Specialty
- Noni natural fruit juice is a specially selected, highly valuable food.
- Take 30 – 60 ml once or more times a day – best on an empty stomach, to promote your health and heighten your power of resistance.
- Noni natural fruit juice is freshly processed from sun-ripened hand picked fruits.
- Fruit of the Morinda tree Noni natural fruit juice is highly appreciated and very popular in many countries.
Noni
Noni
Where does the Noni fruit come from?
Noni is an evergreen bush or tree of the family of Rubiceae found all over the Asiatic-Pacific region. Its fruit reaches a length of up to 9 cm and has a light green to cream coloured shade when it is ripe. From early times it was exported by traders and sailors because of its well-known medicinal quality.
Usage
Usage
Recommended dosage: 30 – 60 ml of Noni juice once or several times a day, depending on your state of health. The higher dose brings quick relief of health problems, the lower dose promotes general well-being and the power of resistance. Ideally, the juice should be taken on an empty stomach around 30 minutes before eating so that the precious proxeronine is not impaired by the gastric juices.
Please shake the bottle well before use so that fruit sediments that may have settled on the bottom are included. The colour of the juice can vary slightly due to the sediments drifting in the juice.
Origin
Origin
Where does the Noni fruit come from?
Noni is an evergreen bush or tree of the family of Rubiceae found all over the Asiatic-Pacific region. Its fruit reaches a length of up to 9 cm and has a light green to cream coloured shade when it is ripe. From early times it was exported by traders and sailors because of its well-known medicinal quality.
Noni fruit processing
Noni fruit processing
How is the Noni fruit processed?
The Noni fruit are harvested when ripe and are processed on the spot. They are squeezed and the juice is bottled in its purely natural state without any additives. Noni reaches peak prices at local markets and is so popular that buyers are virtually fighting for the last fruits.







