Food Portion Shrinking Tastebud Trickery

Helen Foster

Journalist

Mar 26, 2017

In his book Gastrophysics, Oxford University psychologist Professor Charles Spence explains how the way we serve food can completely change how it tastes – and how satisfied with it we may therefore be. Here are 5 tips from the book that could help you shrink your portions.

  • Take the lid off your coffee cup: Smell plays a role in how intense things taste. When you drink a coffee from a takeaway cup with its lid on you don’t get the odour and so lose some of the flavour with it – the same thing happens if you drink something direct from the bottle. Take the lid off your coffee cup and pour other drinks into a glass and you might not need so much.
  • Serve sweet food on round plates. We think things taste sweeter if they are associated with round shapes – and again, this can see us more satisfied by less food. This might mean simply serving dessert on a round dish, or try serving ice cream in a scoop or use a melon baller to serve fruit rather that cutting it into chunks.
  • Serve hot chocolate in an orange cup: It tastes chocolateier and so you might not feel as if you need as much.
  • Buy a red plate: ‘People eat significantly less when served food on a red plate than when offered the same food from plateware of another colour,’ says Professor Spence. In fact, people ate twice as many pretzels from a white plate than a red one in one study.
  • Buy a bowl: All those instagrammers are onto something – food tastes better from a bowl. ‘It allows, maybe even encourages the diner to take a hearty sniff – something people would be less likely to do from a plate,’ says Professor Spence. The heavier the bowl the better – you’ll think you’re getting lots more food if it feels hefty to lift.

 

Food Portion Shrinking Tastebud Trickery
Gastrophysics: The New Science of Eating by Charles Spence is published April 3rd, $39.99 Hardback (Viking Books)

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

By Helen Foster

Journalist

Helen Foster is The Carousel’s Health Editor. She is a highly regarded health journalist and author of multiple books. Originally from the UK, she has worked for every major British newspaper and women's magazine in Britain. She was also a member of the Guild of Health Writers and the Medical Journalists Association. Helen is a regular contributor for the Daily Mail newspaper, Stella at the Sunday Telegraph, Fabulous magazine, Sainsbury's magazine and UK Glamour. She is also author 12 health and wellness books and has just finished No13 and she writes about fitness and health trends on her award-winning blog NotYourNormalHealthBlog.com.

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