red wine has more calories. but not as much more as I thought. For instance, it would have 85 calories in 4 fl.oz where white wine would have 80.
2006-07-26 11:24:18
·
answer #1
·
answered by KatyW 3
·
1⤊
0⤋
The number of calories in red wine and white wine does differ slightly; typically, four ounces of white wine have about five calories less than red wine. With that said, the number of calories in different varieties of wine differ far more; the higher the alcohol content, the higher the calorie count
Wine (4 fl oz) Calories
Beaujolais 95
Bordeaux, red 95
Burgundy, red 95
Burgundy, white 90
Cabernet Sauvignon 90
Chablis 85
Champagne, dry 105
Champagne, pink 100
Chardonnay 90
Chianti 100
Liebfraumilch 85
Madeira 160
Marsala 80
Merlot 95
Mosell 100
Muscatel 160
Port, ruby 185
Port, white 170
Reisling 90
Rhone 95
Rose 95
Sangria 115
Sauterne 115
Sauvignon Blanc 80
Tokay 165
Zinfandel, red 90
Zinfandel, white 80
2006-07-26 18:26:06
·
answer #2
·
answered by Raven 2
·
0⤊
0⤋
I believe that a typical glass (5 oz) of wine, at a typical 12% alcohol content, is about 90 calories. Red or white should not make a significant difference.
However, changing the % of alcohol will change the caloric value.
As will the amount of residual sugar. A dry wine (no res. sugar) should be about 90 calories/5 oz. A sweet wine, or a 'dry' champagne, or a dessert wine, or fortified wine will have a higher caloric value.
Hope this helps.
2006-07-26 18:29:02
·
answer #3
·
answered by Tom-SJ 6
·
0⤊
0⤋
the calorie content of wine depends on two aspects:
1. alcohol content
if you have 200 milliliters wine (one glass/6.76 oz) with 10 percent of alcohol per volume, it contains 20 grams of pure alcohol which has 7 calories per gram - that makes 140 calories from alcohol
2. sugar content
there are dry, medium and sweet wines and sparkling wines/champagnes. dry wines (most common) have around 3 to 5 grams sugar per liter, medium wines (e.g. white zinfandel) have around 10 to 15 grams of sugar per liter and sweet wines (tokaj, sauternes) have a lot more...
so in your glass that adds up to 144 calories in a dry wine, around 155 in a medium and 160 or more in a sweet wine.
if your wine has 13 percent of alcohol per volume, add another 40 calories...
to answer your question: red wine usually has a higher alcohol content than white wine, that's why it automatically has less calories in average
tip: the alcohol content should be on the bottle, and if it's a good wine, you might find its sugar content in the net somewhere...
2006-07-26 22:44:11
·
answer #4
·
answered by baerchen80 3
·
0⤊
0⤋
red would be the higher one
2006-07-29 06:26:08
·
answer #5
·
answered by Shan 5
·
0⤊
0⤋