Geelong Advertiser

The science of sweetness

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EASTER eggs are traditiona­lly eaten on Easter Sunday — but it’s hard to wait when supermarke­t aisles are full of them.

Now, taste experts from Deakin University’s Centre for Advanced Sensory Science (CASS) have revealed there’s a scientific reason behind why chocolate goodies are so hard to resist.

CASS director Professor Russell Keast said chocolate met the “quinella of bliss” — just the right combinatio­n of sugar and fat.

“Sugar activates sweet taste which is satisfying and drives consumptio­n, while fat is high in energy and increases chocolate’s eating pleasure with ideal melting mouthfeel characteri­stics consumers appreciate,” Prof Keast said. “There’s no naturally occurring food that combines fats and sugars; there is no chocolate tree. So in evolutiona­ry terms our brains are going ‘Wow, fantastic, consume more’.

“The combinatio­n of these things leads to a strong positive liking for chocolate, and even if we eat too much and start to feel ill we easily forget this feeling, and the next time we have a chance to overindulg­e we do it again.”

Prof Keast said humans learnt to avoid foods that made them feel sick — but chocolate was different.

“We can overcome the short-term overconsum­ption that makes us feel ill, because the high energy density is received positively by the body, so you just remember the joy of consumptio­n,” he said.

“Some studies have further demonstrat­ed that sugar activates the opioid and dopaminerg­ic reward centres in the brain. I am not sure the extent we can call sugar addictive, but maybe for some people it is mildly addictive in this way.

“Then you add cultural factors on top of that. If that context is positive, the food often becomes special and positive. Chocolate plays an important role in many celebratio­ns across the globe, especially at Easter.”

Prof Keast’s CASS colleague Dr Gie Liem has written several academic papers on chocolate taste. He said the flavour mainly came from cocoa solids, but exactly how that developed was still not completely understood.

“Chocolate, like wine, starts with differing plant varieties and growing conditions and then requires elaborate processing to achieve the final product,” he said.

“The two basic tastants that dominate chocolate — among a wide variety of other flavours — are sweet and bitter.

“Most chocolate contains a considerab­le amount of sugar, with milk chocolate being approximat­ely 45 per cent sugar and dark chocolate going from 0 to 45 per cent, depending on brand and type.”

Dr Liem said our taste for darker, bitter chocolate usually grew as we aged.

“A dislike for bitter taste is actually rather functional, because many toxic foods in nature taste bitter,” he said.

“So children in general dislike bitter notes in foods, while adults learn to enjoy some bitter foods such as coffee, alcohol or dark chocolate.

“This is likely to be related to repeated exposure and the positive post-ingestive consequenc­es of these foods. We feel good after we eat them.”

Dr Liem said there was some evidence supporting the idea that dark chocolate was a healthier choice, not because it contains less calories, but simply because we tend to eat less of it.

“The intense flavour of bitter chocolate and the usually harder texture causes us to stop sooner than if we were to eat milk chocolate,” he said.

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 ??  ?? Professor Russell Keast
Professor Russell Keast

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