This Carrot Juice recipe is about to become your new favorite! Paired with ginger and orange, it’s a delicious way to get more nutrients into your life.
Why You’ll Love It
It tastes amazing. Carrots are naturally sweet and contain more liquid than you might expect! The sweet taste pairs perfectly with spicy ginger and tangy oranges.
It’s easy to customize. While carrots tend to be available year-round, you can pair them with different fruits and veggies depending on the season. If you can’t find in-season oranges, you can swap them for lemon juice, instead. Carrots are also delicious with green apple, or a splash of pineapple juice or orange juice, if that’s easier for you to find at the store.
It has potential health benefits. Carrot juice is high in beta carotene and other carotenoids like lutein, and zeaxanthin, which may help to promote eye health. This juice also contains vitamin C and vitamin B6, which may help to boost immunity.
It’s easy to make. When you own a juicer, making this juice is as simple as washing off your produce and running it through the juicer chute! It’s ready to drink in just minutes. If you don’t own a juicer, check out the tips below for making this in a blender, instead.
Have purple carrots on hand? One study suggests that the anthocyanins found in purple carrots may help to balance blood sugar levels, due to their anti-inflammatory properties. (Similar research hasn’t been conducted on traditional orange carrots, yet.)
Ingredients You’ll Need
To make carrot juice, all you need is carrots! But, it tastes even better when you add oranges and a little fresh ginger. The orange typically adds a tangy flavor (and a little bitterness if you leave the peel on), so you can swap it for half of a lemon for a similar effect.
You can dilute the sweetness of the juice by including a cucumber, celery, or some romaine lettuce, all of which add extra minerals and antioxidants, too.
How to Make the Best Carrot Juice
1. Prepare the produce.
Depending on the juicer you are using, you may or may not have much prep work to do. Wash the produce well, and then cut it down to size to fit through the chute of your juicer. A centrifugal juicer, like the Breville model I use, requires no additional cutting, because the chute is large enough to fit a whole apple through it.
A masticating juicer, like this one, might require you cut the produce down into more narrow pieces to fit through the chute.
Note: There is no need to peel the ginger or carrots before juicing them. The orange peel has nutrients inside, so you can keep that on as well, but it will add a bitter flavor to your juice, so you might prefer to remove the orange peel in that case. If your carrots have greens on top, those are edible, but I tend to remove them for this juice recipe and save them for later.
2. Run it through the juicer.
If your juicer has two settings, you’ll use the “high” one for this recipe. Add the carrots, ginger, and oranges into the juicing chute, a handful at a time (or as much as will fit at once), and use the tamper to press the produce against the blades of the juicer, keeping your hands and fingers safely away.
The order of the ingredients doesn’t matter much in this case, but to prevent the ginger from flying around, you can sandwich it between the carrots as they are pressed into the juicing chute.
3. Enjoy!
Freshly pressed juice is best served right away for the best flavor and nutrition. The produce will oxidize once it is juiced, so it will gradually lose its nutrition over time.
(Masticating juicers are slower, and therefore will help the juice retain its nutrients a little longer– up to 72 hours when stored in the fridge.)
How to Make Carrot Juice with a Blender
If you are not ready to commit to a juicer yet, you can make carrot juice with a blender, too! In this case, you’ll need to cut the carrots, oranges, and ginger into 1-inch pieces to help them blend easier.
Add them to your blender pitcher, along with a 1/2 cup of water. Secure the lid and blend until the produce is totally smooth and pulverized. You may need to add more water, just 2 tablespoons at a time, to help with blending.
Once the produce has been broken down, pour it through a nut milk bag or fine mesh strainer to remove the pulp. The juice is ready to serve right away once it has been strained!
Prefer not to strain the juice? You might prefer smoothies, like my famous Detox Smoothie, Beet Smoothie, or Zucchini Smoothie for more sneaky veggies in each sip.
How to Use Leftover Juice Pulp
Juice pulp can be added to soups or muffin recipes, but for the best flavor, I recommend juicing the carrots first and reserving their pulp separately from the ginger and orange. (This way you’ll have a neutral-flavored pulp that will go well with practically any other recipe.)
If you juice the produce all at once, you’ll end up with a ginger-flavored juice pulp that will pair well with carrot cake & pumpkin spice recipes. Try adding the leftover juice pulp to carrot cake oatmeal or pumpkin overnight oats, for an easy way to sneak more fiber into your life.
Carrot Juice with Ginger & Orange
Equipment
Ingredients
- 1 pound carrots , tops removed
- 2 clementines , peeled (or 1 large orange)
- 1 inch fresh ginger
Instructions
- If your juicer has two speeds, turn it on using the high speed. Add the juice ingredients into the chute, then use the tamper to press them against the blades of the juicer. Repeat until you've juiced all of the carrots, oranges, and ginger. (Tip: If your juicer has a large chute, place the ginger between a few carrots, so it won't fly around or go straight into the pulp basket.)
- Enjoy the juice right away for the best flavor and the most nutrients. If you need to store any leftovers, fill an airtight container all the way to the top, then secure the lid to slow down oxidation. Aim to drink the rest of the juice within 24 hours for the best flavor. (See the notes if you need to store longer.)
Notes
Nutrition
If you try this Carrot Juice recipe, please leave a comment and star rating below letting me know how you like it!
Love that picture…so vibrant!
I have been searching for a stevia sweetened “syrup” to replace honey/maple syrup/agave/coconut nectar in recipes. Do you have any idea how to make this?
Thanks!!!
This combo sounds amazing. I’ll have to try it! Thanks, as always, for sharing. I have the same juicer and it’s excellent. I like anything with ginger and lime – it makes the greens taste tropical.
I wish I could say I’d try this – I really dislike the flavor of ginger. I can’t even eat the ginger with sushi. About as far as I can get is to drink ginger ale.
My favorite juice is anything with beet! When I first started juicing beets, I would get incredibly nauseated – and my nutritionist told me that it is because beets are very cleansing for the liver! So I use it every few days rather than daily 🙂
Red deception, don’t put the the ginger in at all. Make the drink with all the ingredients except the ginger. I personally love, love cumin so I’m going to use that one. Experiment by taking a 1/2 glass of the juice mix and add another spice you might like. I discovered this when I started making smoothies, using the internet to find fruits and vegetable that pair well then adding the spices that I like, otherwise abandoning the process would surely have happened and I have had such a surge in energy and weight loss so quitting is not an option. Good luck!
my favorite juice combo depends on if i am craving a mega green juice or a sweeter one. my go-to usually contains a metric ton of parsley, romaine, cuke, lemon & celery. i also love a nice carrot-ginger-beet juice when i want to mix it up!
Oh that sounds wonderful! As I’m typing I’m actually drinking a carrot/cucumber/mandarin orange and it’s quite tasty!
I saw a video where you make juice by blitzing everything in a blender (Vitamix) and then strain it through a nut milk bag – have you ever tried anything like that?
Hi Rachel,
I’ve actually been making juice with my Vitamix for a few months now and it works really well. The juice tastes good to me and it saved me from having to buy another appliance just yet. I just add a bit of water along with the other ingredients to help everything blend easier.
Yes, I’ve made juice with my blender, too! I used my old nut milk bag to strain– but beware, it may permanently stain whatever you use for straining! I now have a green-colored bag. 🙂
i have soo many carrots ! thanks for this recipe it looks great ! ill have to make it now 🙂
just wanted to let you know i added your food combining chart to one of my blog posts:
http://tayleralexisyoga.wordpress.com/blog/
YUm, thank you for this, I just made it and it is so delicious and refreshing. I am so stuck on my green juice, its nice to change it up!
i love a good carrot ginger juice! This morning I made a different concoction in my juicer. 1 sweet potato, 3 carrots, 1 apple, and cinnamon. IT was AMAZING!!!
This sounds like a delicious combo! I am dreadfully boring when it comes to my juice. I always stick to apple, ginger, lemon, kale, cucs, because I know it works! But this is inspiring me to branch out!
Hi:
I enjoy your website and find some interesting things. I know that this is off topic regarding this post on carrot juice, but Ive been meaning to ask you why you use peanut butter in many of your recipes. My naturopath told me that it was a dirty, fungus-laden food, even the organic stuff is not good for people. What are your thoughts on that?
Thanks,
Maria
Hi Maria!
I actually agree with your naturopath– I don’t believe that peanut butter is a “health food,” and I personally use almond butter instead of peanut butter, in most cases. However, my husband LOVES peanut butter, and I have a few friends with nut allergies, so I do still work with peanut butter on occasion. Also, I would consider peanut butter to be a fine transition food if you’re coming off of a traditional mainstream diet. A flourless peanut butter cookie, or peanut butter banana milkshake, is still better than many processed snacks that are out there!
You can always substitute almond butter in any of my peanut butter recipes, for a delicious result!
my husband loaned out our juicer(we weren’t using it at the time)and I’m left with only a blender type item. It makes a great smoothie, considering it emulsifies everything, but the consistency with carrots isn’t pleasant. Do you have any suggestions? Would it work if I just used less carrots and added water? I’m working on healthy eating..but still clueless.
I would strain the mixture after blending it, so you don’t have to deal with the carrot pulp texture!
This juice was delicious and refreshing! I am a new follower to your site but I am hooked! Thanks so much!
Mmmmm, yes this sounds awesome!! I have a 10 pound bag of organic carrots from costco that I need to get through. This sounds perfect!!
I made this last night and it’s WONDERFUL! I also made a version with a bunch of beets and parsley in place of the clementines and romaine. Quite good too. (Beets = red hands) I’m very ill and just started juicing this week in a new/different direction and effort to find my way to “not dying.” Thanks for all your info and ideas!
The beets sounds like a great addition. Will definitely try it.
Regards,
Talisha
Ps. If anyone is interested in 50 recipes for weight loss, cancer, energy, immune system, cholesterol, diabetes and more here is the link to my new book.
http://www.kitchenchatters.com/books/the-ultimate-juicing-guide/
How long will the juice sty fresh when I juice I make a coup,e of mason jars what in your opinion is the expire after juicing it?
It depends on the type of juicer you use. Juice made in a centrifugal juicer should be consumed within 15-20 minutes, but if you have a masticating juicer, it can be stored for 48-72 hours in a well sealed container in the fridge.
Apple carrot ginger is my absolute FAV, however pineapple, cranberry, lime is my second. When making the pineapple blend, I use fresh cranberries and only a splash of lime because the lime juice can overpower the rest. I recently blended beets, fresh picked apples, carrots, kiwi, kale and ginger for an AWESOME power packed blend! Enjoy!
Hi there
I was recently diagnosed with PCOS I am on a juice detox and excise for 2 hours everyday. Do you perhaps have any juice recipes that may help treat PCOS as I am very afraid that i may not be able to conceive one day.
Thanks!
I woke up with a cold and trying to do what I can to fight this off ASAP. I don’t have organic carrots right now. Can you tell me the risks of juicing high concentration of nonorganic veg?
yummm! Love carrot and ginger