Antioxidant Booster
It is the ultimate French paradox. How is it that the French eat the richest foods on the planet but remain so
slim? The answer may lie not in what they eat but what they drink. Red wine it seems is a rich source of
antioxidants – a natural antioxidant booster if ever you find any. Therefore no matter how much you eat as long as
you consume enough red wine with it you should be okay.
However there is a catch. It is only red wine. Not white. Definitely not white.
Studies have shown that the amount of antioxidant boosters in red wine is higher in comparison to those present
in white wine. It has something to do with the fermentation process they say and on the type of grapes used. Grapes
used for making red wines have naturally high levels of antioxidant boosters which in turn make red wines great
antioxidant boosters.
However new information has just been released. Researchers in Israel say they have developed a method to
increase antioxidant booster content of white wine so that it has health benefits similar to red wine.
Traditionally white wine is made without the use of grape skins which provide for their crunchy thin taste. Red
wine on the other hand is made by fermenting the juice along with the skins. Grapes like any typical fruits have
the most concentration of its antioxidant boosters found in its skin. Therefore because white wine does not include
grape skins it makes sense then that it does not have as much antioxidant boosters as red wine. The skins give red
wine its coloration and contain the highest concentration of polyphenols which are potent antioxidant boosters. The
research theory was that antioxidant booster capacity of white wine could increase by extracting more grape skin
polyphenols during processing.
In order to conduct their research on antioxidant boosters of white wine the researchers obtained completely
squeezed grapes. They let these incubate for up to 18 hours in the presence of alcohol before they removed the
skins. The effect was a significant increase of white wine polyphenols up to six times the normal level. The
antioxidant booster exhibited antioxidant activity similar to that of red wine.
The study used about a quarter of the polyphenol content found in red wine. Even so the researchers will able to
find that even at one-quarter white wine polyphenols exhibited the same antioxidant booster activity. This suggests
that of the two wines used for study white wine contains those varieties of polyphenosl that have higher
antioxidant booster activity.
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