6-6-2002
Contact: Andy Fell
ahfell@ucdavis.edu
530-752-4533
University of California
- Davis
Bad news for spice
lovers: Chili actually reduces your ability to taste other flavors, according to
researchers at the University of California, Davis.
In a painful series of experiments that you may not want to try at home, graduate student Chris Simons put capsaicin -- the hot chemical from chili peppers -- on one side of volunteers' tongues.
The
volunteers then rinsed with solutions representing the five flavors of salty,
sweet, sour, bitter and "umami," the flavor linked to monosodium
glutamate, and rated the intensity of the flavor.
"Capsaicin
always suppressed sweetness, bitterness and umami. Saltiness and sourness
weren't affected at all," Simons said.
Traditional
tastes -- sweet, salty, bitter, sour, umami -- reach the brain through a
completely different route than flavors such as hot chili and fizzy drinks,
which are actually experienced as pain by the nervous system.
As
you eat a hot curry, the pain gets less as pain receptors in the tongue get less
sensitive. The flavor-dampening effect is separate from this numbness, said
Simons. To control for numbing, the researchers re-applied capsaicin to get a
consistent burning sensation.
In
many cuisines, sour and salty flavors often accompany hot spices. While sweet
flavors are reduced by chili, sugar also has a moderating effect on the hot
flavor of capsaicin. Adding chili could be used to reduce the bitterness of some
foods, said Simons.