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Pop! Champagne Is Good for Your Health By
Dr. Al
Sears Pop
the
cork on a bottle of champagne and you know it’s time for a celebration.
“The
Bubbly” makes you feel good right away because if you’re drinking it,
you know
times are good.
There
are
other plants that have some of the same compounds you can find in
champagne.
Cocoa has them, for example. But a cup of hot chocolate somehow doesn’t
seem as
much fun as a glass of champagne. You
get
champagne either by combining two kinds of black grapes, pinot noir and
pinot
meunier, or by using the white chardonnay grape, and letting them
ferment. That
just means you let the grapes sit there until their sugars turn into
alcohol. But
with
champagne, you let them ferment twice, instead of once like regular
wine.
That’s when the bubbles start to form. And that’s when the fun starts.
Not just
for celebrations, but for your body, too. As
it
turns out, champagne is very healthy. Champagne
gives you the same amount of heart protection as red wine, helping your
heart’s
pumping performance, increasing heart muscle energy production, and
protecting
your heart’s cells from free radical damage.1 The
British
Journal of Nutrition published a study that looked at whether
champagne
could affect how well your arteries work. They discovered that
champagne
specifically – not the alcohol in it, or the phenolic acids, which are
the
antioxidants from They
gave
people two glasses of champagne to drink, and found that The Bubbly
boosts
nitric oxide. That’s the compound that relaxes your blood vessels and
lowers
your blood pressure. And the effect lasts for up to eight hours.2 A
different study found that the antioxidants in the phenolic acids have
another
benefit. They appear to protect your brain. The
Journal
of Agricultural and Food Chemistry published a study that
found three
phenolic acids from champagne – tyrosol, caffeic acid and gallic acid –
protect
against the damage to your brain that free radicals can cause. Also,
they
protect you even if you only drink a small amount of champagne.3 Champagne
can also be beneficial in other ways. For example, it causes you to
release
dopamine, the “feel-good” brain chemical that helps you to move around,
think
positively, and experience pleasure.4 Champagne
may even help you digest your food better. A German study on the
effects of
different kinds of alcohol on people’s stomachs found that alcohols
that are
distilled (like vodka) have no effect on gastric acid, which your
stomach makes
so it can break down your food and digest it. But fermented alcohols,
like champagne,
increase gastric acid by as much as 95 percent.5 It’s
well
documented that one drink a day for women and up to two a day for men
can help
you live a longer and healthier life. And with all the extra heart and
brain
benefits you get from The Bubbly, it’s a good idea to drink some even
if it
isn’t a special celebration. So
how do
you choose a champagne that packs plenty of polyphenol punch? The
first
thing you want to remember is that even though the word “champagne”
usually
refers to all sparkling wines, actual champagne comes only from France.
But
that doesn’t mean there aren’t other wines like champagne. You can also
try a
sparkling white wine from California, which is made the same way
champagne is
made in France. Or you can try champagne’s sexy cousins, Spumante from
Italy
and Cava from Spain. •
Champagne
– The best champagne is not made every year, but only when the
wine is good enough. Those champagnes have a “vintage,” or year they
are made,
and are very expensive, like the famous Dom Perignon or Cristal. These
expensive champagnes are also very “dry,” which means they have a
slight
bitterness, but that bitterness is good. It comes from very high
polyphenol
content. Don’t worry, though. Sweeter champagnes – ones that are less
dry-tasting – are still plenty healthy. •
California sparkling white wine:
You get the health
benefits only from real “sparkling” wine. That’s because the real
sparkling
wine gets its bubbles from natural fermentation in the same style they
use in
France. If a wine is artificially carbonated like soda, the label will
say the
wine is “effervescent” instead of sparkling. •
Spumante
– Like French champagne, this kind of Italian sparkling wine is made
in only one region of Italy. You may have heard of Asti
Spumante, a
popular brand. Spumante is lighter and less bubbly
than champagne, and
less expensive. Also, it’s best if you drink it within three years of
the
vintage. •
Cava
– Made exclusively in Northeastern Spain, Cava is
made the
same way as French champagne, but from Macabeo grapes. It’s fruitier
than other
sparkling wines, and its bubbles last longer. On
The Web:
If you would like to learn more about sparkling wines, here are
some websites to visit: 1.
Snooth:
You’ll find better wines
listed here.
Sources 1
Dudley, J.I., Lekli, I.,
Mukherjee, S. et al, "Does white wine qualify for French paradox?" J.
Agric. Food Chem. Oct. 22, 2008;56(20):9362-73 Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
Health Supplements and You 2011