logo
The Japanese Vinegar Trend: Does Sipping It Before Meals Really Benefit You?

The Japanese Vinegar Trend: Does Sipping It Before Meals Really Benefit You?

Express Tribune14-01-2025

Vinegar has long been a staple in Japanese cuisine, not just as a cooking ingredient but as a health tonic. Many Japanese people drink vinegar before meals, believing it can help with everything from digestion to glowing skin. It's a practice that's stood the test of time, so there must be something to it, right? But before you start sipping vinegar like it's the latest wellness fad, it's worth asking: is there any science behind the hype?
Should you really be pouring yourself a glass before every meal, or is it just another trend to sip on and forget?
Let's dive in and see if this tangy tradition deserves a spot in your health routine.
The Health Benefits of Drinking Vinegar Before Meals
Vinegar, particularly the apple cider variety, has long been touted for its health benefits, especially when consumed before meals. This practice is common in Japan, where it's believed to offer a variety of advantages, from digestion to glowing skin. Vinegar, rich in acetic acid, can enhance the production of digestive enzymes and stomach acid, making food breakdown more efficient. It has also been shown to help regulate blood sugar levels, with acetic acid improving insulin sensitivity and reducing post-meal blood sugar spikes.
Vinegar's Metabolism-Boosting Powers
Aside from aiding digestion, drinking vinegar before meals might also promote weight loss by boosting metabolism. Some studies suggest that the acetic acid in vinegar can speed up fat burning while reducing fat storage, helping those on a weight management journey. But, of course, it's not a magic solution; it works best when paired with a balanced diet and regular exercise.
Heart Health Perks of Drinking Vinegar
Vinegar isn't just good for your stomach—it's also beneficial for heart health. Acetic acid and antioxidants found in vinegar help lower blood pressure, reduce cholesterol levels, and minimize triglycerides. These effects can reduce oxidative stress and inflammation, two major contributors to cardiovascular issues.
Glowing Skin from the Inside Out
Vinegar, especially varieties like apple cider, contains antioxidants like polyphenols, which help neutralize free radicals that cause cellular damage and accelerate skin aging. By balancing your skin's pH, the acetic acid in vinegar may also improve your skin's barrier function, alleviating issues like dryness, irritation, and acne. Over time, consuming vinegar may give your skin that sought-after, natural glow from within.
The Risks & Side Effects to Consider
As beneficial as vinegar might be, there are potential risks, especially when consumed on an empty stomach. The acidity of vinegar can trigger gastrointestinal issues, such as acid reflux, heartburn, and worsen conditions like gastritis or ulcers. Additionally, regular consumption of undiluted vinegar can erode tooth enamel, leading to cavities and increased sensitivity. Some medications, particularly those for diabetes or heart disease, can also interact with vinegar. If you're concerned, consulting a healthcare professional is always a good idea. Furthermore, excessive vinegar intake can deplete potassium levels in the body, potentially affecting bone health.
While the benefits of drinking vinegar before meals are promising, it's essential to approach this trend with caution. Dilute your vinegar and avoid overconsumption to protect your stomach, teeth, and bones. As always, consulting a doctor before making any drastic changes to your diet is a smart move.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Japan flexes its military muscle at China, and Trump
Japan flexes its military muscle at China, and Trump

Straits Times

timean hour ago

  • Straits Times

Japan flexes its military muscle at China, and Trump

Japan is transforming its long-restricted military into a potent force to operate alongside America's ships and soldiers. PHOTO: REUTERS OKINAWA - The ship-slaying missiles of the Japanese army's 7th Regiment are mounted aboard dark green trucks that are easy to move and conceal, but for now, the soldiers are making no effort to hide them. Created in 2024, the fledgling regiment and its roving missile batteries occupy a hilltop base on the island of Okinawa that can be seen for miles. The visibility is intentional. The 7th is one of two new missile regiments that the army, called the Ground Self-Defence Force, has placed along the islands on Japan's south-western flank in response to an increasingly robust Chinese navy that frequently sails through waters near Japan. 'Our armaments are a show of force to deter an enemy from coming,' said Colonel Yohei Ito, the regiment's commander. China is not their only target. The display is also for the United States, and particularly President Donald Trump, who has criticised Japan for relying too heavily on the presence of US military bases for its security. The missiles are part of a defence buildup that is central to Japan's strategy for appealing to Mr Trump. While Tokyo is now deep in negotiations with Washington over lifting new tariffs, its top priority is improving security ties. On June 6, Japan's trade envoy, Mr Ryosei Akazawa, met for 2 1/2 hours in Washington with Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent and Mr Howard Lutnick, the secretary of commerce, for talks on a tariff-lifting deal that will probably see Tokyo promise large purchases of energy, computer chips and weapons. By adding new missiles and other advanced weapons, both American-made and domestically developed, Japan is transforming its long-restricted military into a potent force with the skills and technology to operate alongside America's ships and soldiers, to demonstrate that Japan is an indispensable partner. 'We want to be sure the US has our backs, and enhancing our conventional military capabilities is the way to do that,' said Mr Nobukatsu Kanehara, who was deputy head of national security policy from 2014 to 2019 under then-prime minister Shinzo Abe. 'We want to show President Trump that we are a valuable and essential ally.' Given the growing military strength of nearby China and also North Korea, Japan wants to upgrade the defence alliance with the US by becoming a fuller-fledged military partner and moving further from the pacifism enshrined in its constitution adopted after World War II. With the war in Ukraine stirring fears of a similar Chinese move on the democratic island of Taiwan, Japan announced in 2022 it would double spending on national security to about 2 per cent of gross domestic product. The resulting defence buildup is now underway. Japan is buying expensive weapon systems from the US like the F-35B stealth fighter and Tomahawk cruise missiles that will give Japan the ability to strike targets on enemy soil for the first time since 1945. The spending is also revitalising Japan's own defence industry. At a trade show in May near Tokyo, Japanese manufacturers displayed weapons currently under development, including a hypersonic missile, a laser system for shooting down drones, and a jet fighter to be built with Italy and Britain. Japan is also demonstrating a new resolve to fight alongside the United States during a future crisis. When he visited Tokyo this spring, Defence Secretary Pete Hegseth praised a plan to create a new 'war-fighting headquarters' in Tokyo where Japanese and American commanders will work side by side. 'During our discussions, I told him how Japan is making our own strong efforts to drastically strengthen our defence capabilities,' Mr Gen Nakatani, the Japanese defence minister, said after meeting with Mr Hegseth. 'We face the most severe security environment that Japan has encountered since the end of the war.' It has been made even more severe by the uncertainty from Washington. While Japan's leaders and policymakers see strong support from Mr Hegseth and other hardliners on China, like Secretary of State Marco Rubio, they remain worried about America First isolationists who could try to pull back the US military in Asia. There is also the unpredictability of Mr Trump. Their biggest fear is that the president might suddenly strike a grand strategic deal with China's leader, Mr Xi Jinping, that would cede Japan and its neighbours to Beijing's sphere of influence. 'We need to convince Mr Trump and the Maga camp that Japan is too good to give away,' said Professor Satoru Mori, a professor of international politics at Keio University in Tokyo. 'It's in the US interest not to let Japan fall into China's sphere.' The Chinese government has criticised Japan's acquisition of offensive weapons as a return to wartime militarism. Japan is hedging its bets by reaching out to other partners. In addition to the fighter plane jointly developed with Britain and Italy, it has strengthened defense relations with Australia, offering to sell it advanced Japanese-made frigates. Tokyo also sent a warship and soldiers to the Philippines in May to join a multinational military exercise for the first time. If Washington proves unreliable, Japan has an ultimate fallback: tons of plutonium stockpiled from its civilian nuclear power industry, which it could use to build a nuclear arsenal of its own. So far, the national trauma from the 1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki has kept such an option off the table. 'We need to think about a Plan B, if the US does withdraw from Asia,' said Mr Kazuto Suzuki, director of the Institute of Geo-economics, a Tokyo-based think tank. NYTIMES Join ST's Telegram channel and get the latest breaking news delivered to you.

Kyle Chalmers reaping rewards of changing training methods as door ajar for two more Olympic berths
Kyle Chalmers reaping rewards of changing training methods as door ajar for two more Olympic berths

7NEWS

timean hour ago

  • 7NEWS

Kyle Chalmers reaping rewards of changing training methods as door ajar for two more Olympic berths

Six months after thinking he'd never race again, Kyle Chalmers is taking the biggest gamble of his fabled swimming career. And the risk is already being rewarded to the extent Chalmers has put the Brisbane 2032 Olympics on his agenda. Last December, the champion freestyler was retiring. 'I had my Christmas break and honestly I thought I wouldn't come back after Christmas,' Chalmers said on Sunday. The 26-year-old had just found out his fiancee, Norwegian swimmer Ingeborg Loyning, was pregnant. 'I didn't really know how that was going to go with swimming,' he said. Chalmers and Loyning, based in Adelaide, had created a swim academy serving clients in person and online. 'The only reason I got back in the pool was because we had some Japanese swimmers coming to train with us and also Matt Wilson was coming from NSW to train with me for a few days,' he said. 'So I felt I owed it to them to be at training because they had come to train with me. 'And then I came back and just absolutely loved it. 'I'm not associated with ... a high performance program. I'm there with people that are paying to be there, they love swimming.' Chalmers shelved retirement and, with Adelaide-based sports physiologist Jamie Stanley, took a gamble. They changed the training program that propelled Chalmers to the pinnacle in a career reaping nine Olympic and 12 world championship medals. Chalmers has halved his training distance in the water in favour of cycling and running. 'It's a bit of a gamble changing what I know works,' he said. 'I have done the same thing for the last 13 years so to actually change so much is a bit of a risk. 'It's not about training harder, it's about training smarter ... it's very different to what anyone else is doing because it's based around two other sports that are very different to swimming.' The first test of Chalmers' new regime came in April when he raced in Norway. The result stunned the man who has won gold, silver and bronze medals in the 100m freestyle at the past three Olympics. Chalmers clocked 47.27 seconds in his pet event in Norway — his fourth-fastest time ever and quickest outside of major meets. He followed with a personal best, 21.78, in the 50m freestyle. A week later in Sweden, he set a PB in the 50m butterfly, 22.89. 'It was a massive shock for me,' Chalmers said. 'It's nice to be swimming personal best times at almost 27 years old.' Chalmers, who turns 27 on June 25, will race at Australia's world championship selection trials in Adelaide starting Monday. He's bidding to make his fifth world championship team for the July 27-August 3 titles in Singapore. Chalmers also wants to become the first man to win 100m freestyle medals at four consecutive Olympics at the 2028 Games in Los Angeles. 'LA is a massive target of mine,' he said. 'But Brisbane (in 2032) might even be a possibility.'

5 anime like Spy X Family to watch if you can't get enough of Anya, Loid and Yor
5 anime like Spy X Family to watch if you can't get enough of Anya, Loid and Yor

Time of India

timean hour ago

  • Time of India

5 anime like Spy X Family to watch if you can't get enough of Anya, Loid and Yor

If you love Spy X Family and can't get enough of the lovable trio, Anya, the secret agent Loid, and the deadly yet caring Yor, you're in for a treat. This one-of-a-kind blend of family dynamics, spy action, and heartfelt storytelling has charmed fans across the globe. Fortunately, there are several other anime that deliver a similar mix of comedy, excitement, and emotional depth. Here are 5 anime like Spy X Family that you shouldn't miss. Anime like Spy X Family to watch Kaguya-Sama: Love Is War Kaguya-sama: Love is War is a Japanese romantic comedy that spans manga, anime, and live-action formats. The story centers on two top-ranking students, Kaguya Shinomiya and Miyuki Shirogane. Fullmetal Alchemist: Brotherhood This Japanese anime television series is an adaptation of the original Fullmetal Alchemist manga by Hiromu Arakawa. Produced by Studio Bones, it was directed by Yasuhiro Irie, written by Hiroshi Ōnogi, and features music composed by Akira Senju. The series was developed to faithfully follow the complete storyline of the manga, staying true to Arakawa's original vision. Princess Principal Set in an alternate version of 20th-century England, the series follows five young girls attending Queen Mayfair's school, who secretly work as undercover spies for the Commonwealth. Their mission is to overthrow the ruling Kingdom, which has split London into two. Directed by Masaki Tachibana and written by Ichirō Ōkouchi, the series features original character designs by Kouhaku Kuroboshi and Yukie Akiya. Hinamatsuri Hinamatsuri is a Japanese manga series created by Masao Ohtake. It centers on Yoshifumi Nitta, a yakuza member whose life takes a wild turn when a strange girl with telekinetic powers, Hina, suddenly appears in his apartment and ends up under his care. Joker Game The original novel Joker Game by Koji Yanagi, a collection of five short stories, was published by Kadokawa Shoten on August 28, 2008. It also inspired two manga adaptations, a live-action film, and an anime television series.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store