Denemek ALTIN - Özgür

How we taste food

How It Works UK

|

Issue 176

Discover the chemicals that combine to create an extensive assortment of flavours

- AILSA HARVEY

How we taste food

Food is essential to life, and all animals eat to gain the necessary energy for survival. Since the dawn of agriculture, people have experimented with different foods’ potential and learned how to turn cooking into an art. The art of flavouring requires not just taste intuition, but an understanding of the chemistry of different foods and their complementary pairings.

Today, chemists and chefs experiment with flavour combinations to create unique taste profiles for your tongue. The human body experiences flavours by combining the senses of smell, taste and touch. Your tongue is covered in sensory cells, which are packed into groups called taste buds. These protrusions on the surface of the tongue are stimulated by five main types of food flavour: sweet, salty, sour, bitter and umami. For a flavour to be processed, the food must be dissolved in water and come into contact with the taste buds. Food that has little or no water content relies on saliva that’s released into the mouth to instigate the taste sensation.

Between individuals, flavour preferences can vary. Your favourite food is likely to be different to your friends’, and a food that you can’t stand might be a staple in someone else’s diet. Our flavour preferences depend on our genes, experience and age. How your taste buds interpret flavour sensations can change as you get older, making some bitter foods more tolerable for adults than you remember them being when first exposed to them as a child.

How It Works UK

Bu hikaye How It Works UK dergisinin Issue 176 baskısından alınmıştır.

Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.

Zaten abone misiniz?

How It Works UK'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

INSIDE THE MIND OF A GENIUS

What's going on inside the brains of those with truly exceptional mental abilities, and why are they so intelligent? Genetic analysis and Einstein's brain are providing us with some answers

time to read

6 mins

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Are polar aurorae stronger at the North Pole?

Amazing answers to your curious questions

time to read

1 min

Issue 205

How It Works UK

ROCKET LAB LAUNCHES AN EARTHOBSERVING SATELLITE

Rocket Lab launched an Earthobserving radar satellite into orbit for the Japanese company iQPS.

time to read

1 min

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

GLUTEN IN THE BODY

When you eat foods like a sandwich or a bowl of pasta, enzymes in your digestive system work to break down the ingredients so that nutrients can be absorbed by the body as the food passes through you.

time to read

1 min

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

We may finally know how paracetamol works

Acetaminophen is widely used to relieve pain, but exactly how it works has long been a mystery.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

2,800-year-old royal tomb discovered near King Midas' home

Archaeologists have discovered an 8th-century BCE royal tomb of a relative of King Midas in the ancient city of Gordion, southwest of Ankara, Turkey.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

WHAT IS GLUTEN?

Discover how this viscous and elastic protein forms, where to find it and why some people can't eat it

time to read

1 min

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

INTOLERANCE TYPES

Gluten isn't for everyone. When some people consume gluten, they experience pain and other negative gastrointestinal symptoms.

time to read

1 min

Issue 205

How It Works UK

How It Works UK

Covering poo lagoons could cut most dairy farm methane

Dairy farms produce huge amounts of potent greenhouse gases.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 205

How It Works UK

China pits humanoids against each other in a robot boxing tournament

Lifelike humanoid robots have competed in the world’s first humanoid robot combat competition, with four Chinese teams pitting advanced fighting robots against each other.

time to read

2 mins

Issue 205

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size