Can citrus be squeezed too much?

Can citrus be squeezed too much? - Smiling blonde in white blouse squeezing fresh juice into stainless shaker while preparing cocktail in bar

I've seen bartenders stack squeezed lime halves and resqueeze them all together. I think that squeezing the peel would yield very bitter juice, but am I wrong?



Best Answer

Yes, you can squeeze citrus too much.

That bitterness you sometimes taste in citrus fruit comes from limonin, a compound that most people can detect at concentrations as small as a few parts per million. In many citrus fruits the limonin is created once the acids of the juice vesicles interact with LARL, a tasteless substance in the fruit's tissues (Hasegawa, 1991). In the juice of a squeezed lime the reaction from LARL to limonin takes a few hours to complete, so if it is very fresh it will not be as bitter.

Over-squeezing, as in using a pestle, will expose more of the tissue (and therefore LARL) resulting in more bitterness later on. If the peels are in the mix, it will also extract some of the oils (mainly limonene) from the peel, which is very bitter. So bitter, that industrial squeezing machines are designed so that the juice extracts never touch the peel.

During summer, guests often ask for caipirinhas at our house. I like to imagine that it is because I peel my limes, remove most of the white pith including stem, and try to mash the limes just before mixing the drink. This way it requires less sugar allowing those great citrus flavors to stand out.




Pictures about "Can citrus be squeezed too much?"

Can citrus be squeezed too much? - Crop person with bottles of orange juice
Can citrus be squeezed too much? - Crop anonymous person holding ripe citrus over wooden table with orange squeezer and glass bottle with fresh juice
Can citrus be squeezed too much? - Crop anonymous person squeezing half of orange to make homemade juice in kitchen



Quick Answer about "Can citrus be squeezed too much?"

Not only are they no fun to crunch down on (ouch), they impart a bitter flavor. A squeeze of fresh citrus into a cream-based sauce will lighten things up, but squeeze in too much and the dairy will curdle.

How do you get rid of bitterness in citrus?

One way to get rid of the bitterness in whole oranges (and other citrus fruit) if you have to cook them in a recipe, boil them submerged (which is why I have the bowl and cast iron dish on top) in water and 1\u2026 More. Drain and then use the fruit.

Why is my lemon chicken bitter?

Additionally, Bon App\xe9tit shares that when cooking lemons, you should remove the seeds because they, too, can contribute to a bitter taste to your food that will make you pucker.

Why does lime juice turn bitter?

There's almost no limonin in fresh-squeezed lemon and lime juices, but some precursor chemicals of limonin are present. When fresh juice is exposed to air, enzymes convert those precursors into bitter limonin, a process known as enzymatic bittering.



5 Surprising Reasons to Eat More Citrus Fruits




More answers regarding can citrus be squeezed too much?

Answer 2

While the pith of citrus fruits can be very bitter, there is no juice in it. To extract any liquid from pith would require much more pressure than any squeezing-based juicing equipment at a bar is likely to generate. A centrifugal juicer is more likely to produce a bitter flavor if the pith is included with the fruit, as small bits of pith will end up in the juice.

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