I got this email circular sent on to me by my Mum, who seems to love sending me such stuff.
I’m guessing a lot of it is pseudo-science nonsense which I’d quite like to stop getting! So is the following nonsense or true? Can I tell her it’s nonsense and to stop sending me misleading crap, or is it good motherly advice? Sentences like “it will lead to cancer” rather than “it can lead to cancer” don’t lead me to entirely trust this stuff.
The thing contradicts itself anyway - if the fats solidify in your digestive system, they’re not going to affect your heart - *drinking hot things so you absorb the fat into your system faster *(even assuming that’s true) is only going to make things worse for your heart.
Is it cancer, or heart disease that we should be terrified of here - it can’t be both.
But it’s bullshit. Our bodies generate, and dispose of heat all the time - any fat that is liquid at body heat is going to be fine - anything that is waxy and solid at body heat is not going to stay that way just because you drank some warm tea.
As a side note: Koreans don’t drink anything at all during meals. I found this rather surprising as they “drink” soup in place of where I would drink water/tea. At the end of the meal, they will drink water/tea in their rice bowl to consume the leftover rice.
To answer your question, I don’t believe they drink hot/cold drinks for health reasons, just cultural or individual tastes.
This. Drink 12 ounces of beverage that’s at ~40F, and in fairly short order your 150-200 pound body would have it up to damn near 98.6, even if your body wasn’t actually generating heat - which it is.
Reminds me of the TV commercial in which a woman claims that “they can’t put anything on the internet that isn’t true” - shortly after which she leaves on her date with a “French model,” a hard-core nerd who managed to greet her with “Bone-Jewer.”