If You Are Still Drinking From A Keurig, Get Ready To Never Want To Again!

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What busy person doesn’t love the idea of having a personal cup of coffee instantly with the push of a button? Many people are delighted when the Keurig machines show up in the workplace or doctor’s waiting room. I loved the idea. I bought one from Costco along with the handy unit to store those awkward K Cups.  I, of course, insisted on the Newman’s Organic K Cups for my coffee choice.

We stocked our hot beverage center with a variety of flavored K Cups.

Then That Little Voice In My Head Started Asking Questions

I pushed those concerns away for the sake of convenience (after all, filling my own coffee filter with fresh ground coffee takes all of what… two minutes? I’m a busy person, just like you!).

I wondered:

  • How fresh is the coffee in a K Cup?
  • What toxins am I exposing myself to as the hot water forces the coffee through the little holes poked in the plastic cup?
  • What is that lid made of that is poked at the top to allow the water to enter the cup?
  • What chemicals are used in the flavored coffee selections?
  • Is there a filter inside the plastic cup? What is it made of and how is it secured inside the plastic cup?

If you own a Keurig, please continue reading this post because what I discovered is shocking and sickening. This will explain why I am kicking my Keurig to the curb.

drinking coffee from keurig

Is Your Keurig Harboring Mold And Bacteria?

When I packed up my kitchen to move 500 miles south, I wanted to make sure that my Keurig was completely empty and dry before it went on the moving truck. IMPOSSIBLE!

Keurig.com states, “Once your Keurig home brewer has been primed, you cannot empty the water from the inside. The internal tank of the brewer cannot be drained.”

The microbiologist in me is disgusted at the thought. Back in the day when I worked in a hospital lab, we emptied all water reservoirs daily or they would grow bacteria and a biofilm could develop. You are familiar with biofilms if you ever cleaned the goo out of a flower vase after the flowers have died. Biofilms are found wherever there is water and a surface to stick to (like your shower curtain).

The rubber tubing and the internal tank of the Keurig cannot be drained. It is possible that bacteria and mold are happily living inside that hidden water tank where it is nice and dark and warm. Another mold-magnet is that black rubber ring on the bottom of the exterior water container. Look now! Is there green or black slime? ewwwww (biofilm!).

Donna Duberg, M.A., M.S., an assistant professor of clinical laboratory science at Saint Louis University said, “Bacteria forms a slick biofilm when grown in moist, dark places, and so do molds.”

No, your coffee bean’s antibacterial action is not enough to kill these microbes that are floating through the system. Duberg said, “There is research which shows that it is only about 50 percent effective in killing bacteria, such as Staphylococcus aureus and Streptococcus mutans, and molds.”

No, your water is not getting hot enough to kill all microbes that are living in your coffee system. For that to happen, the water would need to reach boiling temperature and stay there for one minute.  And, for heaven’s sake, wash your workplace coffee mug with dish soap and water. Researchers found that half of workplace coffee mugs were contaminated with fecal bacteria.

Can you clean the Keurig? The first step is to empty out the exterior water tank and look inside the tank. Does it feel slimy? Clean and dry that tank and run a few cycles of diluted vinegar through the Keurig. Good luck with that.  One person said, “I could still smell a moldy aroma after doing quite a few vinegar cycles. There were also black floaty things in my cup even when I just brewed hot water.”

Drinking Coffee From Keurig Plastic K Cups

keurig cupsThe Plastic

The K Cup is a composite plastic, #7. Although this is technically BPA-free the chemicals from the composite plastic are not safe and they still have estrogenic activity. 

As long as I mentioned fake estrogens coming from the plastic in your K Cup, don’t make a bad situation worse by adding soy milk to your coffee!

The Cups Are Non-Recyclable

This is a big problem for the environment since we have seen an explosion in the use of single cup coffee makers, like Keurig, in the last few years. MotherJones.com reported, over 8.3 billion K Cups a year are discarded, enough to circle the earth 10.5 times!

The Lid is Polyethylene Coated Foil

Aluminum foil. Yes, we would like to avoid aluminum because of the connection with the biggies:

The Filter

The filter is made of filter paper and ? – I don’t know but somehow it is fused or glued inside the plastic cup.

Reusable K Cups

Although there are reusable K Cups called My K-Cup on the market, you are still faced with the stagnant water situation and hidden water tanks and tubing that cannot be cleaned. The reusable My K Cup still needs to be filled every time you make a cup of coffee and the filter needs to be cleaned every time. There goes your convenience, but if you are willing to risk the microbes, then this is better for the environment and more economical.

The Coffee

The flavored coffee K cups are typically flavored with “natural” or artificial flavors. We know that food manufacturers use these names to hide ingredients that act like MSG, a neurotoxin.

One Keurig K cup user complained of nausea, fatigue, dizziness and vomiting. “This all started when my work got a Keurig machine and I started drinking their tea regularly.”

Another user reported, “I have noticed when I use the K Cups on a daily basis my lips tend to get dry and numb on the outside.”

One of my clients noticed a  connection between skin rashes and the use of the Keurig K cups with flavoring.

This could be a reaction to “natural” and artificial flavors often found in flavored coffee.

Well, Do YOU?

  • Do you care about the taste and quality of your coffee?
  • Do you care about the environment and the workers in the coffee bean industry?
  • Do you care about your health?

There is nothing like a steaming hot cup of freshly brewed coffee made with quality coffee beans. Using the Keurig was easy but the taste was marginal. I do not consider myself a coffee connoisseur but I love a good cup of coffee. Finally, I allowed myself to consider all the issues with the Keurig and I decided to kick my Keurig to the curb.

 

Reference:
getbetterwellness.com

Some of the links I post on this site are affiliate links. If you go through them to make a purchase, I will earn a small commission (at no additional cost to you). However, note that I’m recommending these products because of their quality and that I have good experience using them, not because of the commission to be made.

About Sara Ding

Sara Ding is the founder of Juicing-for-Health.com. She is a certified Wellness Health Coach, Nutritional Consultant and a Detox Specialist. She helps busy men and women identify their health issues at the root cause, in order to eliminate the problems for optimum physical/mental health and wellbeing.

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