Luxe Beat Magazine MARCH 2015 | Page 146

Beer O’Clock A Little of What You Fancy Does You Good (Beer O’Clock excerpt) By Jane Peyton Beer, if drank with moderation, softens the temper, cheers the spirit and promotes health. American Founding Father, Thomas Jefferson O f all alcoholic drinks, beer has more health, nutritional and social benefits than any other. Consumed moderately, beer has ro n h a th n t o rat consumption of low to medium-alcohol beer (4% ABV) is ten pints a week for men, eight pints a week for women, to be consumed throughout the week ith ay off or th i r to ha a rest but not, alas, to be saved up for a weekend binge). Dozens of independent medical experiments have concluded that the beer drinkers in their studies were happier and healthier than those who did not drink beer or drank too much. These positive facts about beer are not widely reported because problems caused by alcohol abuse take precedence in the media and there is a reluctance to be seen to be celebrating the drinking of alcohol. In some British hospitals until at least the mid 1970s, trolleys containing bottles of beer were trundled around the wards, and patients, regardless of whether they were in for an ingrown to nai or an r r off r a rin It was good for morale, but more than anything it was a motivation to get better, leave hospital and go to the pub – after all, it was only a small bottle of beer. The Ancient Egyptians did not just drink beer for pleasure but also used it as medicine too, for ailments including gum disease, as dressing for wounds, and externally as a poultice to treat piles. Today, one of the world’s leading authorities on beer, Professor Charles 146 Bamforth, is the author of the niti or on th o iti ff t of drinking it. The science behind the health claims for beer is to be found in his book Beer: Health and Nutrition. beer or ideally real ale. But before telling you the good news about beer to print on a T-shirt, or on a placard to carry round at all times so that naysayers can be enlightened, t r t i on arti ar an persistent myth about beer. Antioxidants Antioxidants are substances that help to protect the body against th ff t o r ra i a molecules that can damage cells, and may trigger heart, cancer and other diseases. Both barley and hops contain antioxidants and consequently beer is rich in them. The Belly In every language a big stomach is known as a ‘beer belly’ or ‘beer gut’. Some people who do not drink beer have a belly, yet it is still known as