I add collagen to my coffee every morning. Here are all the benefits
There was a time when pimping your coffee was the height of cool. The year? 2018. Wellness influencers? Thriving, largely unregulated and backed by communities absorbed by fluorescent yellow turmeric lattes and butter-laden espressos. There were violet-coloured butterfly pea milk lattes (somehow not a MadLib, but a real drink) and pink ones filled with beetroot powder. It was a heady, expensive time.
Then, as quickly as it ballooned, the trend appeared to die off. Supplements gave way to raw, unpasteurised milk and honey. Oat milk went into exile. Apple cider vinegar gained the top spot in influencer fridges and the thought of shoving a knob of butter into your Americano suddenly seemed ludicrous. So, when I tell you that there’s been one coffee addition that’s survived both the popularity and the purge, know that it’s a hard-won victory. It is, of course, collagen.
For years now, I’ve stirred collagen into my morning drink. Whether it’s coffee, matcha or a morning smoothie, the tasteless white powder gets added. I’ve done it so much that it’s become second nature, something naturopathic nutritionist says is a good thing. “Because collagen is a resilient protein and remains intact even when exposed to heat, I love to stir it into my morning coffee or into my matcha. Not only does it add a boost of amino acids, but it can potentially blunt the cortisol-inducing impact of the coffee, too.”
What does collagen coffee do?
Besides curbing the post-caffeine jitters, mixing collagen into your coffee has a myriad of benefits. “Collagen is the main structural protein for the body’s tissues and acts as the scaffolding or the ‘glue’,” Shand explains. “I like to visualise it as the stuff that holds us together – from the integrity of our skin to our muscles, bones, fingernails, hair and even our intestinal walls. I often recommend it to clients who want to focus on healthy skin during perimenopause and menopause. This is when oestrogen (the hormone responsible for skin elasticity and suppleness) naturally declines. It can also help with joint and muscle pains.”