However, drinking too much can lead to a significant reduction in sense of smell, researchers said.
Yaara Endevelt of the Weizmann Institute of Science in Rehovot, Israel, and her colleagues investigated whether drinking alcohol - known to lower inhibitory signals in the brain - affected the sense of smell.
In one experiment, 20 volunteers were asked to smell three different liquids. Two were a mixture of the same six odours, the third contained a similar mixture with one odour replaced.
Each volunteer was given 2 seconds to smell each of the liquids and say which was the odd one out. The test was repeated six times with each of three trios of liquids.
In a second experiment with a similar drinking structure, the same volunteers were asked which of three liquids had a rose-like odour. The researchers increased the concentration of the odour until the volunteers got the right answer three times in a row.
Endevelt's team then tested the senses of people in pubs around the cities of Rehovot and Herzliya.
Across all three experiments, the team found a correlation between a person's blood-alcohol level and score on tests of odour detection and discrimination.
