Home Food Can you design the perfect piece of chocolate? Physics has the answer

Can you design the perfect piece of chocolate? Physics has the answer

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Can you design the perfect piece of chocolate? Physics has the answer

In addition to taste, sensory attributes like mouthfeel and even the sound made when we bite into something all contribute to our enjoyment of the eating experience. Dutch physicists and food researchers set out to discover whether it is possible to design edible materials that optimize this enjoyment.

In a study published in Soft Matter this week, researchers from the University of Amsterdam, Delft University and Unilever, demonstrates that the mouthfeel of an edible substance can be designed, just like properties of many other materials can. That is, they create metamaterials… materials that are not found in nature but that are carefully constructed in the lab.

Designing mouthfeel through shape

The scientists worked with chocolate, a material that presents a number of challenges. Heating it up and cooling it down can turn soft chocolate into much more brittle tempered chocolate, or vice versa.

The first challenge for the researchers was to ensure consistency in the chocolate they use. This was achieved by ‘very carefully’ heating it up, adding scold chocolate and cooling it down again. This mixture was then put it in a 3D printer.

This allowed the researchers to print essentially any shape of chocolate material they wanted, while guaranteeing that the base material always had the same properties.

The first shape of edible material that the scientists experimented with was an S-shaped chocolate with ‘many twists’. The goal was to test how this material would break and how that breaking would be experienced in the mouth.