Fruit Juice
drinks with a pH of less than 4 can be damaging to the teeth, according to a 2016 study in the Journal of the American Dental Association.
Juice | pH | Brand | Vit C Content | ||
Apple | 3.57 – 3.67 | ||||
Beer | |||||
Blood | 7.40 | ||||
Celery | 5.70 – 6.00 | ||||
Club Soda | 5.24 | ||||
Coca-Cola | 2.37 | Classic | |||
Coconut Milk | 6.10 – 7.00 | ||||
Coffee | 5.11 | Starbucks Med Roast | |||
Cranberry | 2.56 | ||||
Grape | 2.81 | ||||
Grapefruit | 3.00 – 3.75 | ||||
Honey | 3.70 – 4.20 | ||||
Kombucha GTS | 2.50 | ||||
Lemon | 2.25 | ||||
Lime | 2.0 – 2.80 | ||||
Maple Syrup | 5.15 | ||||
Milk | 10.2 | ||||
Orange | 3.06 | ||||
Pear | 3.50 – 3.60 | ||||
Pineapple | 3.91 | ||||
Root Beer | 4.27 | A&W | |||
Seawater | 8.5 | ||||
Tea | 7.20 | ||||
Tomato | 4.01 | ||||