Healthy
food: can you train yourself to like it?
It has been proven time and again that quick-fix diets are counterproductive in the long run, and it's not just willpower failure making dieters regain the weight (and then some). A 2011 study indicated that depriving oneself of food changes the levels of hormones that control our appetites, fuzzing up our hunger compasses and making us eat even more. Furthermore, dieting has been shown to exacerbate an "emotional response to food".
Willpower
can only get you so far when it comes to eating well. But many psychologists
believe there are tricks we can use to change our tastes.
What are they and how do they work?
Delicious …
can we teach ourselves to like the right kinds of foods? Usually by
now, the New Year diet, detox or other form of extreme denial will have hit a
wall, and the merciful retox will be fully under way. What are they and how do they work?
It has been proven time and again that quick-fix diets are counterproductive in the long run, and it's not just willpower failure making dieters regain the weight (and then some). A 2011 study indicated that depriving oneself of food changes the levels of hormones that control our appetites, fuzzing up our hunger compasses and making us eat even more. Furthermore, dieting has been shown to exacerbate an "emotional response to food".
The holy
grail, surely, is to learn to love health food more than junk, thus avoiding
the binge-fast vicious circle. A colleague of mine used to describe his
mid-afternoon Mars bar and Diet Coke as giving himself a "wee hug on the
inside". Is this skewed view fixable?
We know
that most of our food likes are a triumph of nurture over nature, with the
exceptions of an innate fondness for sweet, and distaste for bitter.
"There may or may not be an innate preference for umami flavour, and
there's a debate about fat flavour," says Anthony Sclafani, professor of
psychology at Brooklyn College. "But other than that, when we're talking
about real foods, let's assume most of the preferences are learned."
'Flavour
flavour' learning: Our taste
biases develop in various ways. Flavour flavour [sic] learning, for instance,
is a form of Pavlovian conditioning. For example, if you drink Coca-Cola, says
Sclafani, you may enjoy the taste at first because you already like sweetness.
Then, the more you drink it, the fonder you will become of the other gustatory
characteristics of that particular brand.
A 2006
study into whether flavour flavour learning can help children feel more
positively about broccoli produced encouraging results. After being fed
sweetened broccoli, the kids liked the taste of plain broccoli more.
Lower your
taste thresholds: We all have
different thresholds for feeling satisfied by tastes. These are controlled in
part physiologically – the abundance and function of our taste buds differ,
making us more or less sensitive to tastes – but over time we also get used to
certain levels of, say, sweetness and saltiness. If you don't salt your pasta
water, you're going to think most ready meals taste of rock pool. It's all
relative.
I once gave
up anything with added sugar for a month. I quickly became an evangelical bore,
yammering on about how apples now tasted better than cake to me. However, this
transformation didn't last. To make permanent changes, you need to reduce the
levels little by little, so each step is imperceptible.
"A
number of [food] companies are facing the necessity to reduce salt or sugar or
fat," says Charles Spence, professor of experimental psychology at Oxford
University. "What happens if you do that suddenly? People don't like the
product any more. But execute the same change over a much longer period, very
gradually, then we keep adapting," he says.
The
feel-good factor
Another
form of preference learning stems from the positive post-ingested nutritional
effects of what you consume. So, returning to the Coca-Cola example, the
glucose sends a positive message to the brain because that is its primary
energy source (hence my colleague's Mars bar hug). But you can get a similar
kick after consuming more nutritious foods. I can get a hug from brown rice.
There, I've said it.
Decent
exposure
Repeated
exposure to pretty much any kind of stimulus brings a familiarity that breeds
quite the opposite of contempt. One 2010 study showed that repeated tasting
increased a liking for vegetables (except peppers, weirdly) among
nine-and-10-year olds. "I believe that the same methods would work with
adults though I don't know of any studies with adults," says Professor
Jane Wardle of the Health Behaviour Research Centre, at UCL in London. It took
just nine or 10 tries before the children said they liked the veg. Some even
ticked the "like a lot" box.
Knowledge
is power: Barb
Stuckey, food developer and author of Taste What You're Missing: the passionate
eater's guide to why good food tastes good, believes the best way to drum up
enthusiasm for a type of food is to become an expert on it. Turn your nose up
at greens and she'll say: "let's taste every single bitter green as if we
are doing a horizontal wine tasting." You might notice that spinach is
less bitter and has a soft mouth feel compared with kale, which is more tough
and fibrous. Suddenly you're appreciating nuances in foods you previously only
tolerated.
Mindless v
mindful eating: Stuckey
believes that the way forward is respecting and savouring food. I agree, but
perhaps we're idealists. Brian Wansink, professor of consumer behaviour at
Cornell University, certainly thinks so: "Most people come home from a
10-hour day of working and commuting.
The kids are screaming and they have 16 things on their to-do list before going to bed. They can't cut a pea in half and say: 'Let me savour the pea.' The solution is not mindful eating – let's create an environment where we can mindlessly eat less without thinking about it."
The kids are screaming and they have 16 things on their to-do list before going to bed. They can't cut a pea in half and say: 'Let me savour the pea.' The solution is not mindful eating – let's create an environment where we can mindlessly eat less without thinking about it."
He has a
point. And as Wardle admits: "When food is being used for comfort, or as a
pick-me-up, most people choose something sweet or salty, and usually high in
energy. Fruit and vegetables don't seem to cut it – with the possible exception
of one of the most energy dense fruits – the banana.
"If you think you're overdoing the junk-food treats, know this: Wansink recently found that you can eat just 25% of your usual snack portion and be equally satisfied 15 minutes later. His research is behind many of those eat-less tips that are so simple you could easily dismiss them as too obvious: you'll have a smaller dinner if it's served from the stove rather than at the table; if you use smaller plates you'll eat less but feel just as full.
"If you think you're overdoing the junk-food treats, know this: Wansink recently found that you can eat just 25% of your usual snack portion and be equally satisfied 15 minutes later. His research is behind many of those eat-less tips that are so simple you could easily dismiss them as too obvious: you'll have a smaller dinner if it's served from the stove rather than at the table; if you use smaller plates you'll eat less but feel just as full.
I think
that if you don't find a food disgusting, all you need is the right recipe to
get you loving it. I used to skip past kale in the fruit-and-veg shop until I
discovered how delicious it is with garlic, chilli, anchovies, parmesan, pasta
and a squeeze of lime. I love this dish so much that I no longer blanch the
kale before frying it. I love to chew the goodness out of the stalks. I
actively crave kale (and chocolate and cake, obviously).
Have you
successfully trained yourself to need less sugar, fat or salt? Or learned to
love healthier foods?
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