853 アクティブな恋人 [記録: 2,316オンタリオ5 2007年3月, 2009]
Lost PasswordRegister
私たちは英語を話すが、あなたのネイティブ言語の場合、色の愛を共有できるよう努力している。場合は、 までご連絡くださいこの言語のバージョンで何の問題も参照してください。

Click here to go back to the English version
  すべて  関連記事  ニュース  トレンド  インタビュー  人気

Is Visual Taste Perception Coloring Your Appetite?

〜によって evad インディアナ Culture, News, Popular, Products, Science
このページを印刷する Print this page
     

Is yellow sweet like a banana or sour like a lemon?

From casual observations of our own eating we know that the visual 'taste' of food can be just as important as the ingredients in a dish. But how much does your internalized color and food associations - the ones we started developing from the very first time we saw our mothers' arm reach across and place before us a dark green round leafy Brussels sprout - impact what you are tasting now, and how are food producers exploiting this information to influence consumers?

Some recent research might make you think twice about what you are tasting, and whether or not you might just be seeing a difference.

Food Color Research

juice_colors.jpg

A study published in the Journal of Consumer Research entitled, Taste Perception: More than Meets the Tongue:

The researchers manipulated orange juice by changing color (with food coloring), sweetness (with sugar), or by labeling the cups with brand and quality information. They found that though brand name influenced people's preferences for one cup of juice over another, labeling one cup a premium brand and the other an inexpensive store brand had no effect on perceptions of taste.

In contrast, the tint of the orange juice had a huge effect on the taster's perceptions of taste. As the authors put it: "Color dominated taste."

Given two cups of the same Tropicana orange juice, with one cup darkened with food coloring, the members of the researcher's sample group perceived differences in taste that did not exist. However, when given two cups of orange juice that were the same color, with one cup sweetened with sugar, the same people failed to perceive taste differences.

"It seems unlikely that our consumers deliberately eschewed taste for color as a basis for discrimination," write the authors. "Moreover, our consumers succumbed to the influence of color but were less influenced by the powerful lure of brand and price information."

- ScienceDaily: More Than Meets The Tongue: Color Of A Drink Can Fool The Taste Buds Into Thinking It Is Sweeter

Meaning, people thought the orange juice tasted different when there was no actual taste difference just because it was a slightly different color, but when the color remained the same, and the actual taste was changed, people didn't taste a difference.

More Food Color Research

steak_fries.jpg

During one experiment in the early 1970s people were served an oddly tinted meal of steak and french fries that appeared normal beneath colored lights. Everyone thought the meal tasted fine until the lighting was changed. Once it became apparent that the steak was actually blue and the fries were green, some people became ill.

Studies have found that the color of a food can greatly affect how its taste is perceived. Brightly colored foods frequently seem to taste better than bland-looking foods, even when the flavor compounds are identical. Foods that somehow look off-color often seem to have off tastes. For thousands of years human beings have relied on visual cues to help determine what is edible. The color of fruit suggests whether it is ripe, the color of meat whether it is rancid. Flavor researchers sometimes use colored lights to modify the influence of visual cues during taste tests.
-Excerpt taken from Erice Schlosser's book Fast Food Nation

colored_steak_fries.jpg

Examples of Food That Probably Shouldn't Be the Color It Is

crystal_pepsi.jpg
Crystal Pepsi
I think my first experience with Crystal Pepsi went something like this: "Alright Pepsi has a new lemon lime soda! Oh, wait! Why does it taste like cola!? Weird."

orange_cheese.jpg
Dairy
The last time I saw a cow produce bright yellow milk was when I wondered off from Woodstock into a neighboring farm. There I met a sociable hen named Margery who introduced me to that magical and mysterious milk cow.

cereal_colors.jpg
Cereal
And any other highly processed food targeted towards the most rational of consumers, children. But the bright colors do make it more exciting.
 
 
- Check out these previous food color posts:
Color Guide to Staying Healthy and Eating Right
Wonders of the Food Coloring World

5 2007年2月, 2008
Comments 18
del.icio.usnetscapenewsvinetechnoratifurl
    私たちの記事はいかがでしたか? E-mailによって私達のブログの供給をまたは毎日の更新のためのRSS得なさい。
Comments

提示 1 - 18 の 18 コメント

Libbywalt…
Libbywalters 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
very interesting read and it inspired me. Froot Loops

zebraphob…
zebraphobe 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
Cheese can actually range from white to pale yellow without coloring dependent on the amount of beta carotene in the cows' diet. Same with butter.

And you forgot:

Margarine (in blue and pink)


Ketchup (in red, blue green, purple, pink, orange and teal)



and applesauce (in yellow, orange and blue)


I'm sure there are many more that I'm not even aware of.

zebraphob…
zebraphobe 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
Hmm, can't edit our posts (or preview)?

ketchup:


margarine:

leslie
leslie 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
This is so true! When I tried that green ketchup it tasted so different to me! tasted like it had vitamins in it, maybe because it was a bright vegetable green? All I know is I never had green ketchup again. Just looking at it, I couldn't stomach it.

alanaj
alanaj 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
Did you know you said "an lemon" near the beginning?

phonebook
phonebook 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
dude, I loved green ketchup but my mom couldn't stand it so my dad used it on the dog food (our dog, Jessie loved ketchup)

rosclarke
rosclarke 書いた:
5 02月, 2008
I recently moved to the US from the UK and I have found this to be so true. There are many foods here that I just can't stomach because of the food colourings used. I think in the EU the restrictions on food additives are stricter and so, on the whole, colours tend to be more natural.

I also remember, years ago, a friend serving me bread and butter pudding, to which he had added blue and green colouring. Tasted fine - so long as you kept your eyes shut!

bunigrl33
bunigrl33 書いた:
6 02月, 2008
When we were kids, my brother & I concocted a scheme to get more Christmas cookies. My mom let us decorate the cookies, so we colored the frosting dark, putrid colors. They tasted just fine but my mom refused to serve ugly cookies to her friends and our relatives. So she baked another batch and made us frost them in unoffensive, pastel colors. My brother & I got to eat all the ugly cookies ourselves. :)

klip
klip 書いた:
6 02月, 2008
My husband told me of an experiment his art teacher did, where he served them some strange blue food and they had to guess what it was. No one could. It was scrambled eggs...

Ryuukuro
Ryuukuro 書いた:
6 02月, 2008
I will eat almost anything that is blue. Blue foods, even though they're full of likely-to-be-unhealthy food coloring, are exciting to me. But I could not eat blue meat or blue fries. I think much of it has to do with how much I know the food I'm eating has already been processed. Soda and candy and cakes and things, all processed and sugary foods, can be bright shades of blue and I'll just love them more. Brown seems to be an unappetizing color as its the color of mud and you-know-what but it's also the color of tasty hamburgers. And even though I dislike most green vegetables, I'll be more likely to eat the darker, greener varieties of them as they look healtheir.

joanacard…
joanacarda 書いた:
6 02月, 2008
Every morning I stare at my cup of milk+coffee and a competition between vision and taste begins. More coffee or more milk? I love the dark option but the mild taste is appealing too. I always bet on taste, but colour frequently wins.
Taste wins

Colour wins
http://www.colourlovers.com/paletteImg/F2F2F2/361203/Eyes_wins.png?cPW=MC4zMCwwLjcw

Polythene
Polythene 書いた:
8 02月, 2008
mmmmm i really want a blue strawberry now

eighthmus…
eighthmuse 書いた:
8 02月, 2008
. . .
I think I have not the stomach for bold colour.
I like my ketchup red and organic. *whimper*

But green eggs and ham . . . now that I'll try.

wolftlou
wolftlou 書いた:
26 06月, 2008
That blue strawberry grossed me out, haha

torwch
torwch 書いた:
29 12月, 2008
this makes so much sense, i can think of so many times where i have not eaten something because of its colour... could this be the next big thing? flavoring food just by changing its color?

roxychane…
roxychaney 書いた:
20 02月, 2009
ha! my first color and my third palette were inspired by such fancifully dyed junk foods:

lavender_peep

tropical_juicy_fruit

Amaranthi…
Amaranthine 書いた:
20 03月, 2009
haha I like the crystal pepsi reaction ;P

That blue steak kindof made me squirm. I doubt I could eat it unless I really set my mind to it >.>

Random Fact: Margarine was the first food product the FDA allowed to have added coloring. Margarine is actually white but it kindof grossed people out so they added yellow to make it more inviting. I guess the white made it look fatty or something. Even though when you think about it, yellow isn't that much better xD

KritikBlu…
KritikBlume 書いた:
10 04月, 2009
How interesting. :o
I might start colouring my food to see if it tastes different.


Add a Comment

       コメントを掲示するログオンされるでなければならない。


Trackbacks
今のところ11つのトラック背部...Hooray!

» Is Visual Taste Perception Coloring Your Appetite? BlogoZavr
7 02月, 2008
[...] tasting now, and how are food producers exploiting this information to influence consumers? Sourse: http://www.colourlovers.com You must be login to [...]
FiD WeBlog™ » Blog Archive » Is Visual Taste Perception Coloring Your Appetite?
7 02月, 2008
[...] you are tasting now, and how are food producers exploiting this information to influence consumers?read more | digg [...]
The power of color | 118
7 02月, 2008
[...] Here is a really interesting article from Colour Lovers .com that talks about how color influences our appetite. This really shows the power of color and why it is important to consider which colors you choose rather than just picking your favorites. Click here for the article. [...]
Celebrity Blog » Does Visual Color Affect A Food’s Taste?
8 02月, 2008
[...] I am a nerd at heart, so it’s no surprise that I find this concept fascinating. Basically, a study was done to find out how much our color and food associations impact tasting. [...]
Ideal Programmer\’s blog » Blog Archive » Is Visual Taste Perception Coloring Your Appetite?
25 02月, 2008
[...] read more | digg story [...]
crystal pepsi
21 03月, 2008
[...] [...]
Brand Engine » Blog Archive » Coloring your Appetite
2 04月, 2008
[...] great article and collection of research from Colour Lovers covering the relationship of color and [...]
A Great Place for News, Articles & Free Web Resources
10 〜かもしれない, 2008
[...] SaturdayMay 10,2008 [...]
A Full Head » Blog Archive » The Colors of Nutrition
10 08月, 2008
[...] According to this paper (PDF) in the Journal of Consumer Research, mentioned at ScienceDaily, and ColourLovers, the mere color of a liquid can greatly impact how sweet the imbiber believes it to be, as was [...]
Session 2 | Corporate Identity and Stationary « GRD202
21 1月, 2009
[...] emotion and connotations of colors used. (research ideas: Color Associations and Color Symbolism)Color and food and Color Theory and Explination of Different Color [...]
Session 3 | September 22, 2009 « GRD202: Page Layout
1月前
[...] emotion and connotations of colors used. (research ideas: Color Associations and Color Symbolism) Color and food and Color TheoryExplination of Different Color Modes Focal Point: Style of contact information [...]
Most Loved Blog Posts
Feeds & Favorites


Contribute
Share the Love あなたが何か面白いものを共有したいとカラフルはありますか?
毎月60万人以上の愛好家?私たちは、ゲストとしてお持ちのが大好きです
著者は、私たちのことを書くことが何かしたいのですがあなたのヒントを記載したメールを送信してください。

あなたのアイデアやヒントをお寄せください
Blog Search & Archives
アーカイブをブラウズする
検索ブログ
Latest Palettes & Patterns
Recently Active Lovers
© 2009 Lord IV. 複製権所有 | プライバシーと利用規約