How to eat healthfully can be especially complex for working women who often have neither the desire nor the time to cook for themselves (or for anyone else). Registered dietitian Barhara Morrissey suggests that a few simple rules can help. "Go for nutrient dense foods," she suggests, "foods that contain a multiple of nutrients. For example, select whole wheat bread as a breakfast food, rather than coffee cake. Or drink orange juice rather than orange drink, which contains only a small percentage of real juice—the rest is largely colored sugar water. You just can’t compare the value of these foods; the nutrient dense ones are so superior," she emphasizes. Morrissey believes that variety is not only the spice of life-it’s the foundation of a healthful diet. "Diets which are based on one or two foods are not only virtually impossible to keep up the strength. They can be very harmful," she says, "because nutrients aren’t supplied in sufficient amounts or balance." According to Morrissey, trying to find a diet that can cure your illnesses, or make you superwoman is a fruitless search. "As women, many of us are too concerned with staying thin," she says, "and we believe that vitamins are some kind of magic cure to replace food." "We need carbohydrates, protein and fat-they are like the wood in the fireplace. The vitamins and minerals are like the match, the spark, for the fuel," she explains," We need them all, but in a very different proportion. And if the fuel isn’t there, the spark is useless.\ Orange juice is different from orange drink in that ______.
A. it contains only a small percentage of real juice B. it is natural, nutritious and prepared from real oranges C. it is largely orange-colored sugar water D. it produces nothing but calories