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View Full Version : How wine works its magic


Brucelee
07-06-2008, 15:35
Of sommeliers and stomachs
Jul 3rd 2008
From The Economist print edition

Red wine exercises its benefits before it enters the bloodstream


FINE food sings on the palate, but pairing it with the right wine creates a chorus. Among those in the know, the plum, chocolate and spice flavours of Cabernet Sauvignons, Merlots, Pinot Noirs and Sangioveses best accentuate the rich flavours of red meats. Now, however, a group of researchers led by Joseph Kanner of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem has discovered that pairing red wines like these with red meat appears to be more than just a matter of taste. If the two mix in the stomach, compounds in the wine thwart the formation of harmful chemicals that are released when meat is digested.

The idea that red wine is actually good for your health is irresistible to the average tippler. But it appears to be true. In particular, red wines are rich in polyphenols, a group of powerful antioxidants that are thought to protect against cancer and heart disease by destroying molecules that would otherwise damage cells. How the polyphenols in wine exercise their beneficial effects, though, has been mysterious. That is because they do not seem to travel in any quantity from the stomach into the bloodstream.

The answer, Dr Kanner has found, lies in the stomach itself. The digestion of high-fat foods such as red meat releases oxidising toxins. One in particular, called malondialdehyde, is implicated in arteriosclerosis, cancer, diabetes and a host of other serious diseases. Dr Kanner suspected that the key to wine’s protective effect is when, precisely, it is consumed. He hypothesised that if the polyphenols arrive in the stomach at the moment when the fats are releasing malondialdehyde and its kin, then this might stop these toxic materials from getting any farther into the body.

To test this idea, he and his colleagues fed a group of rats one of two meals—either red meat from a turkey (a foodstuff shown by previous research to raise malondialdehyde levels in humans) or such meat mixed with red-wine concentrate. An hour and a half after the rats had eaten, they were killed. Dr Kanner then removed their stomachs and analysed the contents. As he reports in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, the wine concentrate did indeed reduce the formation of malondialdehyde. It also cut the level of hydroperoxides, another group of oxidising agents that cause cell damage.

Based on these results, Dr Kanner and his colleagues argue that looking for antioxidants from wine in the bloodstream was a mistake; they do not need to be there to be useful. Their research also suggests that the habit of eating fruit at the end of a meal is a healthy one. Many fruits, too, are rich in polyphenols (wine is, after all, just fermented fruit juice). By treating them as dessert, these fruits arrive in the stomach at the point when meat-digestion is poised to do its worst—nipping the problem in the bud, as it were.

70Sixter
07-06-2008, 20:42
Good news Brucelee! Now can you dig something up on the benefits if fine Bourbon?

Brucelee
07-06-2008, 23:13
Report: Aspirin Taken Daily With Bottle Of Bourbon Reduces Awareness Of Heart Attacks
June 10, 1998 | Issue 33•22

From:

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July 28, 1999
PHILADELPHIA—In a medical breakthrough that should come as welcome news for millions of at-risk Americans, University of Pennsylvania cardiologists announced Tuesday that taking one aspirin tablet and a fifth of bourbon daily can "significantly reduce" an individual's awareness of heart attacks.


"This study represents a major victory in the fight against heart disease, America's number-one killer," said Dr. Arthur Katzeff, head of the University of Pennsylvania team. "Each year, more than two million Americans clutch their chests in terror and say, 'Jesus Christ! I'm having a f***** heart attack!' With this revolutionary new aspirin-bourbon treatment, however, such fully conscious incidents of cardiac arrest may soon be a thing of the past."

According to Katzeff, test subjects who were administered a single aspirin tablet in the morning, followed by a fifth of bonded Kentucky bourbon over the next several hours, were 85 percent less likely to realize they were having a heart attack than subjects who did not take aspirin with bourbon.

Americans are excited about the findings. "My four heart attacks have all been hellish," said Ronald Diering, an Evansville, IN, auto mechanic. "I was aware of everything that was happening, and I was gripped by the fear that I was going to die. But with this new aspirin-bourbon treatment, future heart attacks should be much less traumatic."

"Who wants to spend what could be their last moments on Earth in terror?" said Alex Broadhurst of San Jose, CA. "Better to enjoy another bourbon and lie on the floor waiting for the ambulance to show up."

University of Pennsylvania researchers said individuals who take aspirin and bourbon in the prevention of heart attacks may experience certain side effects, including slurred speech, impaired vision, and vomiting.

Upon waking up from a heart attack, researchers said, there is also a chance of having "a wicked hangover."

LoveBunny
07-10-2008, 04:46
Hey, any excuse to drink wine sounds good to me.

And the aspirin/bourbon thing makes me think of a painful medical procedure I had done. I took Xanax and Vicodin before the procedure and then right after I had a martini with lunch. I felt great.

limoncello
07-10-2008, 13:20
Love the article on red wine and meats, the Mediterranean diet RULES!
Last nights dinner? Chianti and Italian sausages. Woo hoo!
I think the tomato sauce and garlic also weave into the overall cosmic dance of the digestive system. Fresh fruit at the end - a must; skip the sweet desserts.
Also skip the After Shock, much easier the next morning. OK, maybe one limoncello once in while (as the name implies).
As I get older, I've started substituting from all pasta (carbs) to a 50/50 mix of pasta and fresh squash/zucchini/etc. as a base, then the sauce added normally. Tastes great, lower carbs, more veggies.
Good health and good driving to all!

Brucelee
07-11-2008, 02:36
Love the article on red wine and meats, the Mediterranean diet RULES!
Last nights dinner? Chianti and Italian sausages. Woo hoo!
I think the tomato sauce and garlic also weave into the overall cosmic dance of the digestive system. Fresh fruit at the end - a must; skip the sweet desserts.
Also skip the After Shock, much easier the next morning. OK, maybe one limoncello once in while (as the name implies).
As I get older, I've started substituting from all pasta (carbs) to a 50/50 mix of pasta and fresh squash/zucchini/etc. as a base, then the sauce added normally. Tastes great, lower carbs, more veggies.
Good health and good driving to all!


I think we are on the same diet, sans the lemoncello for me.

Then again, I have yet to try it, so perhaps this weekend.
\
:D

gmboxster
07-11-2008, 16:21
I think I'll try the aspirin / bourbon diet before I go to work tonight.If nothing else it should help reduce the stress level. If anybody says anything I'll tell them there is proven scientific evidence to support my new diet. Work tonight may not be so bad after all. :)

70Sixter
07-11-2008, 17:13
Thanks for the bourbon bit, Brucelee.

I feel better already! :cheers:

Brucelee
07-11-2008, 18:09
We aim to please!

:p

FTD
07-17-2008, 16:44
Hey, any excuse to drink wine sounds good to me.

And the aspirin/bourbon thing makes me think of a painful medical procedure I had done. I took Xanax and Vicodin before the procedure and then right after I had a martini with lunch. I felt great.
DDaammnn! :troll:

fragdude
07-17-2008, 18:30
If I ever need a "socially acceptable" reason to get drunk I'll just yell, "I'm having a heart attack!....pass the bourbon!"