HomePropertiesRentalsGuides to FranceRegionsServicesForumsVersion FrançaiseNews
Advertise your rental property for free until the beginning of December 2008!
Log-in | Register

Log-In to Account
Username

Password


Not registered?
IFP Guides
Buying Property in France
 - House Buying Process
 - Buying Off-Plan
 - Buying at Auction
Building & Renovation
 - Building a New Home
 - Planning System
 - Financial Assistance
Finance & Taxation
 - Banking in France
 - French Mortgages
 - Personal Taxation in France
 - Inheritance Laws & Taxation
Public Services
 - Health Care Services
 - School Education
 - Higher Education
Work & Business
 - Starting a Business
 - Letting Property
Property Rights
 - Land Registration
 - Property Boundaries
 - Boundary Walls
 - Noise Nuisance
 - Rights of Way in France
Household and Motor Insurance
 - Organising Household Insurance Cover
 - Types of Insurance Cover
Contact

Contact Us
Send this to a friend
Community and News
 - IFP Forums
 - IFP Newsletter
 - Newsletter Sign-up
Services
 - Bookstore
 - Metric Unit Conversion
Finance
 - UCB Mortgages
 - Mortgage Brokers
 - Mortgages & Taxation
 - Currency Services
  

Gascony Wines ‘Healthiest’ in the World

Wines from the Gascony area of Gers in South West France are the healthiest in the world, according to a study published in the scientific journal ‘Nature’.

The beneficial effects of moderate drinking of wine (especially red wine) have been known for many years, but what intrigued the researchers, was to determine whether different wines varied in their impact.


In order to carry out the study a team from the University of London examined a selection of red wines from throughout the world.

What the researchers found was the wines from the Gers contained up to four times the level of life enhancing ‘polyphenols’ than other wines. They attribute the high life expectancy of men in the Gers to their consumption of the local wine.

Professor Roger Corder and his team put this down to traditional winemaking techniques used in the Gers and the predominance of the grape variety ‘tannat’, which is not commonly used elsewhere in the world.

Traditional techniques allow a longer fermentation period for the wine, which increases the ability to extract maximum benefit from the polyphenol rich tannat grape. Not all producers in the region use these techniques, so Professor Corder cautions against indiscriminate buying.

The Gascony region of France is known for its chunky red wines from Saint Mont and Madiran, used to accompany the traditional local dishes of ‘confit de canard’, ‘garbure’ and ‘magret’.

Professor Corder’s prescription for a long life – ‘half a bottle of good Madiran a day'!



The IFP Guides are published for general information only.
Please visit our Disclaimer for full details.

  


LinksAdvertisingHelpAbout IFPContact UsReferenceLegal

Copyright © 1995 - 2008 Internet French Property