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Good news for Guinness drinkersFollow

#1 Apr 10 2004 at 2:43 PM Rating: Decent
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Original Story Here.

Drink to your health
By Kevin Hunt, The Hartford Courant
April 9, 2004

A man walks into a bar and orders a 12-ounce bottle of Corona Extra. Another man walks in and orders a 12-ounce Guinness draft.

The two men turn to each other, raise their glasses and say, "Here's to your health."

Question: Whose dietary and health interests are better served by the 12-ounce beer?

If the guidelines are less alcohol, fewer calories, fewer carbohydrates and, to top it off, protection against heart attacks, blindness and maybe even impotence, then it's the Guinness drinker, hands-down.

No joke.

Guinness, in fact, is lower in alcohol, calories and carbohydrates than Samuel Adams, Budweiser, Heineken and almost every other major-brand beer not classified as light or low-carb. It has fewer calories and carbohydrates than low-fat milk and orange juice, too. Could this be the same Irish stout that looks like a still-life root-beer float and tastes about as filling as a quarter-pounder with cheese?

Yes, the same Guinness that beer expert Michael Jackson (the British king of hops) calls the world's classic dry stout. It's a favorite of Bono (obviously), Madonna (with a good cigar) and Matt Damon (no, Guinness does not make teeth unnaturally white).

This tastes-great, more-filling formula defies nutritional expectations because Guinness is so low in alcohol, a source of empty calories. Guinness is 4.2 percent alcohol by volume, the same as Coors Light. Budweiser and Heineken check in at 5 percent.

"That surprised me," says Dr. Joseph Brennan, a Yale-New Haven Hospital cardiologist of Irish heritage and a confirmed Guinness drinker.

"I could never understand why one or two wouldn't leave me light-headed."

Brennan, like many cardiologists, recommends a drink a day for his cardiac patients. Red wine, in particular, has been shown to help prevent heart attacks. Now maybe it's beer's turn. A University of Wisconsin study last fall found that moderate consumption of Guinness worked like aspirin to prevent clots that increase the risk of heart attacks. In the study, Guinness proved twice as effective as Heineken at preventing blood clots. Guinness is loaded with flavonoids, antioxidants that give dark color to certain fruits and vegetables. These antioxidants are better than vitamins C and E, the study found, at keeping bad LDL (bad) cholesterol from clogging arteries. Blocked arteries also contribute to erectile dysfunction, as does overindulgence in alcohol.

Guinness has a higher concentration than lighter beers of vitamin B, which lowers levels of homocysteine, linked to clogged arteries. And researchers have found that antioxidants from the moderate use of stout might reduce the incidence of cataracts by as much as 50 percent.

It's milk's line, but beer gives you strong bones, too.

"The reason, we think, is that beer is a major contributor to the diet of silicon," says Katherine Tucker, an associate professor of nutritional epidemiology at Tufts University's Friedman School of Nutrition Science and Policy.

Tucker recently participated in a study that showed beer, either dark or light, protects bone-mineral density because of its high levels of silicon, which allows the deposit of calcium and other minerals into bone tissue.

In Ireland, where the slogan "Guinness Is Good for You" was born, the stout's medicinal uses are the stuff of legend. Diageo, the U.S. distributor of Guinness, makes no claims about its medical benefits, says spokeswoman Beth Davies from the company's offices in Stamford, Conn. But a visitor to Ireland might hear accounts (most no longer, if ever, true) of Guinness administered to nursing mothers, blood donors, stomach and intestinal post-operative patients and mothers recovering from childbirth.

"Pregnant women and racehorses, one a day," says Michael Foley of Wethersfield, Conn., standing over a pint of Guinness in the subterranean bar at the Irish American Home Society in Glastonbury, Conn.

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Did you drink your breakfast today?
#2 Apr 10 2004 at 2:46 PM Rating: Decent
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Strangly enough, yes I did.
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#3 Apr 10 2004 at 3:11 PM Rating: Decent
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133 posts
Was it a Guinness, or a substitute liquid cereal? All I had available was Yuengling Black & Tan, but I suppose it served it's purpose, since I was inspired enough to start a new topic... (?¿?)
#4 Apr 10 2004 at 7:24 PM Rating: Good
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6,760 posts
As if I needed another reason to drink God's nectar.

Good info for those who've never tried it, or were too intimidated.
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#5 Apr 10 2004 at 10:27 PM Rating: Good
YAY! Canaduhian
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/cracks open fresh Guiness

Hello, friend!

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What's bred in the bone will not out of the flesh.
#6 Apr 11 2004 at 7:45 AM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
those who've never tried it


Poor, wretched bastards.
#7 Apr 11 2004 at 9:08 AM Rating: Decent
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Quote:
/cracks open fresh Guiness

Hello, friend!


Are you talking about us or the beer?

I'm voting for the beer, but you never know.
#8 Apr 11 2004 at 10:28 AM Rating: Good
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2,514 posts
I would not feed Guiness to a pig.

End of story.
#9 Apr 11 2004 at 12:13 PM Rating: Good
YAY! Canaduhian
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shameen wrote:
Are you talking about us or the beer?


The beer, of course. It's my only true friend.

____________________________
What's bred in the bone will not out of the flesh.
#10 Apr 11 2004 at 8:01 PM Rating: Good
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6,760 posts
Quote:
I would not feed Guiness to a pig.

End of story.


Yes, we certainly wouldn't want any super-pigs loose now. That could upset the whole food chain.
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Some people are like slinkies, they aren't really good for anything, but they still bring a smile to your face when you push them down the stairs.
#11 Apr 12 2004 at 3:32 PM Rating: Decent
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I've always objected to Guiness mainly because I never have a knife and fork handy. Though I have started drinking it recently; we get the bottles with the little "mini-brew pellet" or the "paintcan BB" inside.
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we all know liberals are well adjusted american citizens who only want what's best for society. While conservatives are evil money grubbing scum who only want to sh*t on the little man and rob the world of its resources.
#12 Apr 12 2004 at 10:13 PM Rating: Decent
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3,053 posts
Been wonderful since they open a pub next door to The Baltimore Civil War Museum. On those times Jonwin and I go out to diner and I don't dare mix a Guinness with my meds, I can order beef braise in Guinness.

If you can't find Guiness on tap then your better off drinking Chipper City.
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#13 Apr 12 2004 at 10:22 PM Rating: Decent
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I used to like Guiness quite a bit.

Then I went to Ireland, and toured the brewery in Dublin. While there I got to drink Guiness fresh. Now, drinking it back here in the states, its just not the same. Oh sure, its good, but its not as good as it could be. Its not as good as it was sitting in the bar at the top of the Guiness brewery, with a 360 degree view of Dublin.

/sigh
#14 Apr 13 2004 at 12:40 PM Rating: Decent
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3,212 posts
Beef and Guiness Stew- Tender pieces of beef braised in Guiness stock with diced carrots, onions, leeks and celery. Served over traditional champ potatoes.

Its Clipper City Ale not Chipper City, though the house amber is also nice and locally brewed.

I hated my first bottle of the stuff, lucky for me it came in a four pack. Loved it by the time I had finished.

Guiness is the official stout of the staff at the Baltimore Civil War Museum. Though a Murphy's off the shelf is good as well.
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