Heartburn and Coffee: Break the Connection
Doctors have always detected a connection between heartburn and
coffee. It has almost become a part of common wisdom that
coffee, wonderful drink that it is, is one of the main causes
behind heartburn. One out of five coffee drinkers in the US
suffers from heartburn. They have been advised by their doctor
to cut their caffeine intake. It's a deplorable situation where
they love their coffee, but are not loved in return.
So are you doomed to a caffeine-less existence for the rest of
your days? Are heartburn and coffee so eternally linked together
that there is no hope at all for coffee aficionados? Must they
necessarily suffer heartburn or give up the drink they hold so
close to their hearts?
The good news is, heartburn and coffee need not be as
irrevocably bound together as much today as they once were.
There is now a process for making coffee harmless in this
respect. The last major innovation in coffee processing
technology was in the 1930-s, when decaf or decaffeinated coffee
was invented. And now, for the first time since then, there is a
new technology for making coffee that does not cause heartburn.
What links heartburn and coffee? The contents of the human
stomach are naturally acidic, so that is normal. You don't
really feel that acidity as long as things are in control. And
that acidity is actually necessary for the proper digestion of
food. It is when that acidity grows to abnormal levels and rises
from the stomach into the food pipe, that you experience
heartburn.
There are many substances that may cause this excess of acidity
by irritating the stomach. And among the many kinds of stomach
irritants, caffeine is one of the most potent. It stimulates the
stomach into producing more acid than normal. This is what
connects heartburn and coffee. And this is why doctors advise
against coffee for chronic patients of acid indigestion.
Now, there are new techniques for making coffee less irritating
for the stomach. As a result, the connection between heartburn
and coffee is not necessary any more. The Hevla technology, for
example, employs a patented process that involves a high
pressure steaming of the beans. Removing the irritating
substances from coffee has not really been the challenge all
this time. Rather, it has been removing them while retaining the
taste and the flavor - things that make coffee interesting.
This is exactly what the new techniques have achieved. The best
Arabica beans are chosen for Hevla-processed coffee, and the
roasting goes on as usual. Roasting creates the flavour, but
unfortunately also gives rise to the substances that connect
heartburn and coffee. The Hevla high pressure steaming method is
able to remove these substances without compromising on the
taste and flavor.
So if you are one of those people who are thinking of giving up
on coffee because of heartburn, despair no more. The link
between heartburn and coffee has been broken. Go ahead and try
the new product, and savor your favorite drink without suffering
for it.