I must admit I'm not big on special fitness drinks, especially recovery drinks. They're often full of extra calories, and I usually opt for water since most exercise physiologists believe you don't need to worry about replacing electrolytes, carbs, and protein unless you have been working out and sweating for more than an hour. I often think a lot of these drinks have added coloring and chemicals, so when I saw Code Blue marketed as an all natural post-workout drink I was curious to try it. I must admit, I liked its tropical flavor, and although it only has 40 calories per eight-ounce serving (the can contains 12 ounces, equal to one and a half servings) Code Blue does not have that artificial sweetener taste of many low-cal beverages.
To see how this drink is sweetened and if it is an unnatural color, just read more.
Looking at the ingredient list on the back of the Code Blue can, I can't say I felt like I was drinking something "natural." After water, the next three ingredients are: crystalline fructose, agave nectar, and malic acid, which adds tartness more than sweetness. Further down the list I found stevia leaf extract listed as well, which is a bit more natural. Code Blue contains the electrolytes potassium and sodium, but also contains the supplement milk thistle to help detox the liver (trainer Bob Harper believes in the treatment), and prickly pear extract to reduce inflammation.
The first time I tried Code Blue, I drank it straight from the can. You can imagine my surprise when I poured it into a glass and found the liquid to be a vibrant unnatural blue. Which prompts the question, what natural ingredient was used to color this drink and why even bother coloring it?

Ingredients: Filtered Purified Water, Crystalline Fructose, Agave Nectar, Malic Acid, Sodium Phosphate, Potassium Citrate, Citric Acid, Natural Flavor, D-Ribose, Fruit Juice (for color), Sustamine™ (L-Alanine L-Glutamine), Pectin, Inositol, Ascorbic Acid, Prickly Pear Extract (Opunitia ficus-indica), Milk Thistle (Silybum marianum) Extract, N-Acetyl Cysteine, Stevia (Stevia Rebaudiana) Leaf Extractives, Soy Protein and Rice Flour, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride (Vitamin B6), Niacinamide (Vitamin B3), DL-alpha-Tocopheryl Acetate (Vitamin E), Selenium Complexed with Amino Acids and Polypeptides, Cyanocobalamin (Vitamin B12)
I'm not really sold on the drink, but I'm not completely opposed to it either. I would certainly drink this over other recovery drinks, but more likely I will sip some water instead. Have you tried it?
This just in: The color comes from blueberries.

Issa
Napapijri
Paul & Joe
The sugar seems unnecessarily high. Why does it need crystalline fructose, agave AND stevia? Not to mention the fruit juice....
Plus they list "natural flavor."
Stick with water!
1Ewwwwwwww
2Coconut water is the BEST health drink.
I LOVE recovery drinks. My two favorites are 2% chocolate milk and Hammer brand Recoverite. After a 6 hour bike ride Recoverite is the way to go, esp. since I bring it in powder form and add water after the ride.
3Seems like it has an awful lot of ingredients for being "natural". I'll stick with water.
4I actually tried the drink and was pleasantly surprised. Better than a Gatorade at least from a sugar vs. functional perspective.
5I live in NY swear by Code Blue. I don't know why everyone is complaining about the sugar which is only 9 grams. I used to drink Gatorade and Vitaminwater which has almost three times as much.
6Surprised you're complaining about the ingredients. I like the taste, it has way more electrolytes than any sports drink, and even the blue color that it has is completely natural.
7Most functional recovery drink I've ever used, and it tastes great. Find me a drink that works as well and has less sugar in it, and I'm sold, but until then, Code Blue is where it's at.
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