Introduction of big wine glasses was always meant to
help swirl the wine and get the maximum bouquets out of the wine, especially
the reds. 6-glasses to a bottle may be an implicit norm in many of the
Indian restaurants (when they charge on 5-glasses a bottle basis), but
5-glasses (150 mL) is more of an international norm with 4-a bottle (187mL)
getting increasingly popular.
However, many restaurants abroad, including Australia
and UK have shifted to even 250mL a serving- obviously charging prices
on the size basis but consumers counting in terms of glass being a standard
drink.
Prof Steve Allsop, who was involved in the study, says
heavy drinking was creating a generation of women who were at greater
risk of weight gain, cancer and brain and liver damage.
In the National Drug Research Institute study, researcher
Celia Wilkinson asked women participants how many standard drinks they
consumed in a week. They were then asked to pour their "normal"
drink.
"We measured it and found people are clearly making
an error, anything from underestimating it from 10 per cent up to 50 and
even 100 per cent," Prof Allsop said.
It meant a woman who believed she had consumed three
glasses of wine had had as many as six.
Groups of women gave conflicting answers to the amount
of wine in a standard glass. Their estimates ranged from 375ml in a glass
of wine to 150ml.
Professor Allsop said research had also shown that women's
increased independence, both financially and socially, had led to females
becoming heavy drinkers. Women in higher-paid jobs, particularly those
in managerial positions, were especially vulnerable, research had found.
The Federal Government would introduce new standard
drink logos - showing the number of standard drinks in a product, a Department
of Health spokeswoman said.
Research shows 70 per cent of men and 60 per cent of
women have no clue about the volume of alcohol required to put them at
risk of suffering brain damage. A survey last year found one in five women
believed they could consume four standard drinks a day over 8 -10 years
without incurring brain damage, when in fact drinking at that level puts
them at significant risk.
One aspect of over consumption that the study seems
to have had a fleeting glance at, is the absolute level of consumption.
It is not only the size of the drink but amount of alcohol which is equally
important to consider. For instance, a German Riesling may have 8% alcohol
by volume whereas Chablis may have 12.5%. It is not uncommon to find alcohol
levels of 14-15.5% and even more; touching 16% in some Australian reds.
The producers even have the freedom to under-declare alcohol level by
.5-1% in some countries. Obviously, a standard glass of 150 mL (a standard
recommended by delWine) of this German Riesling will have HALF the alcohol
than the Australian Shiraz having 15.5% or more.
We strongly urge our readers to read the labels
carefully, watch the level of alcohol and consume accordingly. If the
wine producer insists on giving you more alcohol due to the integrity,
balance and structure of his wine, by all means drink it-but drink less
accordingly to be in the safe limits of health and driving capabilities-editor
Subhash Arora
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