Chocolate Lovers: 6 Reasons to Cheer

Chocolate Lovers: 6 Reasons to Cheer

by Marjorie Ingall
It may seem like pure indulgence, but chocolate can do good things for your heart, skin, brain, and more.

Listen to the way people malign chocolate: Sinful! Decadent! To die for! There’s even that popular restaurant dessert known as “Death by Chocolate.” But is this any way to talk about a loved one—especially during the season of comfort and joy? Not at Health. With evidence mounting that some kinds of chocolate are actually good for you, we come bearing gifts: six delicious reasons why you should nurture a chocolate habit (within reason) and taste-tested advice on what to try. Merry munching.

1. A happier heart
Scientists at the Harvard University School of Public Health recently examined 136 studies on cocoa—the foundation for chocolate—and found it does seem to boost heart health, according to an article in the European journal Nutrition and Metabolism.

“Studies have shown heart benefits from increased blood flow, less platelet stickiness and clotting, and improved bad cholesterol,” says Mary B. Engler, PhD, a chocolate researcher and director of the Cardiovascular and Genomics Graduate Program at the University of California, San Francisco, School of Nursing. These benefits are the result of cocoa’s antioxidant chemicals known as flavonoids, which seem to prevent both cell damage and inflammation.

2. Better blood pressure
If yours is high, chocolate may help. Jeffrey Blumberg, PhD, director of the Antioxidants Research Laboratory at Tufts University, recently found that hypertensive people who ate 3.5 ounces of dark chocolate per day for 2 weeks saw their blood pressure drop significantly, according to an article in the journal Hypertension. Their bad cholesterol dropped, too. People who ate the same amount of white chocolate? Nothing. (It doesn’t have any cocoa—or flavonoids.) Word to the wise: 3.5 ounces is roughly equal to a big bar of baking chocolate, so the participants had to cut about 400 calories out of their daily diets to make room. But you probably don’t have to go to those lengths. Just a bite may do you good, Blumberg says.

3. Muscle magic
Chocolate milk may help you recover after a hard workout. In a small study at Indiana University, elite cyclists who drank chocolate milk between workouts scored better on fatigue and endurance tests than those who had some sports drinks. Yoo-hoo!

4. TLC for your skin
German researchers gave 24 women a half-cup of special extra-flavonoid-enriched cocoa every day. After 3 months, the women’s skin was moister, smoother, and less scaly and red when exposed to ultraviolet light. The researchers think the flavonoids, which absorb UV light, help protect and increase blood flow to the skin, improving its appearance.

5. Brain gains
It sounds almost too good to be true, but preliminary research at West Virginia’s Wheeling Jesuit University suggests chocolate may boost your memory, attention span, reaction time, and problem-solving skills by increasing blood flow to the brain. Chocolate companies found comparable gains in similar research on healthy young women and on elderly people.

6. Good loving (maybe)
Italian researchers wanted to know whether chocolate truly is an aphrodisiac. In a survey of 143 women published in the Journal of Sexual Medicine, those who ate chocolate every day seemed to have more sex drive, better lubrication, and an easier time reaching orgasm. Pass the Godiva, right? Not so fast. The women who ate chocolate were all younger than the ones who didn’t; it was age and not chocolate that made the difference. Still, if a double-chocolate raspberry truffle puts you in the mood, why let science get in the way?

New York–based writer Marjorie Ingall loves milk chocolate but says she’s ready to go dark this year.
 
I dont' know about the Dark chocolate, I LOVE milk chocolate!!! Wonder if it has some of the same effects??
 
Yahoooooooooooooooooooo!!! This makes me happy! I love both milk and dark chocolate.

Have you tried any dark chocolate lately newbride. It used to taste awful in the past, but I've fallen in love with it as of lately. It is much richer and sweeter, IMO,than it was before. I find myself going for the dark chocolate automatically now,when I treat myself. The dark chocolate raisinettes are my FAV!!

You always post the greatest stuff Mal! Thanks again!
 
Oh man now I am going to HAVE TO have a piece of chocolate! mmmm

I'm a dark chocolate person now, but in the past couldn't stand the stuff. Now I just don't care much for the milk! Funny how life changes.

My personal favorite is Dagoba's Lavender. Its dark chocolate with blueberries & lavender flowers....mmmmmmmmmmm. Have to go see if we have any on the shelf!
 
Hershey's has come out with new ones called Cacao Reserves truffles. The ones I get are dark chocolate... 65%. They come in a kind of cute little tin and are 290 calories... but you get to eat 8 truffles as one serving. I was in LOVE the first time I tried them. I never used to like dark chocolate... but it's growing on me!
 
*drools*
man i love chocolate
i have a good motivation to resist though - sometimes i think my dairy intolerance is the best thing that ever happened for my weight loss :p
 
I knew about the antioxidants, but the muscle and memory stuff knocked me out! But I have yet to taste good, fresh chocolate, ground right from the tree. In 'French Women Don't Get Fat' Mireille Guiliano says:

"In tasting chocolate, sweetness, saltiness, acidity, and bitterness are key savours. Acidity is what you should feel inside your cheeks, and it's essential to the diffusion of aromas and length of taste in the mouth. Bitterness is felt at the tip of the tongue. It signals a chocolate with little sugar, and it's a good quality as long as it does not cancel out any other sensation. Texture is also vitally important to character: smoothness, the crunch of the shell... For French women, the real thing remains dark chocolate, bittersweet or, even better, extra-bittersweet, which is the purest, with the highest percentage of cocoa solids - the stuff that makes chocolate taste chocolatey."

She goes on to say:

"Fortunately, with good chocolate you don't need - and should not want - pounds of it for pleasure. A couple of choice pieces a day won't disable your budget or your weight-maintenance programme. For those not near the chocolate boutiques now springing up in cities, it is possible to order high quality online." ('French Women Don't Get Fat', Mireille Guiliano, Chatto & Windus, 2005, p.197-99).

Interesting fact to note from the book: Mireille's mother ate chocolate every day of her life and died at over ninety years of age.

I never thought I would like that 70% cocoa solids chocolate but after reading this book I went out and bought some and ate it in the way Mireille recommends: slowly and with full attention to the flavours, sensations and aromas. One small piece was plenty, I found. The next day I was lying on the sofa and a sudden sharp memory assaulted me of the flavours and aromas of the dark chocolate I had eaten the day before! This has never happened with milk chocolate, which probably can be explained in terms of the diffused nature of milk chocolate; all the goodness, the ousia (Gr. 'soul' or 'essence') of one piece of dark chocolate is spread over about a quarter of a whole block, so you need more to get the fix. As well, you load your body with stacks of unhealthy fat and sugar on top, which cancels the fix.

This is Mireille's argument, and a very cogent one, to be sure...

But sometimes I really feel like just having a few huge mouthfuls of creamy milk chocolate and feeling the sweet, fatty goo sliding slowly down my throat, or sinking my teeth into a rich chocolate ganache or marbled cheesecake, you know what I mean?
 
righteous! :D i could never cut the dark chocolate completely out of my diet anyway, but at least reading this makes me feel a little better about it!!
 
I frequently chuck in a bar - or two, of Green & Black Organic Dark 70%, into the shopping trolley for both myself and Mrs Llama to enjoy as a treat during the evenings, or after work outs. Nothing wrong about a little chocolate - as long as its a treat!
 
Little tastes of dark chocolate as a treat is a good way to go.

I don't think the 6 frozen girl scout thin mint cookies (240 calories) I just ate were what anyone had in mind!!!!!! Oh well, I'm confessing to a slip up.
 
I really don't like white or dark chocolate... too rich for my liking. But a bit of milk chocolate, I can live with. :D
 
okay this information is pure evil.. chocolate... good? I feel fatter now just thinking i could have a little bit of chocolate and stop. Great info but i dont have the willpower to start.. and actually stop.

I'm too weak to stop once i start.. so... Say no to Sweets for me lol
 
Woo Hoo!! I eat chocolate almost every day - diet or no diet - so it's nice to hear that there's some benefits to it!
 
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