Skip the acai berries and pass on the pomegranate juice. When it comes to fruit, American kids prefer apples — by a long shot.
On any given day, apples account for 29 percent of the fruit consumed by U.S. children and teens, according to a study published Monday by the journal Pediatrics. About two-thirds of that is eaten as whole apples, and one-third is sipped as 100 percent apple juice.
Kids of all ages rely on apples to fulfill government recommendations to consume up to two cups of fruit per day. Toddlers between the ages of 2 and 5 get 15 percent of their daily fruit from apples and 17 percent from juice. Children between the ages of 6 and 11 count on apples for 22 percent of their total fruit intake and apple juice for an additional 9 percent. Adolescents in the 12-19 age group get 19 percent of their fruit in the form of apples and 7 percent from apple juice.
The appeal of apples is apparent across all racial and ethnic groups, consistently taking the top spot among all types of fruit, according to the study. Latino kids get 21.2 percent of their daily fruit from apples, as do 19.2 percent of Asian-American kids, 18.5 percent of white kids and 17.2 percent of African-American kids. Apple juice adds an additional 9.8 percent, 7.7 percent, 10.4 percent and 10.5 percent to those figures, respectively.
The information on apples came from interviews with 3,129 youth (and, depending on their ages, their parents or guardians) who participated in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, which is conducted by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. In 2011 and 2012, the kids were asked to recall everything they ate and drank in the previous 24 hours.
The authors of the Pediatrics study, from the CDC’s National Center for Health Statistics, found that just 12 items accounted for 86.4 percent of all fruit consumed by American kids. In addition to the 18.9 percent contribution from whole apples and 10.3 percent from apple juice, the other items were citrus juice (14.3 percent), other fruit juice (9 percent), bananas (6.8 percent), melons (6 percent), citrus (4.6 percent), berries (4.3 percent), peaches and nectarines (3.5 percent), grapes (2.8 percent) and dried fruits (0.6 percent). Other fruits and mixtures of fruit in the form of fruit salad added up to 5.5 percent of total fruit consumption.
Altogether, the kids who participated in the survey consumed an average of 1.25 “cup equivalents” of fruit on a typical day. Of that, 0.6 cup was eaten as whole fruit, 0.38 cup was drunk as 100 percent fruit juice and 0.15 cup came from the fruit component of mixed dishes, such as fruit smoothies.
Whole fruit is the most nutritious type of fruit, since it contains fiber along with vitamins and minerals while adding no extra sugars or fat. Whole fruit made up 57 percent of the total fruit consumed by children between the ages of 6 and 11, compared with 52 percent for adolescents ages 12 to 19 and 49 percent for toddlers ages 2 to 5.
The researchers also found differences according to race and ethnicity. With all ages grouped together, Asian-Americans got 60 percent of their total fruit in the form of whole fruit, while the corresponding figure for African-Americans was 43 percent. Latino and white children were in the middle, with whole fruit accounting for 55 percent of their total fruit consumption.
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