Close X
Saturday, November 2, 2024
ADVT 
Health

Want To Enjoy Main Course? Avoid Good Appetizer

IANS, 26 Jun, 2015 01:31 PM
    A good appetizer has the potential to significantly change how the main course is enjoyed, says a study by a food science professor.
     
    "If you have a fantastic appetizer and then the main seems lack luster, that could be because of this type of contrast effect. That does not mean you should not have fantastic appetizers!" said Jacob Lahne, assistant professor in the Center for Hospitality and Sport Management at Philadelphia's Drexel University.
     
    Lahne tested and analysed subjects' hedonic (liking) responses to a main dish of "pasta aglio e olio" (pasta with garlic and oil) after they had either a good or mediocre bruschetta appetizer.
     
    The good bruschetta was made with extra ingredients like balsamic vinegar and lemon zest as well as fresher and better quality ingredients compared to the blended olive oil and dried basil in the mediocre bruschetta.
     
    The good bruschetta was judged better than the mediocre bruschetta but the pasta dish was liked more when preceded by the mediocre appetizer.
     
    One possible reason for this result is that the very nature of the appetite-whetting first dish sways the consumer to compare it with the subsequent courses to the latter's potential detriment.
     
    There had been no research on how liking one dish might be influenced by other sequential foods in the meal until this study.
     
    With his co-author, Debra Zellner, PhD, a professor at Montclair State University, he published the results of the study "The Great is the Enemy of the Good: Hedonic Contrast in a Coursed Meal" in Food Quality and Preference.
     
    "I've always been interested in trying to understand the food choices people make, so doing research in Drexel's Academic Bistro as a unique study space seemed like a natural approach," Lahne said.
     
    The study appeared in Food Quality and Preference.

    MORE Health ARTICLES

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia
    Sleep problems like insomnia being reported among the elderly are more likely because of bad sleep quality and not their duration....

    Bad sleep quality, not duration, triggers insomnia

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture
    Men are the "weaker sex" in terms of death and disability caused by osteoporosis as their bone health is simply being ignored by the healthcare systems, shows a study....

    Men twice as likely as women to die after hip fracture

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes
    Women who eat fried food regularly before conceiving are at increased risk of developing gestational diabetes during pregnancy, says a new study....

    Fried food before conceiving may cause gestational diabetes

    How binge drinking harms the liver

    How binge drinking harms the liver
    An Indian-origin researcher has identified epigenetic protein changes caused by binge drinking, a discovery that could lead to treatment for...

    How binge drinking harms the liver

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids
    Many children become allergic to peanuts even before they eat them and skin exposure may contribute to the early sensitisation, says a study....

    Skin exposure may trigger early peanut allergy in kids

    Do-it-yourself flu vaccine? Study shows it works

    Do-it-yourself flu vaccine? Study shows it works
    Do-it-yourself flu vaccine? It could happen. Military folks who squirted vaccine up their noses were as well-protected as others who got it from health workers, a study found.

    Do-it-yourself flu vaccine? Study shows it works