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Bottoms up | page 1, 2
The Irish-American remedies are, on the whole, certainly the most
colorful ones I heard. In each case, it was explained to me that the
concoction in question would "absorb the alcohol." In addition to
corned beef and cabbage for breakfast, my Irish friends advocate a
number of noxious blender drinks, most of which combine a protein
source (eggs, milk, canned salmon) with something sugary (chocolate
pudding, fruitcake, Jello), all mixed with a little whiskey or beer,
plus, in every case, coffee (served separately). One Irish cop adds,
"It also helps to have a trial date scheduled for the next day, so you
can sleep in the back of the courtoom." The Germans have also impressed me as serious drinkers, and it seems
they're partial to pickled fish for the morning-after meal, including
the delicious-sounding rollmops, bismarkhering and brathering, while the
Finns -- perhaps the most worthy drinking rivals to the Germans --
prefer whole salted herring (head on) with a little warm vodka. Indeed,
most every European (both Eastern and Western) hangover remedy I heard
involves some sort of fish product, from caviar in Russia to salt cod in
Spain and Portugal, to herring, herring and more herring all over
Scandinavia and Northern Europe. Most of my Canadian friends are in Quebec, and they're big advocates of
poutine -- the Quebec national junk food. It consists of French fries,
meat gravy and cheese curds, which are little bits of rubbery cheese
culled early on in the cheddar-making process. The curds actually
squeak when you eat them. The stereotype is that Jews don't drink, or at least that they don't
know anything about drinking, and I certainly grew up in a family with a
"Jewish liquor cabinet" (all top-shelf liquor; all unopened). So I
searched for a subculture of booze-knowledgeable Semites and, luckily, I
didn't need to go far: My in-laws defy virtually all attempts at
categorization. One brother-in-law is a cop, the other is a Navy
reservist and my father-in-law actually knows how to fix cars (even
better, my wife hates shopping). These guys can drink, and it's no
surprise that their secret anti-hangover weapon involves preemptive
eating of pastrami. "It lines the stomach," argues my father-in-law.
"I'd never drink without it."
Also Today How to avoid a hangover America is a nation of immigrants, and most of the ethnic remedies I heard about from Americans originate in the old country. We do have one unaffiliated group here in America, though, other than American Indians: They're called WASPs, and they put even the Irish to shame because WASPs don't drink beer -- they drink cocktails. And they don't eat. So it was no surprise that my informal poll of the few WASPs who would speak to me indicated a total lack of culinary spark. The most common answer: "Take three aspirin and drink three big glasses of water before you go to bed. Repeat in the morning." Despite my best efforts, I was unable to secure the participation of the Islamic world in my survey. The religion forbids alcohol consumption and, although plenty of Muslims drink, it's hard to get them to acknowledge it publicly. I have it on good authority that yogurt plus two cloves of garlic is the Turkish remedy of choice. The list goes on: Korean alder-and-licorice tea, Senegalese jassa (a kind of chicken stew) and Thai "restitution soup" (basically, a noodle soup). And then there are the little tidbits of advice: Avoid sugary drinks, bubbly drinks and mixing drinks -- and drink lots of water. Finally, in the true American spirit of overmedication, it was inevitable that we'd turn to drugs to fight the effects of alcohol. The pill known as Sob'r-K allegedly works "as a filter taking out all the impurities in the alcohol." The Sob'r-K Web site shows an X-marks-the-spot map of the stomach with little pills floating around the gastrointestinal system like buried treasure. Other popular pills include the Brazilian drug Engov, the all-natural Nux Vomica (available in health-food stores), E-mergen-C (a vitamin supplement), milk thistle and various herbal and aromatherapy remedies of questionable merit. But is there scientific support for any of these remedies? "Some of the folk remedies may help a little," says Shoemaker, "but the factors they address are minor compared to total alcohol consumption, which is the primary cause of hangovers." But what about all those carefully planned morning-after menus? "Food does not absorb alcohol," explains Shoemaker with finality. "Consumption of food may, however, increase metabolization, activate absorption and increase the speed with which the body processes alcohol." So Larry's family recipe was not entirely without merit. It had sugar and protein to wake up my metabolism, plus a little hair of the dog to ease my withdrawal symptoms. But I'd have been better off just to drink less. And what of "lining your stomach" with pastrami or some other fatty food? According to Shoemaker, it might help a little. "Drinking on an empty stomach is the most potent way to increase blood alcohol quickly, and the speed of consumption is related to the severity of the hangover." Shoemaker agrees that alcohol is dehydrating. "Alcohol inhibits a pituitary hormone called ADH -- anti-diuretic hormone -- which normally operates on the kidneys to conserve fluid. That's why, when you drink, you're running to the bathroom all the time and that's why your urine -- if you're not too drunk to notice -- is nearly colorless. Your body is losing more water than it should." He doubts, however, that drinking water before bed will do much good. "Most likely, you'll just be going to the bathroom a lot." Aspirin helps with headaches (although it doesn't actually do anything about the alcohol in your system), but, according to the Columbia University Health Service, you have to be careful because, when combined with alcohol, too much aspirin can cause serious stomach problems. Regarding coffee, the official position of the good doctors at Columbia is: "With coffee, what have you got? A wide awake drunk." As for the type of liquor having something to do with hangovers, Shoemaker confirms that "carbonation, as in beer and champagne, does contribute to quicker absorption." Likewise, he says, "There is at least some data indicating that cogeners -- pharmacologically active molecules such as methanol and butanol -- contribute to side effects. Concentrations of cogeners are higher in whiskey, rum and brandy than they are in, for example, vodka and gin, which are clear and filtered." But, ultimately, the only remedies with the scientific imprimatur of the
University of Connecticut Alcohol Research Center are to drink less and to drink slower. And to
that I'd add gaining weight, because it only takes a few minutes with a
blood alcohol
content table to see that fat guys can drink a lot more than anybody
else (more so, even, than fat girls).
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