And it also contains citric acid if that indeed is important.

On Thu, May 27, 2010 at 1:33 PM, Dan Nave <[email protected]> wrote:

> Lemon juice appears to be a good source of trace minerals, with amount
> of Potassium being the highest.
> In 100ml of lemon juice:
>
> Vitamins
> Vitamin A(IU) 19
> Vitamin A (microg retinol activity equivalents) 1
> Vitamin B6 (mg) 0.051
> Vitamin B12 (microg) 0
> Folic Acid (microg) 0
> Niacin (mg) 0.1
> Riboflavin (mg) 0.01
> Thiamin (mg) 0.03
> Vitamin C (mg) 46
> Vitamin E (mg) 0.15
> Vitamin K (mg) 0
> Minerals
> Calcium (mg) 7
> Copper (mg) 0.029
> Iron (mg) 0.03
> Manganese (mg) 0.008
> Magnesium (mg) 6
> Phosphorus (mg) 6
> Potassium (mg) 124
> Selenium (microg) 0.1
> Sodium (mg) 1
> Zinc (mg) 0.05
> Other
> Protein (g) 0.38
> Fibre (g) 0.4
> Water (g) 90.73
> Carbohydrate (g) 8.63
> Energy (Kcal) 25
> Lipids (fats) (g) 0
> Cholesterol (mg) 0
>
>
>