Chocolate - A Health Food?
In this article we're going to discuss the health benefits of
chocolate, if indeed there are any at all.
Let's be honest. If you're a normal person you love chocolate.
Otherwise the industry itself wouldn't be so profitable. How
many of us didn't like to chow down for a snack of Oreo cookies
and milk or just a big hot fudge sundae at the local ice cream
shop? Of course there is always the nice big piece of seven
layer cake with that thick chocolate icing.
The list of things chocolate goes on and on and with that list
also goes all the health warnings of how chocolate is bad for
you. But is it?
Health warnings and benefits, for the most part, need to be
taken with a grain of salt only because it seems that what was
bad for you ten years ago suddenly has health benefits we knew
nothing about, and things that we were told to eat when we were
children all of sudden cause problems we didn't even know
existed years ago. So, is chocolate one of those things?
Well, the latest information about chocolate, most recently
reported in The American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, was that
chocolate, when added to an already healthy diet, provided
antioxidant benefits and actually increased a person's high
density lipoprotein (HDL), or what is called "good cholesterol."
One of the antioxidant benefits was that it impedes the
oxidation of the "bad cholesterol."
What most people don't know is that the study was made on only
twenty-three subjects which is nowhere near a large enough
sample to draw any conclusions from. Also, when taking a very
close look at the article itself, it clearly states that the
benefits were small at best. It also went on to say that because
the differences in the numbers were so small, it would need to
be determined if these differences were significant enough to
produce an improvement in health that could be measured.
Many experts say that the study was over-hyped because of
possible ties to manufacturers in the chocolate industry itself.
And while no wrong doing was ever proven, the suspicions still
grew. Defenders of the cocoa bean itself argued that it is
commonly known that many substances we don't normally associate
with good health have antioxidant benefits, such as tea, so why
not chocolate?
What the study didn't mention was all the things that chocolate
has that are certainly not good for you. For example, chocolate
as a high level of stearic acid, which is a saturated fat.
Saturated fats are directly related to high cholesterol levels
and increased risk of coronary artery disease and coronary
death. Chocolate supporters say that stearic acid is not like
other saturated fats. Yet, a study of 80,000 women over the age
of 14 who all ate large amounts of chocolate, showed that these
women had a much greater chance of heart disease.
No doubt the battle over how healthy or not healthy chocolate is
for a person will go on. And while it does, we will continue to
eat our Oreo cookies and seven layer chocolate cakes. Isn't life
wonderful?