Healthy Alcohol
Cheers to the Weekend !
One of the most common questions about a Healthy Lifestyle is whether alcohol is OK. I also hear, “What’s the healthiest alcohol?” and “How do I cure my hangover?”
What we’re really asking is, “What should I drink when I am trying to stay healthy, but want to be social?”
There is a way to have a drink (or a few) on occasion without feeling too lousy the next day. I believe it’s optimal from a health perspective to not drink, but ...
WHAT DOES “HEALTHIEST ALCOHOL” REALLY MEAN?
Bad news first: Alcohol isn’t good for you. Shocking, I know. Alcohol has an aging effect on the body because the liver breaks it down into aldehyde, the most damaging alcohol toxin.
Alcohols also contain other toxins (natural or manmade) that make you feel and perform even worse the next day.
This means that if you do drink, there are better choices you can make to feel better and remain healthier. Highly filtered and distilled drinks like vodka and gin remove ingredients like gluten and sulfites and don’t contain sugar. Keep reading for a handy guide to alcohols, starting with the least damaging.
THE “HEALTHIEST” ALCOHOL TO DRINK...
Best choice: Vodka
Gin
Tequila
Whiskey
Other unsweetened spirits
Dry cider
Dry champagne
Dry white wine
Liqueurs
Colored, sweetened spirits
Red wine
Most damaging: Beer and lager
BEST CHOICE: VODKA
Vodka is distilled and charcoal filtered, so your body will only deal with the alcohol and no other toxins. Warning: If you mix it with sugar and other stuff, it’s no longer the best choice.
Bonus points .. go with potato vodka.
GIN
Gin is flavored by juniper berries, which have antioxidants, but not that many. 1,000 years ago, it was considered herbal medicine, but today it’s just a popular drink. Bonus points for a dry martini with olives or bacon.
TEQUILA
Tequila is made from agave, which is high in the bad sugar fructose. But since tequila’s fermentation process removes the sugar, then is distilled and filtered, what you get is mostly pure alcohol. Bonus protein if you eat the worm.
WHISKEY
Whiskey is made from grains, which are higher in toxins, but the distillation process still removes a fair amount of the bad stuff. Whiskeys also contain special types of antioxidants, including ellagic acid, making them better than red wine in the free-radical-fighting department. Bonus points for a real whiskey sour with fresh lime or lemon juice.
DRY CHAMPAGNE
Champagne only comes from a region of France, and the standards for real champagne are very high. French champagne tends to have the lowest amount of mold toxins remaining after fermentation.
DRY WHITE WINE
Dry white wine tends to be lower in mold toxins than regular whites or reds, particularly the dehydrating ochratoxin A. But it’s still unfiltered, so it contains different types of mold toxins not present in distilled liquors. Bonus points: If you can find a yellow band at the top of the bottle, the alcohol was designated for drinking in Europe and is required to meet higher standards than American imports from Europe.
RED WINE
Red wine is high in ochratoxin A and yeast, and you don’t know which strains will be in your particular bottle. These both affect your body negatively. Although much talked about, the amount of resveratrol in wine is so small that it’s meaningless: try dark chocolate instead!
MOST DAMAGING: BEER AND LAGER
Beer contains gluten, yeast and almost always ochratoxin A and other mold toxins. Often, the grains used are directly contaminated with mold before being fermented, making beer the dirtiest of the alcohols. If you’re going to drink beer, at least make it gluten-free — and be sure to help your body eliminate these toxins by following the recommendations below.
4 STEPS TO MINIMIZE THE EFFECTS OF ALCOHOL
(1) CHOOSE YOUR POISON
One of the questions I get most often is, “Which alcohol is best?”
All alcoholic beverages are going to dehydrate and cause a minor level of inflammation — it IS alcohol. But the type of drink you choose can make a huge difference in how you feel the next morning. Some alcohols have a lot more toxic byproducts from fermentation than others.
Tragically, beer has the most toxins of any common alcoholic beverage. Vodka is your best bet because the distillation process removes almost all of the toxins that make can make you feel lousy the next day. Your body just has to deal with the alcohol.
(2) HYDRATE
Before you can eliminate toxins, your body dilutes them with water so they don’t harm you on the way out. The water either comes from your tissues or water you drink — so, drink water.
I recommend drinking a glass of water for every serving of alcohol you consume, ideally at the same time or right after.
(3) TAKE ACTIVATED CHARCOAL
Charcoal binds to toxins and helps eliminate them. Take activated charcoal after you’re done drinking (or if you chose unfiltered alcohol like beer or wine, take one capsule with each drink).
(4) BONUS SUPPLEMENTS
Glutathione: Glutathione is your body’s master antioxidant and helps support liver detox, among other things. Historically, supplementing with glutathione was expensive and not very efficient. The best supplements use a liposomal delivery system so your body can actually absorb it. That’s what I use if I drink.
B vitamins: Alcohol depletes vitamin and mineral stores, and especially your B vitamins. A good B-complex is a must if you’re having more than a couple drinks. Take your B vitamins before you start drinking.
Alpha lipoic acid: ALA is a potent antioxidant on its own and helps your body produce glutathione. Take about 400 mg before you start drinking.
N-Acetyl Cysteine: NAC is a precursor to glutathione and a great nutrient for liver support. Take 600 mg of NAC before you start drinking and before bed that night.
The wine industry has done a great job telling us that resveratrol is good for us. It might be — I don’t take it regularly because of concerns about it being mildly estrogenic. But even if it is, you’d need hundreds of bottles of red wine to get the amount of resveratrol in a single pill.
There is some evidence that one drink a day may have protective effects. The evidence I’ve seen is pretty vague and seems to be highly publicized by alcohol vendors, just like winemakers are big cheerleaders for resveratrol. And if you love wine, drink it — but follow the steps above to minimize its effects.