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Origin of Beer and Its Ingredients With Information on Health Effects

posted on August 19, 2008 in Uncategorized

Beer is one of the oldest and most consumed alcoholic beverage produced by brewing and fermentation of starches derived from cereals. Wheat,corn,rice and malted barley are commonly used for brewing the beer. While brewing beer sometimes herbs or fruits are also be added to give flavor and color to beer. Alcoholic beverages which are fermented from non-starch sources such as grape juice(wine) or mead are not classified as beer.

History of beer

Beer is recorded in the written history of ancient Egypt and is one of the oldest beverages approximately dating back to the 6th century B.C. European monasteries also started making and selling beer by the end of 7th century A.D. During the industrial revolution production of the beer moved from domestic manufacturing to industrial manufacturing. Beer like beverages were independently invented through out the various cultures mainly because any substance containing carbohydrates like sugar or starch can easily undergo fermentation. During the thirteen century making the beer and selling beverages from home was a mean of supplementing family income.

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Health Benefits of a Glass of Wine

posted on July 26, 2008 in Uncategorized

Alcohol, for years, has gotten a bad reputation for having zero health benefits and numerous social implications. While this has painted it in a bad light which has, to some degree, influence 35% of adult Americans not to drink at all, it has also led to research to confirm the negative stigma associated with alcohol.

The research that resulted has led to some interesting conclusions. In 1992, a team of researchers from Harvard University released a report detailing the 8 best things to do to fight or prevent coronary heart disease. Shockingly enough to many people, moderate consumption of alcohol was on the list. The moderate intake of alcohol improves cardiovascular health. The key here is that the consumption must be moderate. Drinking a bottle of wine or a case of beer a day will not help a person’s heart.

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Red Wines - Improve Your Health

posted on July 3, 2008 in Uncategorized

It has been proven that red wines, when being consumed, may have a number of health benefits due to the high antioxidant substance. Red wines contain certain antioxidants not found in other alcoholic beverages that offer extra health-protective effects.

Recent studies have proven that when woman consume one glass of red wine (men consume two glasses) it lowers the risk of a heart attack by 30-50 percent. Also, if you have already had a heart attack it decreases the risk of you having another one in the near future.

In other studies, researchers have found that red wines can raise HDL cholesterol and prevent LDL cholesterol from molding. In addition, red wines can also help prevent blood clotting and lower the blood vessel damage caused by fat deposits. Studies have shown that the people from the Mediterranean region, who drink red wines on a regular basis, have a lower risk of heart disease.

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Pints for Prostates Delivers Men’s Health Message Using the Universal Language of Beer

posted on June 16, 2008 in Uncategorized

Effort Enlists the Beer Industry to Urge Prostrate Cancer Screening

Charlotte, N.C. - The symptoms of prostate cancer rarely show before the disease has progressed, but a simple PSA blood test can serve as an early warning and save men’s lives. But how do you reach men in their late 30s and early 40s, when statistics show they often skip regular physicals and avoid doctor’s offices?

“Pints for Prostates is an awareness campaign designed to reach men through the universal language of beer. We want to communicate with them in a friendly and non-threatening way about the need for regular PSA testing,” says Rick Lyke, a 47-year-old Charlotte, N.C., marketing executive and drinks journalist who was diagnosed with prostate cancer in February. “Early detection is the key to fighting prostate cancer and a PSA test and a physical exam are the best method to catch it early.”

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Employees at Miller’s West Virginia Distributor Fight for Health Care and Livable Wages

posted on June 15, 2008 in Uncategorized

(Charleston, WV) - Workers at the West Virginia distributor of Miller and Coors beers will kick off a summer handbilling series at local bars and restaurants today. The workers say they want to bring attention to contract demands by SABMiller’s West Virginia distributor, Capitol Beverage Company, that would hike workers’ cost for family health care.

Approximately 30 workers, represented by Teamsters Local Union 175, will distribute handbills outside a busy strip of bars and restaurants in downtown Charleston. The leaflets read, “Cutting Health Care at Miller Beer is Tasteless.” The summer leafleting series comes after Capitol Beverage broke off negotiations with its workers on May 2, 2008, in an attempt to force them to accept grossly substandard wages and health care coverage.
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Drink Beer to Get Thin or Does Beer Make You Fat?

posted on April 22, 2008 in Beer and Health

These post looks like very negative. Just Read it. And wait for a small time - i’ll provide you few tips how to drink your favorite beer, like you do it now, and don’t think about your weight. Yea - i’ll get few recipes for you.

It would be great to drink all the beer you want and not have any of the effects. Although getting some of those effects often will be a good reason for drinking it. Drinking a few beers can be very relaxing but also give you a nice little buzz sometimes. However, it may also give you some negative effects like help in making you fat.

Certainly, a couple of drinks during the weekend or for some type of infrequent special occasion most likely won’t affect your overall fat one way or another. Of course, this really is assumes that you do some exercise once in a while. If you are trying to lose weight, these few beers may have some type of impact but not anything major. Still, any choices you make regarding drinking or eating will either help or hurt you every time.

Obviously, having the ability to enjoy life may include having a few drinks with your friends or family once in a while. I certainly cannot hold that against you? You really need to balance your life to get some enjoyment every once in a while.

However, drinking more than a few drinks of beer or alcohol everyday could be a great deterrent from keeping your current weight and/or reducing it. It’s hard to avoid consuming a couple 150 calorie beers every day without it affecting your fat content. Most people who do this don’t have the necessary bodily activity to burn off all these calories daily. Furthermore, these calories don’t have a lot of nutritional content.

Let’s look at just how many calories you could consume by having a couple beers everyday for a whole year. Two beers every day allow you to consume 300 extra calories everyday. This amounts to a total of 2100 every week. Extend this further to get a years amount of almost 110000 calories. This will actually come out to be around 31 pounds of fat gained annually. For most people, this will be rather difficult to lose.

Beer and alcohol helps prevent the burning of fat (using fat for the body’s energy). When person consuming it metabolizes the alcohol, the process assists in preventing him or her from appropriately metabolizing fat.

Think of the calories inside beer as no more than empty calories that actually take the room of calories you should have in their place. Although there might be some nutritional value inside, it is minimal. It will be much better to have some good food value calories that help your body instead of hurt.

Whether you are attempting to lose weight or not, drinking too much beer or alcohol will be self-defeating. It might be okay to drink a few during the weekend. A few means maybe one or two but not much more than that. Remember that whenever you’re taking in drinks or food, except for water, you’ll be ingesting calories. They don’t have to be fat calories to become fat in your body.

If you look at almost anyone that drinks a lot of beer everyday, you’ll see that on average many of them gain a lot of their fat in their stomach. Most experts see this generating fat around the mid-section as very problematic for overall health. They say it is a symptom of possible future heart disease.

So the next time you think about having more than one or two beers during the week, you might want to think differently. Instead of developing a craving for drinking down a beer, you might want to start trying something a little more healthy like eating fruit or vegetables. It might sound funny to tell someone that normally likes to drink beer to instead eat something like an apple, but if you really try, you’re bound to find some nutritionally sound food that will satisfy you.

Go to http://www.bestfatlossprogram.com/ to get your free weightloss muscle toning ebook. Aside from past experience figure out why I know so much about losing weight, getting lean and toning up.

Beer Drinking Tips - The Health Benefits of Beer

posted on April 18, 2008 in Beer and Health

Many of the studies that document the beneficial effects of alcohol have highlighted the virtues of red wine. Only recently has beer come to the foreground as a health-giving beverage. The published research papers cited below provide ample evidence that beer, when consumed moderately, may be even more salutary than wine.

Healthy Effects of Alcohol

The overall picture that has emerged is that consumption of alcohol in moderation is good for the cardiovascular system. Its consumption is associated with elevated levels of high-density lipoproteins (HDL). Many drinkers have also been found to have less fibrinogen, a protein thought to be a culprit in the occurrence of strokes and thromboses. Alcohol has also been known to lower insulin levels, which in turn lessens the risk of atherosclerosis, a condition in which the arteries harden.

Several experiments, such as one conducted at the Institute of Epidemiology at the University of Münster in Germany, suggest that beer may lessen the risk of coronary disease. But a number of other studies demonstrate that the benefits of beer go beyond those attributed to the alcohol it contains.

Research from the TNO Nutrition and Food Research Institute in the Netherlands showed that levels of vitamin B6 in beer drinkers increased thirty percent while those who regularly consumed gin and red wine gained by only half that rate.

Study findings published in the European Journal of Clinical Nutrition’s July 2001 issue suggest that the presence of folate, the anion form of vitamin B9, is responsible for some of beer’s healthful effects. Folates have been known to fight cardiovascular disease.

One study conducted at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and published in a 2001 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine concluded that beer consumed in moderation aided in the preservation of mental capacities in older women.

A study from Tufts University in Massachusetts shows that drinking beer, be it light or dark, helps to maintain the mineral density of the bones. The leg bones among elderly people are prone to thinning.

Risks Associated With Beer

What about the health risks associated with beer consumption?

There is enough evidence from research about Fetal Alcohol Syndrome to warrant prohibiting women from drinking alcohol. A baby may suffer from brain disorders if the alcohol consumed by the mother passes through the umbilical cord and through the milk in her breasts.

Gaining weight can be a concern for beer drinkers. While beer contains no fat, one glass will have 150 to 450 calories, depending on the kind of brew. Counted in terms of volume, this amount is lower than the calories found in apple juice or red wine in a glass of similar size.

Other known adverse effects of excessive beer drinking include liver damage and stress on the kidneys. Amount of intake is, of course, a key factor in whether beer becomes a healthy or unhealthy drink.

Immediate Effects

Coffee is an example of a beverage that contains a less-than-desirable substance (caffeine) yet immediately provides benefits when taken in the right amount. The alertness that caffeine causes can be advantageous at work and when driving.

Drinking beer in excess does result in lowered mental acuity in the immediate aftermath, making automobile driving a high-risk undertaking. But when intake is moderate, beer becomes a relaxing drink that provides relief from stress, a known causative element in many diseases. It helps to remember that the drawbacks of intemperate drinking outweigh the advantages of controlled alcoholic beverage consumption.

The alcohol in beer provides modest B vitamins amounts, plus more useful quantities of magnesium, selenium and other trace elements. Beer is mostly water, which along with the alcohol, helps to cleanse the kidneys. Alcohol and the brewing process also help destroy bacteria in the water.

Needless to say, no single study or report on the health effects of beer can be considered definitive. But most suggest, that when taken in amounts exceeding no more than two 12-ounce glasses a day, beer will almost always be a great benefit, rather than a risk, to one’s health.

For more information on the Health Benefits of Beer visit the Beer Guide, a popular site for beer drinkers and homebrew enthusiasts. Discover the history of beer, how it is brewed and the many types of beer on offer around the world.


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