For nutritionists, cinnamon is bae. “I
love cinnamon and have it every morning sprinkled on my cappuccino,” says Elisabetta Politi, R.D., a
nutritionist with Duke Health. Even better: Some
research has shown that cinnamon
can help lower your blood glucose (blood sugar) levels. And since blood glucose
spikes make you feel hungrier, people speculate that means cinnamon could
possibly help you feel fuller, helping you eat less overall.
Enter cinnamon water, the latest H2O drink available at health-food stores
that claims to have weight-loss benefits.
But is this waist-friendly cocktail too
good to be true?
Loads of research has looked at whether
cinnamon can lower blood glucose. One 2016 review of 10 different studies showed an
average reduction in fasting blood glucose with cinnamon that was better than
other common dietary supplements. “But the reduction was modest, and in most studies participants failed to meet the
American Diabetes Association treatment goals,” says Politi. Research methods
have also varied greatly, with doses ranging from 120 mg to 6,000 mg (.046
teaspoons to 2.3 teaspoons) per day over the course of four to 16 weeks. All of
this means more research needs to be done before experts will start
recommending cinnamon to control blood sugar levels, she says.
Any
definitive link between cinnamon and appetite is far from clear. “There’s no
evidence that cinnamon improves fullness,” Politi says. In other words, eating
more cinnamon isn’t likely to curb your appetite or help you to eat less.
That said,
if you’re bored with plain water, cinnamon water is a healthy alternative that
can help with weight loss, says Politi. Swapping it for even just one
high-calorie beverage daily, like your morning glass of OJ or afternoon soda,
can cut 100 to 150 calories. That adds up to 4,000 calories per month and
48,000 calories per year—or roughly 13 pounds of body fat.
If you’re
already limiting sugary beverages “adding cinnamon water can’t boost weight
loss,” says Politi. “But I certainly would recommend it to anyone trying to
increase fluid intake.”
To make
cinnamon water, toss one stick of cinnamon into a carafe of water, and chill in
the fridge overnight. To bring out cinnamon’s amber color, boil 1 cup of water
with 1 stick of cinnamon, cool, and use as a concentrate added to plain or
seltzer water.
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