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Does Wine Make You Fat? Some Illuminating Evidence

Answers to the question many of us would like to know:

Does wine make you fat?
Does Drinking Wine Make You Fat
No, but alcohol tricks your brain into making unhealthy decisions. It’s time to arm yourself with the knowledge to drink smarter. By the way, a long term study with over 19,000 women showed drinkers tend to be less obese than non-drinkers as they age.

We digest wine differently than food

Even though wine has little to no carbs and zero fat, it still has calories!

The interesting thing about calories in wine is that we digest them differently than food. Our body stops what it’s doing and prioritizes alcohol calories first before addressing other calories (fat, carbs, sugar, etc.) The liver does this work with enzymes.

So, if you drink too much or drink before eating, your body initiates a 3-step process to metabolize the alcohol before it can switch back to food.

Does wine make you fat illustration by Wine Folly
Wine doesn’t make you fat, but eating pizza when you’re drunk does.

Why does drinking make you hungry?

Why do we end up eating a whole cheese pizza after a night of drinking? The effects of alcohol on the brain causes a skew in how we regulate calorie intake for 2 reasons:

Your blood sugar drops

Drinking dry wine causes your blood sugar to drop. This is because your body focuses on metabolizing the alcohol calories first before food calories. Your brain responds by saying,

“Uh oh, we need more blood sugar. Go eat something!”

No one has ever drunkenly craved a salad—and there’s a reason. A study conducted by Purdue University found that moderate consumption of alcohol enhances the taste of salt and fat, which is why bacon and scrambled eggs the next morning are so satisfying.
Dr. Edward Miller, Wine & Health

Alcohol tricks your “primitive” brain”

Alcohol affects the part of your brain that causes you to feel hungry, aroused, and flushed at the same time. These reactions occur in your hypothalamus (high-po-thall-lam-us), which is an early evolutionary part of the human brain located right above the brain stem.

A 2004 study published in the Alcohol Journal led by Princeton University scientists suggests that a brain chemical called galanin [secreted by the hypothalamus] could be behind both fatty food cravings and a thirst for alcohol. “There seems to be a cycle of positive feedback,” Princeton researcher Bartley Hoebel said in a 2004 statement. “Consumption of alcohol produces galanin, and galanin promotes the consumption of alcohol.” Dr. Edward Miller, Wine & Health

How to stay healthy and drink wine

Eat protein before you drink

Have some quality protein before you drink. Long sustaining energy calories will help curb your craving while you drink.

Stick to moderate drinking

Unfortunately, a bottle of wine is not a single serving. It’s important to understand your limits. If you’re 140 pounds or under, you should stick to just one drink and only 2 if you’re over that weight.

Avoid the drunk diet

If you do get drunk, it seems reasonable to assume that food (e.g., cheesy bread, pizza, and apple pie) could help absorb the alcohol in your system. The truth is, there’s nothing to stop or slow the long, painstaking process your liver will need to go through to carefully convert every milligram of poisonous acetaldehyde into not-so-bad-for-you acetic acid. Be a friend to your liver and stay up on your fluids by drinking lots of water. Our favorite hangover food is a Pho (pronounced ‘Fuh’) noodle soup. The Vietnamese know what’s up.


the-health-benefits-of-red-wine

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