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Could coffee hold the key to sugar reformulation?

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Could coffee hold the key to sugar reformulation?

The newly published study aimed to investigate the effects of coffee consumption on immediate gustatory (taste) and olfactory (smell) sensitivity.

Having tested 156 participants’ sense of smell and taste before and after drinking coffee, researchers at Aarhus University in Denmark found no changes to their sense of smell. The same could not be said for their sense of gustatory – or taste – sensitivity.

“When people were tested after drinking coffee, they became more sensitive to sweetness, and less sensitive to bitterness,”​ according to Alexander Wieck Fjældstad, associate professor at Aarhus University.

Specifically, the researchers identified a change in detection thresholds for sweet taste (increased sensitivity) and bitter taste (decreased sensitivity) in the minutes following coffee consumption. No change was observed in taste or smell sensitivity for salty and sour tastants.

Fjældstad – who is also affiliated with a research group investigating enjoyment at Oxford University, as well as the Flavor Clinic, Øre-Næse-Halsafdelingen in Holstebro – and colleague Henrique Fernandes repeated the experiment with decaffeinated coffee.

The team was able to rule out that such changes in taste perception were associated with coffee’s caffeine content: the decaffeinated coffee experiment yielded the same result.

Interestingly, the results indicate that the increase in sweet sensitivity is independent of daily coffee consumption, while the level of decrease in bitter sensitivity is associated with coffee consumption habits.