Saturday, 16 May 2026

"Why do tastes differ? Now that's a question!"

Todays post was prompted by a question that was raised on my recent haddock and lentils post here 


Victor said "I don't know why; but we don't like lentils. Why do tastes differ? Now that's a question!"

... and what a good question I thought ... let's try and find out the answer!

"Why don’t we all like the same foods?

There are some tastes and textures we humans just can’t seem to agree on.

Hand someone a slab of chocolate or a slice of hot buttered toast and it’s unlikely (but not impossible), you’ll get a barely disguised look of disgust. On the other hand, offer up something more divisive, such as a piece of licorice or something smothered in desiccated coconut and chances are you’ll get more people declining a nibble.

It shouldn’t make sense. We all breathe the same air to survive, absorb rays from the same sun and have one of eight blood groups pumping through our bodies, so surely we should welcome the same fuel, whatever flavour it may be?

But we don’t. And it’s not just because we’re a fickle bunch. Taste is a serious science and to get a greater understanding of it, you might want to take a closer look at your tongue.


This illustration of the human tongue shows the areas where we most experience taste
highlighted in pink.

Things that go bump on the palate

We all have bumps on our tongue. They’re called papillae and they’re the usual home of our taste buds, which react to the different flavours in food when they reach our mouth. However, the amount of papillae on our tongue varies from person to person.

Those flavours fall into five categories: bitter, sweet, sour, salty and umami (or, savoury). But with the amount of flavour receptors in our taste buds varying from person to person, it means we will all have different reactions to the same food.

That’s especially true for super tasters. They have more papillae on their tongues and it means certain flavours, particularly sour or bitter ones, can be overwhelming, which means they tend to stick to the milder dishes on the menu.

On the other hand, those with fewer papillae than average aren’t anywhere near as sensitive to strong flavours and are known as subtasters. If eating a particularly fiery curry doesn’t have you breaking out in a sweat you’re likely to be a subtaster, whereas a supertaster would have to dilute the dish with yogurt or cream first to make it palatable.

Want to check if you’re a super taster? The best way is to dab some blue food colouring on your tongue. Blue dye won’t stick to papillae, so if your tongue doesn’t go very blue, it means you have more of the papillae that makes people super tasters.

Love beans? Could be your genes

Taste buds are only the beginning. There are so many different chemicals involved when it comes to the five tastes that a lot of it depends on how our brain reads the signals sent from our tongue.

From birth, we inherently understand that sweet is good and bitter is not. It’s a survival technique because things that can do our insides harm don’t tend to taste very nice.

While that is evolutionary, our genetics play a part too. We have around 25 receptors on our tongue that detect bitterness but they don’t work the same way for everyone. One in particular, snappily called TAS2R38, is concerned with our ability to detect a flavour known as propylthiouracil, or PROP for short. Not everyone can taste PROP and further studies has shown that, if you can’t, you’re more likely to enjoy chilli and eat more fatty foods.

While we’re in the womb, we also get used to enjoying the same food that mum does. The flavour is passed through the amniotic fluid into the womb and also through breast milk after birth. After that, however, it’s how much exposure we get to different flavours which influences our list of enjoyable foods.

Elizabeth Phillips, a psychologist at Arizona State University is an expert in taste. She said: “Up until the age of two you will eat anything.

“But then you become neophobic, that is, you don't like new food. So if you hadn't already been exposed to a certain flavour by the time you hit your terrible twos, whether through amniotic fluid, breast milk or solid food, chances are you won't like it.”

Some tastes are growers

Your eighteenth birthday is potentially a wondrous day of taste exploration. It could be the very first time you try beer. And if you taste beer for the first time and love it, you’re a rarity as humans are predisposed to react against such a bitter flavour.

But the beer industry isn’t failing so, clearly, somebody likes the stuff. This is a case of where anyone who dislikes a food on first taste, can train themselves to enjoy its flavour over time.

Dana Small, a professor of psychiatry and psychology at America’s Yale University, said in a 2013 study: “When you ingest something, all these hormones are released. Your blood glucose changes, you’ve all these metabolic effects that are critical for changing the brain’s representation of flavour. If you experience a novel flavour and experience positive post-ingestive effects, then the next time you ingest that flavour you’ll find it better and will be more likely to eat [or drink] more of it.”

But the reverse is also true. As Dr Phillips points out, if eating or drinking something for the first time makes you ill, your body’s survival mechanism will kick in. This make you develop an aversion to it as your brain associates it both the smell and taste with being poisoned.

The mystery of texture

Although evolution, culture, gender and life experience provide clues to why different people react to different flavours, the one enigma that can’t be explained is our individual reactions to texture.

While some of us enjoy nothing more then chewing on a bit of bacon gristle, others are repulsed and spit it straight out into a hankie. The mouth-feel of certain foods can be enough to put some people off (for example, baked beans or coconut) but scientists are as yet unable to come up with a satisfactory reason why. All they do know for sure is that if you can’t stand lumpy custard, you really won’t go anywhere near it."

Above words and image from article seen here

~ xxx ooo xxx ~

Thank you Victor, I hope you, and all readers found the answer to your question an interesting read.

Do please share your thoughts in the comments section ... maybe you have some strong dislikes to certain foods?

All the best Jan

28 comments:

  1. This is so interesting. My dearest is always thanking God for tastebuds. An how difference we each are. I love texture and crunch. My dearest loves anything soft and smooth. I love sweets, he doesn't. I thought it interesting about age. When our daughter was little her hamburger was meat and bun. No lettuce, no tomato, no mayo....at 18th, she wanted everything on it. My son would put a little packet of sugar on his hamburger and now he doesn't eat sweets. This was a fun post to read~~~ Think I'll go get my toffee peanuts so I can have some crunch. HaHa

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  2. Hi Jan, thank you for sharing this fascinating information. 😊

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  3. This was a fascinating read, and makes sense too. As an educator, I know that nature vs nurture is important. Genetics matter, but so do rich environments that promote learning. The same seems to be the case with our taste in food. Some of it is genetic, but exposure plays a big role too. Thanks for sharing!

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  4. I love sweets and I hate myself for it - wish I didn't. Don't like beer at all. Little alcohol. No coconut or cilantro. I like most other things, but I love sweets. What part of the tongue was that?

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  5. This is very interesting!

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  6. Another great post. I know for myself that I detest cilantro but one of my adult children thinks it tastes good. Strange how we can differ, isn't it.

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  7. I have strong dislikes of asparagus, lamb and pork, also hate the mouthfeel of avocado. There are other foods I don't like, lentils is one, and I am allergic to blue food colouring, getting a fine itchy rash if I have too much, so I avoid anything blue like smarties or M&Ms, and green cordial too.

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  8. That's a great post, Jan. Interesting information about basic tastes, texture and flavor intensity.

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  9. Interesting topic, but it's good that we differentiate ourselves.
    You know what they say: 100 people, 100 wonders :))
    Wishing you a nice Saturday with different flavors.

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  10. Fascinating! One thing that comes to mind is rocket. I love it. Bill thinks it's one of the worst things he's ever eaten! When we were in Alaska and eating quaq (frozen raw fish) Bill loved it. I didn't think it had much of a taste, but the texture was rough for me. And there are things I hated as a kid (avocados, cilantro/coriander) that I absolutely love now. Thanks for sharing this interesting read. Enjoy your weekend!

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  11. Boa tarde Jan. Confesso, que tem muito tempo que não como lentilhas. Obrigado por reservar, um pouquinho do seu tempo, para me desejar feliz aniversário. Um excelente dia de sábado e um grande abraço do seu amigo carioca.

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  12. This topic is really fascinating—thanks, Jan!
    Have a great day. hugs Elke

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  13. That is so interesting, and not something I'd ever thought much about. I haven't any blue food colouring or I'd try and discover what sort of taster I am. I suspect not a super-taster!

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  14. This really was fascinating. I know there are some genetics too with bitter tastes, and if you get more dominant genes you taste bitter tastes stronger. It's really fascinating how much of what you like is learned and how much is not. Thanks for this Jan. I really enjoyed this. Have a super weekend too.

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  15. Thank you Jan for mentioning me and for yet another well-researched and well-written article. I appreciate all you good work on this Blog. If there were Blog Oscars you would win every time.

    God bless.

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  16. LOL, Jan, at the word "chocolate" I already looked disguised ;-)
    Hm, will check with blueberries!
    True. Dad gave me beer when I was still in a high chair and I disliked it. Now... I do! I can even taste if someone tries to sell me an expensive ale and it is none (I didn´t have to pay).
    Texture, yes. FIL baked tongue. It was delicious but I was always asking myself into which tongue I bite! - He said my SIL refused, so I HAD to eat it. See... I´m the "good DIL", right? (she was not and my BIL is divorced from her).
    Once Ingo "forced" me in a restaurant to try herring that came with my very yummy Labskaus. I had to spit the herring into a napkin.
    Sadly I dislike fish. Must re-start taking omega3 - thank you for the reminder!
    This was interesting!

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  17. ...life sure is complex.

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  18. Fascinating and informative post on taste receptors ~ thanks too for commenting on my blog ~ Happy Weekend to you ~ ^_^

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  19. Jan, this is another interesting post. Mr. M. and I have such different tastes. And over the years both of our tastes have changed dramatically. I enjoyed this post very much. Have a nice day.

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  20. Interesting. I don't like cheese (I eat some as growing up Italian. Mozzarella, ricotta, mascarpone. ) but cheese has to be cooked. I don't like it raw, natural or whatever you call it when it's not cooked. Yes, it is a mouth feel. I don't like beer. To me, it smells like a body fluid. I'm not fond of mixed drinks. I like wine if they are on the sweet side especially white wines. I do like champagne.

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  21. REPLY TO
    Chatty Crone who said ...
    I love sweets and I hate myself for it - wish I didn't. Don't like beer at all. Little alcohol. No coconut or cilantro. I like most other things, but I love sweets. What part of the tongue was that?

    Hello and many thanks for your comment and question.
    Our taste perception is considered to work like this:-
    sweet flavors are usually sensed at the tip of the tongue,
    salty is on the front sides,
    sour often detected on the sides, towards the back,
    bitter is at the back and lastly,
    umami is sensed across the tongue, particularly towards the middle
    Lots more to read at article here:-

    https://www.nabimag.com/munchies/a-map-of-the-tongue

    All the best Jan

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  22. GOOGLE TRANSLATE
    Luiz Gomes
    Boa tarde Jan. Confesso, que tem muito tempo que não como lentilhas. Obrigado por reservar, um pouquinho do seu tempo, para me desejar feliz aniversário. Um excelente dia de sábado e um grande abraço do seu amigo carioca

    Good afternoon Jan. I confess, it's been a long time since I've eaten lentils. Thank you for taking a little of your time to wish me a happy birthday. Have a wonderful Saturday and a big hug from your friend from Rio.

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  23. I love hot and spicy foods, but the last 10 years, they bother my tummy. I crave them still. Funny I never have cared for curry. I keep trying because my husband likes Indian food. I don't have a huge sweet tooth and I'm good with that but savory foods, yum! Really interesting

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  24. Thank you for this information. I’ve learned a lot.
    Yoko

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  25. What a fascinating topic that I hadn't given much thought to before.

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