10 Reasons beer is not bad for you

  [image: 10 Reasons beer is not bad for you]
  Beer myths busted (Thinkstock photos/Getty
 *Here are 10 reasons why beer is not really bad for you, if had in
moderation. Please note, this is not an encouragement to imbibe, especially
if you are a teetotaler or have a medical condition*

*1. Beer drinkers live longer*
Moderate drinking is good for you, and beer is good for moderate drinking.
Everyone knows that if you drink too much, it's not good for you. Let's not
pull punches: If you're a drunk, you run into things, you drive into
things, you get esophageal cancer, you get cirrhosis and other nasty
conditions. But more and more medical research indicates that if you don't
drink at all, that's not good for you either. According to numerous
independent studies, moderate drinkers live longer and better than drunks
or teetotalers. Beer is perfect for moderate drinking because of its lower
alcohol content and larger volume compared with wine or spirits. And as
that old radical Thomas Jefferson said, "Beer, if drank with moderation,
softens the temper, cheers the spirit, and promotes health." And he didn't
need a scientific study to tell him that.

*2. Beer is all-natural*
Some know-it-alls will tell you that beer is loaded with additives and
preservatives. The truth is that beer is as all-natural as orange juice or
milk (maybe even more so - some of those milk & OJ labels will surprise
you). Beer doesn't need preservatives because it has alcohol and hops, both
of which are natural preservatives. Beer is only "processed" in the sense
that bread is: It is cooked and fermented, then filtered and packaged. The
same can be said for Heineken.

*3. Beer is low in calories, low in carbohydrates and has no fat or
cholesterol*
For a completely natural beverage, beer offers serious low-calorie options.
Twelve ounces of Guinness has the same number of calories as 12 ounces of
skim milk: about 125. That's less than orange juice (150 calories), which
is about the same as your standard, "full-calorie" beer. If beer were your
only source of nutrition, you'd have to drink one every waking hour just to
reach your recommended daily allowance of calories (2,000 to 2,500). And
nobody's recommending you drink that many. The only natural drinks with
fewer calories than beer are plain tea, black coffee and water. Surely,
beer is loaded with those fattening carbohydrates, right? Wrong again. The
average beer has about 12 grams of carbs per 12-ounce serving. The U.S.
Recommended Daily Allowance is 300 grams of carbohydrates in a standard
2,000-calorie diet. In other words, you would need to drink an entire
24-pack case of beer - and then reach into a second case - simply to reach
the government's recommended daily allotment of carbohydrates. You're
better off munching an apple or drinking some soda pop if you want to
carbo-load. Each has about 35 to 40 grams of carbs - three times the number
found in a beer. Also, beer has no fat or cholesterol.

*4. Beer improves your cholesterol*
Beer not only has no cholesterol, it can actually improve the cholesterol
in your body. In fact, drinking beer regularly and moderately will tilt
your HDL/LDL cholesterol ratios the right way. You've got two kinds of
cholesterol in your system: HDL, the "good" cholesterol that armor-plates
your veins and keeps things flowing, and LDL, the "bad" cholesterol that
builds up in your veins like sludge in your bathtub drain. Beer
power-flushes the system and keeps the HDL levels up. According to some
studies, as little as one beer a day can boost your HDL by up to 4 per cent.

*5. Beer helps you chill*
The social aspects of moderate drinking are solidly beneficial to your
health. In other words, to get out every now and then and relax with your
buddies over a couple of beers.

*6. Beer has plenty o' B vitamins*
Beer, especially unfiltered or lightly filtered beer, turns out to be quite
nutritious, despite the years of suppression of those facts by various
anti-alcohol groups. Beer has high levels of B vitamins, particularly folic
acid, which is believed to help prevent heart attacks. Beer also has
soluble fiber, good for keeping you regular, which in turn reduces the
likelihood that your system will absorb unhealthy junk like fat. Beer also
boasts significant levels of magnesium and potassium, in case you were
planning on metal-plating your gut.

*7. Beer is safer than water*
If you're someplace where you are advised not to drink the water, the local
beer is always a safer bet. It's even safer than the local bottled water.
Beer is boiled in the brewing process and is kept clean afterwards right
through the bottle being capped and sealed, because if it isn't, it goes
bad in obvious ways that make it impossible to sell. Even if it does go
bad, though, there are no life-threatening bacteria bacteria (pathogens)
that can live in beer. So drink up - even bad beer is safer than water.

*8. Beer prevents heart attacks*
If you want to get a bit more cutting-edge than vitamins, beer has other
goodies for you. You've heard of the French Paradox, how the French eat
their beautiful high-fat diet and drink their beautiful high-booze diet and
smoke their nasty goat-hair cigarettes, but have rates of heart disease
that are about one-third that of the rest of the world? It's been credited
to red wine and the antioxidants it contains. Hey, guess what else has lots
of antioxidants, as many as red wine? Dark beer! According to the American
Heart Association, "there is no clear evidence that wine is more beneficial
than other forms of alcoholic drink." One study profiled in the British
Medical Journal in 1999 said that the moderate consumption of three drinks
a day could reduce the risk of coronary heart disease by 24.7 per cent.

*9. Beer fights cancer*
The most amazing beer and health connection is something called
xanthohumol, a flavonoid found only in hops. Xanthohumol is a potent
antioxidant that inhibits cancer-causing enzymes, "much more potent than
the major component in soy," according Dr. Cristobal Miranda of the
Department of Environmental and Molecular Toxicology at Oregon State
University. This xanthohumol stuff is so good for you that the Germans have
actually brewed a beer with extra levels of it.

*10. Beer does not give you a beer belly*
A study done by researchers at the University College of London and the
Institut Klinicke a Experimentalni Mediciny in Prague in 2003 showed no
connection between the amount of beer people drank and the size of their
overhang. "There is a common notion that beer drinkers are, on average,
more 'obese' than either non-drinkers or drinkers of wine or spirits," the
researchers said. But they found that "the association between beer and
obesity, if it exists, is probably weak." Most studies have found that
people who drink beer regularly (and moderately) not only don't develop
beer bellies - they weigh less than non-drinkers. Beer can boost your
metabolism, keep your body from absorbing fat and otherwise make you a
healthier, less disgusting slob. Just drink it in moderation, as part of an
otherwise healthy diet.

So that's it. Drink beer. You'll live longer and be happier. You won't get
fat. In fact, you may weigh less. You'll boost your metabolism, improve
your health and reduce your risk of clogged arteries, heart attack and
cancer. What more could you want?

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