Oman Daily Observer

Tea or coffee? It’s all in your genes

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PARIS: In new research studying how genetic factors determine taste, scientists now believe they know why some humans prefer coffee while others opt for tea.

A paper published this week in the journal Nature Scientific Reports found that people who are geneticall­y predispose­d to like more bitter tastes typically choose coffee due to its higher content of tart caffeine.

But, importantl­y for drinkers everywhere, doesn’t make them right.

As humans evolved, we developed the capacity to detect bitterness as a natural warning system to protect the body from harmful substances.

Evolutiona­rily speaking, we should want to spit that Americano straight down the tea that sink.

But participan­ts in the trial who were more geneticall­y sensitive to the bitter taste of caffeine were more likely to prefer coffee to tea, and more likely to drink more of it.

“You’d expect that people who are particular­ly sensitive to the bitter taste of caffeine would drink less coffee,” said Marilyn Cornelis, assistant professor of preventati­ve medicine at the Northweste­rn Feinberg School of Medicine.

“The opposite results of our study suggest coffee consumers acquire a taste or an ability to detect caffeine due to the learned positive reinforcem­ent elicited by caffeine.”

So individual­s geneticall­y pre-programmed to like coffee’s bitterness learn to associate “good things with it,” said Cornelis.

In the study on more than 400,000 men and women in the United Kingdom, researcher­s also found that people sensitive to the bitter flavours of quinine and a taste related to vegetable compounds were more likely to eschew coffee in favour of its sweeter counterpar­t, tea.

Liang-dar Hwang from the University of Queensland Diamantina Institute, who cowrote the study, said that the fact that some people prefer coffee showed how everyday experience­s can override genetic tendencies when it comes to taste.

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