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Ways To Reap Red Wine’s Benefits — Without Drinking It
Cassie Shortsleeve February 09, 2015
Trust us — you want the resveratrol in your diet!
Research has done it again: reiterated just how healthy red
wine’s potent ingredient is. The polyphenol resveratrol helps you live longer!
It prevents heart disease! It protects your skin! And the latest: It helps your memory.
And while there’s some truth to the antioxidant,
anti-inflammatory properties of the darker vino, alcohol isn’t always your best
bet for a health defense. (Plus, some research suggests that in order to rein
in some of resveratrol’s touted effects, you’d have to drink 52 bottles of wine
a day, which no health expert would suggest you do.)
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Magic Murals SponsoredSo, consider these four ways to sneak
resveratrol into your diet — we won’t tell your Malbec-loving friends.
Itadori
Tea
This herbal tea popular in Japan and China has traditionally
been used to fend off heart disease and strokes. But some research suggests
that its high levels of
resveratrol make it a perfect replacement for people who don’t drink
red wine, says Ilyse Schapiro, a New York-based registered dietitian.
Related: 5 Best Teas For Weight Loss
Peanuts
(And Peanut Butter)
Peanuts actually contain more reservatrol than peanut butter,”
Schapiro tells Yahoo Health. You’ll get less from a PB & J than a glass of
wine, but the food is still considered a good source of the antioxidant. (They’re
also carcinogenic. Almonds are anti).
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“Antioxidants ingested through drinking do not directly help
neutralize free radicals on the skin the way topical resveratrol does,”
dermatologist Elizabeth Tanzi, MD, co-director of the Washington Institute of
Dermatologic Laser Surgery in Washington, DC, tells Yahoo Health. In product
form, resveratrol can help your skin. It’s also a natural anti-inflammatory and
provides sun protection, says Joanna Vargas, celebrity facialist and founder of
the Joanna Vargas Salon and Skincare Collection. (Studies in animals back this up.)
Supplements
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Before you pop a pill,
keep this in mind: Supplements aren’t regulated by the FDA. But Joseph Maroon,
MD, author of The Longevity Factor: How Resveratrol and Red Wine Activate Genes
for a Longer and Healthier Life, says he doesn’t see a real downside to taking
a resveratrol supplement. There are virtually no side effects, he says. It’s
better to eat your nutrients than take them in vitamin form, he says, but for
people who struggle to incorporate polyphenol-rich foods like berries or dark
chocolate into their diets, a supplement could be a good idea. Try 250 or 500
milligrams of ResVitale, available at big-name stores like GNC.
But here’s a reason to consider (moderate consumption
of) red wine…
G.us SponsoreThere are about 500 other polyphenols besides resveratrol in a
glass of red wine — and maybe only 1 or 2 milligrams of resveratrol,” Maroon
says. So in addition to the other polyphenols, with red wine, you get the
“synergism of absorption” which can provide more benefits than one polyphenol
on its own. If you’re red wine-wary, consider that one of the lightest pours —
Pinot Noir — is also the one richest in resveratrol, says Maroon.
Your Next Read: Exactly Why Red Wine Helps Prevent Cancer
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