The phrase
"to dilute the juice" means adding water or another liquid to make the juice less concentrated or strong.
Full definition
To help prevent this you can
add diluted juice to your child's and give them one ounce a day just to ensure they stay hydrated.
If your child becomes tired of
drinking diluted juice, offer him a frozen juice bar, or consider making flavored ice chunks by freezing some juice in an ice cube tray.
You can
also dilute the juice with equal amounts of water to reduce the amount of sugar bathing their teeth.
â $ Swap processed sugar for fresh fruitâ $ ¦ Or if you were pounding sugary juices all the time,
start diluting the juice with water, and slowly move to just water or unsweetened tea.â $
Stick to water, milk and
well diluted juice (at mealtimes so the sugar doesn't stay in their mouth and attack teeth).
Actually, it was at his doctor's recommendation that I
try diluted juice and glycerin, because sometimes he'd be obviously uncomfortable.
You can use straight juice and omit the water, but I've found that
diluting the juice does not affect the taste much and reduces the natural sugar content.
A snack usually consists of 4 oz of
diluted juice or water, 1/4 diced fruit, cereal bar, and a handful of dried cereal.
She reasoned that since
she diluted the juice, it would not cause decay.
I've tgried several types of sippies / nipples, water,
diluted juice... he's not interested.
You'll need standalone potty chairs to use at home (ideally one for every main area where you spend time, plus any bathrooms), plenty of water or
diluted juice to drink, and snacks that encourage peeing (either salty ones that make you thirsty, such as crackers, or foods with high water content such as watermelon and Popsicles).
This product is a juice drink that
dilutes juice and its nutrients by half.
If she is not a fan of water, try a small amount of
diluted juices — like white grape, prune or apple.
Use only sterilized water to
dilute the juice and give to your little one in a bottle.
He might also enjoy ice pops or slushies made from electrolyte solutions or
diluted juices.
UK guidelines recommend that
you dilute juice for your baby — one part juice to 10 parts boiled, cooled water.
To replenish these fluids, encourage your child to drink plenty of liquids, such as water, milk, an electrolyte solution, or
diluted juice.
Dilute the juice with water and offer it in a cup with a meal.
Don't forget to
dilute the juice with water!
(Serve water or
diluted juice with snacks; most kids don't notice if you dilute it gradually to half water, half juice.)
For other fluids (or for
diluted juice) the No - Spill Cup is a must.
I want to breast feed as long as possible, but when I am away during the day, I worry about fluids, as he does not take water or
diluted juices.
Diluted juice is another option, but avoid sugary drinks and carbonated beverages that can upset the stomach.
Breastfeeding moms can give the breast milk in a cup (or try water or
diluted juice).
I fed him more solid foods during the day and gave
him diluted juice to make sure he wasn't dehydrated.
Diluting the juice is a good way to make sure your child doesn't drink as much, but between meals (when most «juice abuse» occurs), offer water instead.
Give your child plenty of water or
diluted juice to ensure he needs to go and allow more opportunities for training.
Dilute juice with water until you only need a dash for flavour and then cut it out.
If you're awake 16 hours you won't eat and may only consume water or perhaps
some diluted juice during the fast.
However, overusing this remedy will cause skin dryness; it's therefore, advisable to
dilute the juice with some water especially if you plan to use this remedy more than twice a day.
My old way would have been gatoraid, pedialtye, popsicles, saltines, rice,
diluted juices.
Keep your child well hydrated with water,
diluted juice, fruit pops, herbal teas, or soup.