly every state, and some other lands, but there's no place finer. I'm pure Florida man.

lightedman 13 hours ago

The Florida Orange was NEVER the Florida Orange to begin with.

Of note from the story: "...because it came from China, where oranges also came from in the first place." Technically yes but also no, what we have for the modern navel orange came from a mutation that happened in Brazil in the 1800s - 200 years after its introduction from China. The parent trees for literally the entire navel orange (aka Florida aka Sunkist orange) industry are in Riverside, CA, I see them every day driving to work. The now-deceased Queen of England used to get two boxes of oranges from those very trees every year.

  • ramesh31 10 hours ago

    Makes the disease even more confounding, as one would assume that orange trees evolved alongside it. Normally invasives are destructive because the species has never seen it before.

    • khuey 9 hours ago

      Citrus greening wasn't documented in Asia until the early 1900s so it's possible they didn't evolve alongside it.

  • SoftTalker 6 hours ago

    FWIW, "navel" oranges are grown for eating, not for juice. People prefer them because they are easy to peel and they don't have seeds.

    Juice oranges have a tougher, thinner rind that doesn't peel easily, and they have seeds. But they have better taste and more juice than navel oranges.

    • defterGoose 56 minutes ago

      I'll pick a bone on the flavor comment because a good Washington Navel is probably one of the best tasting oranges in existence.

mgleason_3 5 hours ago

I hate to say it, but I wonder if we are better off letting it go. The climate in Florida makes it a constant battle that’s managed by spraying tons of pesticides, fertilizer, fungicides, and antibiotics. It all runs off into the rivers and everglades and pollutes the water system eventually making its way to the ocean polluting it as well. It contributes to a host of serious problems for humans and the ecosystem. The antibiotic resistance alone is absolutely nuts.

cratermoon 15 hours ago

Sugarcane and pineapple used to be the biggest agricultural products in Hawaii. Now they're gone.

  • SoftTalker 14 hours ago

    What caused this in Hawaii?

    • MrRadar 14 hours ago

      IIRC for sugar it's because of cheaper cane sugar substitutes (corn syrup and sugar beets) out-competing the cane sugar grown in Hawaii.

      • SoftTalker 13 hours ago

        So, market conditions then, and not some kind of blight or parasite? Wasn't sure.

    • scheme271 13 hours ago

      Sugarcane was due to cheaper sources. Pineapples I think was due to economic factors as well. Basically, one of the most isolated population centers in the world adds a lot of cost due to shipping things in and out and being a US state imposes means that labor isn't going to be dirt cheap.

      • jnsaff2 11 hours ago

        Also Jones Act: ships from Asia can't pick up cargo from Hawaii on the way and drop it in mainland US. This means that shipping between Hawaii and mainland is much more expensive then it needs to be.

        • Spooky23 9 hours ago

          The Jones act has to be one of the most destructive stupid laws that we have.

          • stackskipton 5 hours ago

            Not really, it makes sense from point of view if you want to have an empire, you need a merchant marine to move things around by sea on ships you control.

            Jones Act doesn't accomplish what it's supposed to do but that's mainly because it was weak protectionism. Many other countries just shovel government money into their shipbuilding at rates that would probably make many just as angry.

            • marcosdumay 5 hours ago

              I can believe it would make lots of people just as angry. But I really doubt policies like the ones from China or South Korea have an impact near as large as the US's.

              It doesn't help that the US is full of non-contiguous territory separated by deep ocean. Other countries have similar laws but aren't as impacted.

    • HoldOnAMinute 11 hours ago

      Sugar cane required annual burning of the fields, which became really unpopular. That and labor practices.

      They still grow millions of pineapples

      • ggm 6 hours ago

        That cropping technique had been superseded by no burn methods. They're used extensively in Queensland Australia. It's called "green harvesting"

    • airstrike 6 hours ago

      The history of Hawaii, the Dole family and pineapples is worth a documentary. I'm sure one must already exist

exmadscientist 2 days ago

The other thing that I can't help but think has seriously hurt the industry is that, between concentrate and flavor packs, almost all supermarket orange juice tastes like garbage. Fresh-squeezed orange juice is, of course, the benchmark. If you ever taste Minute Maid back-to-back with fresh-squeezed, well, you probably won't be buying Minute Maid again any time soon. It just doesn't even taste like oranges. There are a few brands available (the expensive ones, of course) that do come close enough to actually taste like oranges, but when the mass-market product falls that far down in quality, you can't help but wonder how anyone still wants to buy it.

  • qup 2 days ago

    I haven't had minute maid in a long time, but I enjoy Simply, and Sam's club house brand is pretty good as well.

    Nothing like a fresh Florida orange, though. I used to know a secret tree in a public preserve that had the best oranges known to man.

    I might drive down this winter and see if it's still there.

    • dcrazy 2 days ago

      It may surprise you to learn that Simply Beverages is owned by Coca-Cola, who also own Minute Maid.

      Simply is definitely the superior of their product lines.

  • somat 2 days ago

    The process to make never concentrated orange juice logistically viable involves removing all the oxygen from the juice so it stores well. Now you can take a seasonal product like oranges and sell the juice the entire year around. Unfortunately removing the oxygen also removes most of the flavor. so what the bottlers do is add an engineered "flavor package" when they bottle the juice to add the flavor back.

    I am halfway convinced that flavor wise frozen concentrated orange juice is "closer to the tree" than the "never concentrated" stuff. Nothing on fresh squeezed. But that is the price we pay to have a non-seasonal product.

    • chrisco255 14 hours ago

      Is it really non-seasonal any longer now that there are reliable international markets in southern hemisphere to support?

      • pixl97 13 hours ago

        I mean, they don't get teleported to the point of sale so most of the rules still apply to long distance shipping.

    • wombatpm 5 hours ago

      As a chemical engineer we study the process for making frozen concentrate orange juice (FCOJ). IIRC you feed the juice into low pressure flash distillation that splits off most of the water. Problem is that many of the volatile compounds go out the top as well, and the resulting concentrate is blah. So you feed back in about 10% raw juice, pack the sludge in cans and freeze em.

      The fun part was trying to find good estimates for viscosity for the two phase orange sludge in order to properly size the piping and pumps. Treating food products like chemical production is its own weird sub-specialty.

      • somat 4 hours ago

        Salutes on the post. After hearing the flavor tricks they have to jump through to make "never concentrate" I was sort of hoping the freezing process of FCO kept more of the original flavor. But it sounds like it does not.

        The industrialization of food is really what enables our modern way of life. But it slightly horrifies me every time I learn more about it.

  • bsimpson 15 hours ago

    Back before Starbucks bought them, Evolution was magical. They sold cold-pressed orange juice in the store that tasted fresh. I lived by that stuff!

  • m4rkuskk 14 hours ago

    From the store bought orange juices, I think the Trader joes one is the closest to tasting like fresh-squeezed.

  • MisterTea 14 hours ago

    A local grocery store used to make their own fresh squeezed using a refrigerator sized stainless steel machine that might as well have been a Rube Goldberg machine with its winding metal wire chute full of oranges which led to the squeezing head. That thing was kept right in the aisle next to the refrigerator case they kept the juice in. It was the best orange juice though expensive as it was over 10 bucks a quart when the store finally closed. I tried to call and buy the machine but got nowhere. Turns out the owner died so the family closed up the shop and liquidated it.

    As for Minute Maid, it has always tasted awful to me and it tasted worse in the 80s. The only packaged OJ I can stand is Tropicana.

    • soperj 14 hours ago

      pretty much everywhere in the Netherlands has contraptions like this, small though, not fridge sized. Didn't see orange concentrate anywhere.

      Minute maid actually tastes better than Tropicana to me (can't stand that brand), been getting one from Spain lately at Costco (Don Simon) that's pretty good, less sweet.

      • seszett 14 hours ago

        Standard in France and Belgium as well.

        I have never liked Tropicana or Minute Maid, but about... 30 years ago? We used to have a brand called Fruvita that actually tasted good but it got bought by Tropicana, the taste changed, and we just stopped buying orange juice.

    • simmons 14 hours ago

      A Sam's Club in my area has started selling fresh squeezed orange juice. It's quite delicious. (And yes, it's pricey.) I've looked around at many other stores (including places like Whole Foods) and nobody else seems to be doing this.

    • detourdog 14 hours ago

      Tropicana used to get high marks from me. The only brand I buy in a grocery store is Natalie’s.

      Fresh squeezed is amazing.

    • dredmorbius 12 hours ago

      Or you can buy a citrus juicer and make it yourself. A couple or three oranges and a few seconds in the morning.

      OXO Good Grips runs about $20, it's a squeeze-by-hand option. You can get a wooden reamer, or spend about or upwards of a Franklin for something complicated, though I find simpler is saner.

      • MisterTea 12 hours ago

        I have both an old school glass dish reamer as well as a wooden reamer. Use it for making lemon/lime iced tea (using actual tea, not that powered sugar crap) for the summer months.

  • ryandrake 14 hours ago

    I've always found it pretty scary how some mass-market foods have diverged almost completely from the thing they are actually representing. The weird milky vaguely-citrus flavor of chemical that comes in the box labeled "Orange Juice" is just one of many examples. For another example, go taste a grape and then taste some so-called "grape juice." It's actually mostly apple juice, and doesn't even remotely taste like grapes.

    • colechristensen 14 hours ago

      Dark grape juice is made of concord grapes which are the primary variety which is made into jelly, jam, juice, and in general grape flavored things. They don't taste like grocery store eating grapes, they're a different variety.

      THEY ARE DELICIOUS when you can find them, one of the things I miss about living in California was the brief season you could get a concord grape on the vine to eat. I have never seen them outside a bay area farmer's market, late summer if I remember correctly.

      • rkomorn 14 hours ago

        I never understood why grape flavored things taste the way they do until I (accidentally) bought Concord grapes.

        That said, "delicious" is definitely a matter of opinion.

      • skyberrys 14 hours ago

        I love concord grapes so much. Im eagerly awaiting their annual return to the farmers market (early September). I love them so much the vendors know to get me and tell me when they are here. I don't understand why the demand for them is small.

        • colechristensen 14 hours ago

          I also deeply miss the limes. The halfway-to-yellow actually ripened limes that didn't even show up some years.

          If I knew for sure when they would be available I'd certainly make a trip across the country to eat those limes.

          • skyberrys 13 hours ago

            Those lines are just hanging out on the trees around for most of the year! Best storage for citrus is on the tree.

      • mcphage 8 hours ago

        Concord grapes are pretty common in season in New York State, and I’m assuming the states nearby.

  • therobots927 14 hours ago

    It’s the boiling frog problem. Consumers gradually become used to lower quality. 15 years ago, McDonald’s was good. You knew it was bad for you but it was so good that you just didn’t care and it was a great cheat meal. You could get an Angus Delux meal for $7. https://wealthgang.com/mcdonalds-prices-throughout-the-years...

    Of course they discontinued the angus burgers that actually used high quality ingredients compared to the McDouble / quarter pounders.

    Now it’s $12 for a double quarter pounder meal and it tastes like shit. I only notice this because I just didn’t eat there much in the last 15 years. Meat quality and bun quality has clearly gotten worse. I don’t know how they keep growing sales.

    • kevin_thibedeau 7 hours ago

      The Big Arch patty is better than the angus was. Their baseline burgers have always been crap.

BoneShard 2 days ago

It was a sad day for me when I realized that a glass of orange juice(or any juice in general) isn't much better for your health than a can of soda and probably even worse than diet/zero coke.

  • Noumenon72 2 days ago

    I love cutting grapefruit in half and digging out chunks because at the end you get to drink grapefruit juice the way it was intended, as a reward for eating grapefruit.

    • pfannkuchen 2 days ago

      Do you eat the seeds and poop them out somewhere nice? I think that’s what the grapefruit intended.

      • thatguy0900 15 hours ago

        You could make the argument that the grapefruit succeeded in its intention already, by being so good that humanity tends and manages whole groves of grapefruit trees

      • dylan604 15 hours ago

        No that's silly. Everyone knows that when you eat a seed like that, the plant grows in your belly.

        • pitaj 13 hours ago

          this made my day

          • dylan604 13 hours ago

            as a kid I was thoroughly disappointed learning this not being real. probably more so than finding out about Santa.

    • mindslight 11 hours ago

      fun fact: be careful if you're on any medications.

      • BirAdam 8 hours ago

        Especially any immune suppressant medications.

  • hedora 2 days ago

    Most artificial sweeteners have metabolic side effects, and lead to weight gain.

    You’re probably better off drinking cane sugar soda because it is more filling than HFCS soda.

    Anyway orange juice is probably better still. At least it has some vitamin C and maybe trace fiber in it.

    • jpfromlondon 1 day ago

      no metabolic effects from sweeteners, wish you lot would stop moving the goalposts on why sweeteners are unhealthy:

      https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC12098100/

      • hedora 1 day ago

        The abstract says the study is useless:

        > However, given this study applied a heterogeneous ASB formula, it could not adequately consider the role of specific artificial sweeteners. Further research is needed to evaluate the potential effect of different artificial sweeteners and their doses on health.

        • jpfromlondon 1 day ago

          it's also not the only study, just one example, besides that's standard boilerplate CE so as not to assume liability.

        • Tagbert 15 hours ago

          Similar to the reports that talk about health problems with sweeteners. Not enough good data to be informative and actionable.

      • m3047 13 hours ago

        This just in, licorice kills dogs. Once in a while it kills people too. (affects insulin production, and aldosterone causing blood pressure effects then downstream effects on blood potassium and kidneys)

    • lotsofpulp 14 hours ago

      >Most artificial sweeteners have metabolic side effects, and lead to weight gain.

      I have not seen a single double blind study show this in the many decades low calorie sweeteners have been consumed (in normal amounts).

      What I have seen is study after study showing the harms of consuming too many carbohydrates (the amounts contained in normal consumption of juice due to quantity of sugar).

    • BugsJustFindMe 13 hours ago

      > Most artificial sweeteners have metabolic side effects, and lead to weight gain.

      So does sugar. Everything ever credibly published on the effects of artificial sweeteners say four things:

      1) everything else held equal, artificial sweeteners unequivocally reduce weight gain vs consuming equivalent sugar because sugar is 100% empty calories

      2) some artificial sweeteners (e.g. sucralose) may increase appetite vs equivalent sugar, causing you to possibly eat more depending on which ones you consume

      3) various artificial sweeteners may have non-weight-related negative effects on the body related to cardiovascular health, gut health, and so on

      4) sugar definitely has a whole bunch of non-weight-related negative effects on the body related to cardiovascular health, gut health, and so on

      • wun0ne 10 hours ago

        Sugar is not just empty calories. Your muscles need glycogen, which is produced from carbohydrates—including sugar—to function.

        Simple sugars are particularly effective at restoring glycogen stores after intense cardiovascular workouts.

        • BugsJustFindMe 8 hours ago

          It seems you may not know what the phrase "empty calories" means, so, let me help: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empty_calories

          Lumping simple sugar in with complex carbohydrates as equally beneficial because they're both carbohydrate molecules is horrendous prevarication. And bringing up "intense workouts" at all, which I'm sure you very well know is demographically an extreme outlier scenario, in a conversation about weight gain, is the most hilarious kind of derailment.

    • Night_Thastus 13 hours ago

      There seems to be little to no evidence of any negative effects from just about any artificial sweeteners. I mean shoot, Aspartame immediately breaks down into some of the most common amino acids in the body. There's no biological mechanism for it to do anything negative.

      Sugar, on the other hand, has very well known and studied health risks at the concentrations we see in a lot of modern 'staples' - soda and juice included.

  • baron816 15 hours ago

    This is what happened to me. I would guzzle orange juice. I couldn’t start a day unless I had a giant glass of it. Then I found out that it was just all sugar and not much else. I don’t think I’ve had a glass of the stuff in over a decade.

    • traderj0e 8 hours ago

      They advertise vitamin C, but that's in tons of other things. Even used as a preservative.

  • bena 15 hours ago

    Yes, the way I've heard it put is eating an orange is fine, but drinking a glass of juice is like eating an entire orchard.

  • triceratops 14 hours ago

    What if you make fresh squeezed OJ at home, eat the leftover pulp and skins first, and then drink the juice? I wonder if that has the same glycemic impact as eating an orange.

    • nslsm 14 hours ago

      Why not just eat the orange. I can't be the only one who finds eating the pulp alone icky. Like chewing on a damp rag.

    • orev 14 hours ago

      The juice is still much less healthy. It’s the act of having your guts extract the nutrients that makes fruit healthy, because it reduces how quickly your body absorbs it. Once you make it into juice (or a smoothie) by mechanically digesting it prior to consumption, you’ve removed the need for that.

      • wao0uuno 39 minutes ago

        You forgot about chewing. Nobody swallows oranges in chunks. You chew and that presses out the juice. Drinking the juice and then eating the pulp is no different although it does sound silly. At that point just eat the damn orange like a normal person.

    • throwaway2037 3 hours ago

      This sounds like a good idea for a science experiment and a following paper!

HardwareLust 1 day ago

It's not who killed it, it's what killed it and the answer is greed.

  • nerdsniper 1 day ago

    For anyone not aware, the most proximate cause of the disappearance of "Florida Orange Juice™ " is the Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus bacteria. Monoculture is often blamed, but the bacteria affects all citrus trees - oranges, limes, lemons, grapefruits, pomelos, etc.

    • cratermoon 15 hours ago

      Those are all the same plant. Hybrids of Citrus. A monoculture.

      • nerdsniper 14 hours ago

        In the past, "monoculture" was used to describe things like "one particular variety of banana"[0] - e.g. the Gros Michel banana fell to fungus and was replaced by the Cavendish banana, which was not susceptible to the same fungus but is now also falling to a similar fungus, and will be replaced by another banana variety. In fact, they're not just the same species but closely related cultivars - both part of the AAA banana cultivar group (triploid cultivars of Musa acuminata).

        The article in Time Magazine puts it succinctly:

        > There’s a name for this situation: monoculture, the practice of fostering just one variety of something.

        In the case of bananas (and many other crops, plants, decorative trees, etc), a diversity of varieties would have minimized the spread and impact of pathogens, while providing a more diverse selection of nutritional content and flavor for consumers. But that doesn't seem to be the case for citrus trees.

        I don't think that "monoculture", as it has been used or the past 50+ years, is the appropriate concept to apply to this citrus greening. Perhaps we could criticize something else - like tree density? Or perhaps monoculture is the problem, but in a much broader sense - maybe a grove with 10% citrus trees, 10% corn, 10% soybeans, 10% berries, 10% apple trees, etc...would create a biome that was hostile to the citrus greening bacteria in such a way that it couldn't thrive and spread. We have no data to support that hypothesis at this time though.

        0: "What We Can Learn From the Near-Death of the Banana" https://time.com/5730790/banana-panama-disease/

        • amanaplanacanal 14 hours ago

          Monoculture can also mean just one species.

          • ianburrell 8 hours ago

            Citrus isn't one species but hybrids of citrons, mandarins, pomelos in Citrus genus. It isn't like cabbage that produces multiple cultivars. Citrus genus is supposed to be diverse cause they do hybridization in wild.

    • tetromino_ 13 hours ago

      According to the article, the reason why the bacteria was so quickly fatal for Florida orange trees is that their roots were weakened by a sequence of major hurricanes and by many years of excessive pesticide use.

      • jillesvangurp 5 hours ago

        These are all contributing factors. Mono cultures mean a single problem with pests can rapidly spread. Using pesticides means you wipe out a lot of the local wild life; including any predators that might go after the insects that spread the pests. And if you grow the exact same variety of the same produce, they are all going to be vulnerable to the exact same thing at the exact same time. Using more pesticides just adds to the problem and eventually pests become resistant anyway.

        A solution here could be growing a larger variety of produce, using organic farming practices, crop rotation, etc. Pests tend to specialize in specific things and most pests have natural predators. So, if you stop killing those they'll help keep outbreaks in check. And if you rotate crops, you take away the food source for the pests. And if you grown a variety of different things, it won't all get sick at the same time.

fuzzfactor 2 days ago

Looks like premature collapse of a monoculture due to excess stress, much of it a result of human effort.

  • nerdsniper 1 day ago

    I don't think monoculture is relevant for once; the bacteria affects all citrus trees: oranges, limes, lemons, grapefruits, pomelos, etc.

    • fuzzfactor 1 day ago

      Yeah, not just one or two susceptible varieties.

      But when you have nothing but the perfect host for the infection, in incredibly massive proportions as far as the eye can see, a little bacteria goes a long way.

      Which can be even worse :(

      • cratermoon 15 hours ago

        But those are all the same plant - hybridized Citrus.

  • chrisco255 13 hours ago

    It's not monoculture, it's Florida's climate being the perfect environment for the psyllid that causes the disease. California's drier, less humid climate has been more resilient to the bug.