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WHAT GIVES FOOD ITS TEXTURE?

How It Works UK

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Issue 204

From crisp, crunchy fruit to satisfyingly stretchy cheese, explore the chemistry behind each bite

- AILSA HARVEY

WHAT GIVES FOOD ITS TEXTURE?

Flavour alone doesn’t determine how highly you rate a food. The feeling of food in the mouth plays a huge part in your enjoyment of a meal. While taste receptors process the flavours in foods, nerve cells help the brain perceive the tactile feeling of the contents of your mouth. In the brain's somatosensory cortex — part of the parietal lobe at the top of the brain — signals from your mouth's interaction with food are incorporated into your perception of the experience.

Aside from the sense of touch, which is the primary texture-detecting response, kinesthetics also play a part in sensing texture. This is the movement and position of food in the mouth, and it's your teeth’s role to test this. As they chew on different foods, the mouth senses how they break apart, bend or stick to the teeth. The sight of food before it even touches the mouth also plays a part in our perception of its texture. You judge a food by how it sits on a plate at rest before you eat it. For example, the thickness of a sauce can be observed by how much it spreads on the plate, as well as its speed of movement. Finally, the sound of food or feel of it moving against your touch prepares your brain for how the food will feel in the mouth.

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FLERE HISTORIER FRA How It Works UK

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

UNCANNY'S DANNY ROBINS

The creator and host of the BBC's Uncanny series tells us about his most chilling experiences while researching the show, and writing a ghost book for children

time to read

4 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

HOW FEATHERS GROW

A bird's proteinaceous plumage comes from the same source as our hair

time to read

1 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

New EV battery technology could power 500-mile road trips on a 12-minute charge

Scientists have used a neat chemistry trick to tackle a major challenge facing future batteries.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

HOW AIR PURIFIERS WORK

These filtration devices clean a room's air of particles that can make a person sick

time to read

1 min

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Chinese scientists hunt for alien radio signals in a 'potentially habitable' star system

TRAPPIST-1 is a red dwarf star located about 40 light years away that hosts seven Earth-sized rocky planets, with at least three orbiting in the habitable zone where liquid water could exist.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN WE DIE?

Our bodies are vessels for life, but in death they undergo a cascade of chemical and biological changes

time to read

3 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHY ARE KEYBOARDS QWERTY?

There's a reason why this seemingly random arrangement of letters is widely used on keyboard layouts

time to read

1 min

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

A 'quasi-moon' discovered in Earth orbit may have been hiding for decades

A new paper describes a possible 'quasi-moon' of Earth, an interloping asteroid that may have been following our planet around for decades, undetected.

time to read

1 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHAT'S AN ANTI-DRONE GUN?

How these devices intercept and disable unmanned aerial vehicles

time to read

1 mins

Issue 208

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Dozens of mysterious blobs discovered inside Mars may be 'failed planets'

Giant impact structures, including the potential remains of ancient ‘protoplanets’, may be lurking deep beneath the surface of Mars.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 208

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