Drinking hot chocolate from an orange or cream colored cup tastes better than in a white or red one, reveals a new study.
Drinking hot chocolate from an orange or cream colored cup tastes better than in a white or red one, reveals a new study. The study adds to recent research demonstrating how our senses perceive food in a different way depending on the characteristics of the container from which we eat and drink.
"The color of the container where food and drink are served can enhance some attributes like taste and aroma," as explained to SINC by Betina Piqueras-Fiszman, researcher at the Polytechnic University of Valencia (Spain). Along with her colleague Charles Spence, from the University of Oxford (UK), the scientist has come to the conclusion in the case of drinking chocolate.
Both conducted an experiment in which 57 participants had to evaluate samples of hot chocolate served in four different types of plastic cup. They were the same size but of different colors: white, cream, red and orange with white on the inside.
Published in the 'Journal of Sensory Studies', the results reveal that the flavor of chocolate served in orange or cream colored cups was better for the tasting volunteers.
However, the sweetness (not the flavor of the cocoa) and the aroma (the smell) where hardly influenced by the color of the cup, despite the participants mentioning that the chocolate was slightly sweeter and more aromatic in a cream colored cup.
"There is no fixed rule stating that flavor and aroma are enhanced in a cup of a certain color or shade," recognized Piqueras-Fiszman. "In reality this varies depending on the type of food, but the truth is that, as this effect occurs, more attention should be paid to the color of the container as it has more potential than one could imagine."
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In addition, this information could encourage chefs, catering professionals and even the packaging industry to think more about the color of crockery and packaging. As the researcher explains, "it is a case of experimenting to understand how the container itself affects the perceptions that the consumers have on the product."
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In other cases, it has been proven that a strawberry mousse appears to be sweeter and more intense on a white plate compared to a black plate. And as for coffee, the majority of those surveyed associated brown packaging to a stronger flavor and aroma, whereas reds seem to accentuate this sensation and blues and yellows make the drink seems softer.
Source-Eurekalert