The appeal of Mozart's symphonies on our sensibilites is long known but what about its effect on fruits and vegetables?
The appeal of Mozart's symphonies on our sensibilites is long known but what about its effect on fruits and vegetables? In July, the Hyogo Prefecture-based fruit company Toyoka Chuo Seika shipped out its first batch of "Mozart Bananas" to supermarkets in the area.
The bananas are exposed to "String Quartet 17" and "Piano Concerto 5 in D major," among other works for one week in their ripening chamber.
In fact, over the past few decades, a wide variety of foods and beverages have been exposed to classical vibrations - soy sauce in Kyoto, udon noodles in Tokyo, miso in Yamagata Prefecture, maitake mushrooms in Ishikawa Prefecture and "Beethoven Bread" in Nagoya, Aichi Prefecture, to name a few.
A representative from the company, Isamu Okuda, said that it's no joke, and they believe it makes the bananas sweeter.
Ohara Shuzo, a sake brewery in Fukushima Prefecture, also uses Mozart's music to brew sake. They experimented with jazz, Mozart, Bach, and Beethoven, among others.
"We found Mozart works best for sake and that's why we use only his music," the Japan Times Online quoted Shuzo as saying.
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"It makes the sake have a richer fragrance and a milder taste," she said.
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The music of Mozart happens to be rich in such frequencies - those above 8,000 Hz, which is why sound and music therapy both tend to use it.
Dorothy Retallack, in her 1973 book, 'The Sound of Music and Plants', found that playing various kinds of music to plants for three hours daily made them flourish.
However, there isn't enough research to confirm the effect of music on plants, fruits or vegetables.
Source-ANI