Information Blog

11:26 PM

Sunday - Wine Drink

The Best Articles on Wine Drink

Wine Drinkers Eat Healthier Foods Than Beer Drinkers



Copyright 2006 Daily News Central


Drinking wine is believed to provide greater health benefits than drinking beer. The additional benefits may be due in part to an associated healthier diet, researchers theorize.


Wine drinkers eat more olives, fresh fruits and vegetables, low fat dairy products, poultry and lean cuts of meat, according to a recent study. Beer drinkers were found to eat more pre-cooked packaged foods, sugar, chips, soft-drinks, cold cuts, sausages and fattier cuts of meat.


Shopping Habits Studied


Food and alcohol shopping habits were investigated by a team from the National Institute of Public Health in Denmark. Researchers analyzed 3.5 million transactions, chosen at random from 98 outlets of two major Danish supermarket chains over a six month period. They evaluated the link between the purchase of beer and wine together with various food items.


Customers were categorized as "wine only," "beer only," "mixed," or "non-alcohol" buyers. Details of items bought, the number and price of the items, and the total charge for each customer's transaction were recorded.


Wine Buyers Purchase Healthier Foods


The results indicate that people who buy and presumably drink wine purchase a greater number of healthy food items than those who buy beer, according to the authors. Wine buyers purchased more fresh, low-fat foods, while beer buyers bought more processed, high-fat foods.


The study results also support findings from the United States and France that indicate wine drinkers tend to eat more fruit, vegetables and fish -- and less saturated fat -- than persons who prefer other alcoholic drinks.


Other Lifestyle Factors


The health benefits of drinking wine may be due to a combination of specific substances in wine and different characteristics of people, researchers add.


Thus, it is crucial that studies on the relationship between alcohol intake and mortality adjust for other lifestyle factors besides eating habits, including drinking patterns, smoking, physical activity, education and income.


The Meditteranean Diet


If you want to enjoy a longer life, eat a Mediterranean diet: lots of vegetables, legumes, fruits and cereals, along with plenty of fish. Keep your intake of saturated fats low but your consumption of olive oil high. Avoid dairy products and meat -- and enjoy that glass of wine now and then.


Elderly Europeans who eat that way enjoy longer life expectancy, according to another study published online by the BMJ last year. The evidence suggests that such a diet may be beneficial to health.


Lower Death Rate


That study involved over 74,000 healthy men and women, aged 60 or more, living in nine European countries. Information on diet, lifestyle, medical history, smoking, physical activity levels and other relevant factors was recorded. Adherence to a modified Mediterranean diet was measured using a recognized scoring scale.


A higher dietary score was associated with a lower overall death rate. A two point increase corresponded to an 8 percent reduction in mortality, while a three or four point increase was associated with a reduction of total mortality by 11 percent or 14 percent respectively.


So, for example, a healthy man aged 60 who adheres well to the diet (dietary score of 6-9) can expect to live about one year longer than a man of the same age who does not adhere to the diet.


Plant Foods, Unsaturated Fats


The association was strongest in Greece and Spain, probably because people in those countries follow a genuinely Mediterranean diet, according to the authors.


Adherence to a Mediterranean-type diet, which relies on plant foods and unsaturated fats, is associated with a significantly longer life expectancy, and may be particularly appropriate for elderly people, who represent a rapidly increasing group in Europe, they concluded.

About the Author


Rita Jenkins is a health journalist for Daily News Central, an online publication that delivers breaking news and reliable health information to consumers, healthcare providers and industry professionals:
http://www.dailynewscentral.com

A synopsis on Wine Drink.

Wine Drinkers Eat Healthier Foods Than Beer Drinkers


Copyright 2006 Daily News Central
Drinking wine is believed to provide greater health benefits than drinking beer. The additional benefits may be due ...


Click Here to Read More About Wine ...

Recommended Wine Drink Items

Wine Enthusiast 2 Piece Corkscrew and Bottle Opener - Black


So compact take this corkscrew whereever you go. It's small enough to fit in your pocket or bag. But it's multi-functional opens bottle caps and wine bottles.


Price: 2.95 USD



Headlines on Wine Drink

What's Cookin': Drink Wine to Save Water - Seattlest


What's Cookin': Drink Wine to Save Water
Seattlest, Seattle - Jun 20, 2008
Sponsored by Wine & Spirits Magazine, this event celebrates the June issue’s annual Critics’ Picks—the magazine’s favorite inexpensive wines from around the ...


Brooklyn for Sale - New York Times


Brooklyn for Sale
New York Times, United States - 8 hours ago
... and Darrin Siegfried, owner of Brooklyn Wine. The talk came a few days after news emerged that Starbucks had named a drink for the borough (though that, ...
Yo, Brooklyn Brand, Whassup? New York Times
all 5 news articles


Irish splash most in the EU on booze - Times Online


Times Online

Irish splash most in the EU on booze
Times Online, UK - 7 hours ago
Beer has been the most popular alcoholic drink in Ireland for more than 20 years, but wine has grown from 6% of the market in 1986 to 21% in 2006. ...


Drink to this Wine Version 1.0 - Techtree.com


Techtree.com

Drink to this Wine Version 1.0
Techtree.com, India - Jun 19, 2008
And while this isn't the wine you drink, it might be headier. "Wine" is the free open source software that allows users run Windows applications on Linux, ...


Setting the perfect temperature for a drink - WRAL.com


Setting the perfect temperature for a drink
WRAL.com, NC - Jun 20, 2008
... "What to Drink With What You Eat" have been known to whip out a pen-sized infrared thermometer to check the temperature of their wine before imbibing. ...


Thirsty for high returns? Get into the market for red wine - Independent


Thirsty for high returns? Get into the market for red wine
Independent, UK - 7 hours ago
A specialist fund pools investors' money to buy wine to trade, but that doesn't mean you will get to drink your returns, just as investing a stake in a ...



Wine Ingredients
Kiona Wine

Labels:

BlinkBitsBlinkList Add To BlogmarksCiteULike
diigo furl Google  LinkaGoGo
HOLM ma.gnolianetvouzrawsugar
reddit Mojo this page at Rojo Scuttle Smarking
spurl Squidoo StumbleUpon Tailrank
TechnoratiAddThis Social Bookmark Button

onlywire Socializersocialize it

0 Comments:

Post a Comment

<< Home