Showing posts with label alcohol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alcohol. Show all posts

Friday, November 27, 2009

L'Chayyim

Found here:


Q.

We are a Jewish couple with an international friend base. This year, everyone is doing foods from their culture. I thought that it might be fun to devise a manishevitz cocktail (mulled mani., mani belilini) but nothing is working. Our foodie friend contends that manishevitz is good for cleaning drains but nothing else. What have you got up your sleeve to prove him wrong? Rachel, Philadelphia

A.

Much as I hesitate to correct you on something to do with your culture, the wine is called Manischewitz. The indispensable mixologist and Times columnist Jonny Miles wrote about it last spring, when he found it used in the Drunken Pharaoh, a bourbon and Manischewitz cocktail served here in Manhattan. (Me, I’d just serve a lot of slivovitz after the meal. It’s Philadelphia. You need a release.)

Friday, May 01, 2009

L'Chayim!

Study finds half a glass each day boosts men's life expectancy by five years

Drink a Little Wine, Live a Little Longer

Men who regularly drank up to a half a glass of wine each day boosted their life expectancy by five years, Dutch researchers report.

Light, long-term alcohol consumption of all types of beverages, whether wine, spirits or beer, increased life by 2.5 years among men compared with abstention, the researchers found. By "light," they meant up to 20 grams, or about 0.7 ounces a day.

While numerous other studies have found similar benefits, study author Martinette Streppel, of the division of human nutrition at Wageningen University in the Netherlands, said 40 years of follow-up is noteworthy for many reasons.

"The main strength of our study was the collection of detailed information on the consumption of different alcohol beverages at each of seven measurement rounds," Streppel said.

The long-term, regular follow-up, Streppel added, enabled the researchers to study the effect of long-term alcohol intake on mortality.

The study is published online in April in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health.

The Dutch researchers evaluated 1,373 men, all part of the Zutphen Study, started in 1960 and named for an industrial town in the Netherlands. The researchers followed them from 1960 to 2000, tracking weight, diet, cigarette smoking, the diagnosis of serious illness and other data, along with their drinking habits...