While I probably lost only a pound-considering the price tag, you kind of want those results to be a little more miraculous-I did become more aware of how food affects your body and felt a lot lighter and healthier, which was my ultimate goal anyway. By the end of the experience, I couldn’t believe I hadn’t had a bite to eat in two days (and I even had a tin of cookies on my desk tempting me!). I can’t say it’s a taste I’ll ever crave (and unfortunately, it’s the juice you drink most often throughout the cleanse), but other selections, including tart and spicy lemonade (filtered water, lemon and cayenne) and cashew nut milk (filtered water, raw cashews, vanilla bean, cinnamon and agave nectar), were downright tasty. BluePrint Cleanse (BPC) obviously has some great brand awareness going on. It seems to be all the rave these days every time I mentioned to someone that I was trying it out, that person had either already done it or had been planning on doing it. (I felt a little light-headed at the beginning of the first day, but the second juice remedied that.) The first juice of the day was “green lemon,” made of filtered water, romaine, celery, cucumber, green apple, spinach, kale, parsley and lemon. by Jenny Sansouci on 20 Comments Ah, the BluePrint Cleanse. Each juice is labeled, so there’s no planning involved you just drink six bottles a day and feel surprisingly satisfied. Once I got over the initial idea of not eating any food, the two-day cleanse was very easy. Now that Blueprint Cleanse is available in Illinois (the New York–based company delivers two-, three- and five-day supplies of fresh, all-natural juices via FedEx), I finally gave it a shot. ON THE JUICE For years, I’ve been talking about doing a cleanse, but I always come up with reasons to avoid actually going through with it (“How do you start?” “But I’m hungry.”).
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