This got me dying
who paid for this study bruh
it’‘s literally seasoning. that’s it. that’s what make food taste good.
I looked at the picture and said seasoning before I scrolled down to see the rest.
Though if you actually read the article, you’ll find that a. the study in question was performed at an Indian institution, not a Western one, and b. their conclusions are actually pretty interesting; in a nutshell, Indian cuisine tends to use more strongly contrasting spice pairings and spices that have a smaller overlap with the flavour profiles of the accompanying foodstuffs even when compared with other South Asian culinary traditions.
You can find the cited paper here (warning - math):
http://arxiv.org/ftp/arxiv/papers/1502/1502.03815.pdf
An excerpt from the Washington Post article, if the study itself is too heavy:
If you were to hold a microscope to most Western dishes, you would find an interesting but not all-too-surprising trend. Popular food pairings in this part of the world combine ingredients that share like flavors, which food chemists have broken down into their molecular parts - precise chemical compounds that, when combined, give off a distinct taste.
Most of the compounds have scientific names, though one of the simpler compounds is acetal, which, as the food chemist George Burdock has written, is “refreshing, pleasant, and [has a] fruity-green odor,” and can be found in whiskey, apple juice, orange juice and raw beets. On average, there are just over 50 flavor compounds in each food ingredient.
A nifty chart shared by Scientific American in 2013 shows which foods share the most flavor compounds with others and which food pairings have the most flavor compounds in common. Peanut butter and roasted peanuts have one of the most significant overlaps (no surprise there). But there are connections that are more difficult to predict: strawberries, for instance, have more in common with white wine than they do with apples, oranges or honey.
Chefs in the West like to make dishes with ingredients that have overlapping flavors. But not all cuisines adhere to the same rule. Many Asian cuisines have been shown to belie the trend by favoring dishes with ingredients that don’t overlap in flavor. And Indian food, in particular, is one of the most powerful counterexamples.
Researchers at the Indian Institute for Technology in Jodhpur crunched data on several thousand recipes from a popular online recipe site called TarlaDalal […] which used a total of 200 ingredients. They examined how much the underlying flavor compounds overlapped in single dishes and discovered something very different from Western cuisines. Indian cuisine tended to mix ingredients whose flavors don’t overlap at all.
“We found that average flavor sharing in Indian cuisine was significantly lesser than expected,” the researchers wrote.
In other words, the more overlap two ingredients have in flavor, the less likely they are to appear in the same Indian dish.
#surprise surprise not just white people in western countries do science (via betterbemeta)
“Science” = “Lol white people”
When being a shithead racist backfires spectacularly.
daaamn
Racists are too busy dumping on white people to not be stupid, more at 11.


















