Caffeine may make us want more sweet treats

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New research suggests caffeine tempers taste buds temporarily, making food and drink taste less sweet.

“…if you eat food directly after drinking a caffeinated coffee or other caffeinated drinks, you will likely perceive food differently.”

Caffeine is a powerful antagonist of adenosine receptors, which promote relaxation and sleepiness. Suppressing the receptors awakens people but decreases their ability to taste sweetness—which, ironically, may make them desire it more.

The research demonstrates taste modulation in the real world, says senior author Robin Dando, assistant professor of food science at Cornell University.

“When you drink caffeinated coffee,” Dando says, “it will change how you perceive taste—for however long that effect lasts. So if you eat food directly after drinking a caffeinated coffee or other caffeinated drinks, you will likely perceive food differently.”

Dando and colleagues report their findings in the Journal of Food Science.

In the blind study, one group sampled decaffeinated coffee with 200 milligrams of caffeine added in a laboratory setting, making a strong cup of coffee. The stimulant was added to make that group’s coffee consistent with real-life amounts of caffeine. The other group drank just decaffeinated coffee. Both groups had sugar added. Panelists who drank the caffeinated brew rated it as less sweet.

In a secondary part of the study, participants disclosed their level of alertness and estimated the amount of caffeine in their coffee. Further, panelists reported the same increase in alertness after drinking either the caffeinated or decaffeinated samples, all the while panelists could not predict if they had consumed the decaffeinated or the caffeinated version.

Why caffeine doesn’t leave everybody wired

“We think there might be a placebo or a conditioning effect to the simple action of drinking coffee,” says Dando. “Think Pavlov’s dog. The act of drinking coffee—with the aroma and taste—is usually followed by alertness. So, the panelists felt alert even if the caffeine was not there,” says Dando.

“What seems to be important is the action of drinking that coffee,” Dando says. “Just the action of thinking that you’ve done the things that make you feel more awake, makes you feel more awake.”

Source: Cornell University