The shape of our cutlery, tableware and even furniture, influence what we taste: round shapes are associated with sweet and creamy, while angular, sharp shapes create a more bitter, sour and/or sparkling experience. There is an example of a well known chocolate brand, who changed the shape of their bar from angular to more rounded. Regular customers started to complain: they found the bar suddenly too sweet. Isn’t that crazy? The brand had altered nothing in the ingredients and composition of the chocolate – only the chape had changed.
Colours too can change our taste perception. Red/pink colours make it taste sweeter, while blue makes it saltier. Apparently serving food on a red plate also makes people feel fuller and eat less than with any other colour. Good to know?
Food in motion (think melting chocolate or threading cheese) is more appealing and looks fresher to us. This is because food in motion is often higher in calories, and we are obviously wired to be attracted to foods containing lots of calories.
Talking about melting chocolate, did you know that the term gastro-porn was first used in 1977 by Alexander Cockburn in the New-York review of Books?
“Now it cannot escape the attention that there are curious parallels between manuals on sexual techniques and manuals on the preparation of food; the same studious emphasis on leisurely technique, the same apostrophes to the ultimate, heavenly delights. True gastro-porn heightens the excitement ans also the sense of the unattainable by proffering colored photographes of various completed recipes.”
Pure foodporn.