I absolutely love snacking on those little baby carrots, but my wife says that the carotene will make my skin turn orange. Okay that might be true, but exactly how much carrot must one eat for this to happen?
I did a quick search on the topic and found disagreement. Many people warn against eating too many carrots and others say that the orange skin thing is practically a myth since, they claim, one would have to eat a ton of carrots for this to occur.
It happens. I’ve seen it in patients. Usually toddlers, fed alot of strained carrots and yams, but in some adult food faddists. I can’t tell you what dosage is necessary to make it happen, but it is definitely less than “tons”.
It can happen, but I think you’d have to eat SEVERAL times the normal amount of carrots for that to happen. As in abnormal mass amounts. I won’t try to guess at the amount, as I’ll probably be wrong. I also don’t think it would be a drastic skin-tone change.
A few years ago, a then-coworker of mine got on a health kick and got seriously into juicing. I don’t know how many carrots and other juiced vegetables he was eating, but he got a definite orange tinge to his skin.
It went away when he stopped juicing so much. He looked a little odd for a while, though.
My story is like Archergal. I did juicing with a friend for a while, but stopped when I noticed his skin color.
I doubt a pound of raw carrots per day would change your skin color but I wouldn’t recommend that much either. It takes a lot of carrots to make a couple of glasses of juice–so take it easy on the juice.