Long Reads

Does Chewy Food Put You Off? Here's Why.

You might be a supertaster (yes, that's a thing).

May  8, 2020
Photo by Rocky Luten

I’m Sara, and I’ve been a picky eater all my life.

More often than not, the thing that can completely and totally put me off a food is its texture. If it’s too slimy, too creamy, too-any-one-thing, I’m out, no matter how good it may taste. I decided I had to figure it out for good: What determines my strong aversion, and will I ever get over it?

Sybil Kapoor, author of Sight Smell Touch Taste Sound A New Way to Cook, confirmed my suspicion that the way a food feels has a huge impact on whether we enjoy a meal. “It is our sense of touch that is vital for culinary enjoyment, from the moment we hold something with our hands to the final swallow,” she writes. “It allows us to savor the temperature, taste, and flavor of food as well as the sound food makes as we eat.”

Think about how it feels to bite into a piece of beef jerky versus steak. Despite the fact that they have the same source material, the former is densely chewy and demands that you spend some time masticating every morsel—that you allow its salty funk to sit and unfurl on your palette. Meanwhile, the latter is tender, less funky and more unctuous, nearly melting after a moment on your tongue. As Kapoor explains, “different textures within a dish release their tastes in different ways in our mouths.” If it weren’t for the jerky and steak’s wildly differing consistencies, they’d be far more difficult to distinguish.

Leathery jerky and even custardy scrapple, I can handle. But how does this explain why I love most mushrooms, but just can't choke down a wood ear; or why my ideal dessert is a bowl of Chex, not ice cream? According to Linda Bartoshuk, PhD, a psychologist and Bushnell Professor of Food Science and Human Nutrition at the University of Florida, supertasters, or people born with more tastebuds, may be physiologically more sensitive to a food’s mouthfeel. In the same way that they experience flavors more intensely, so, too, do they experience textures to a greater degree. A supertaster is not only particularly sensitive to bitter foods (like broccoli, specific mushrooms, or coffee), but will perceive a fatty food to be twice as creamy than a regular taster will.

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Top Comment:
“Growing up, we ate what we were served, no excuses. In fact I didn't even realize that disliking a food because of its texture was a thing until about 10 years ago. My cousin and nephew who were in their early twenties at the time, were staying with us and I wanted to make something I considered special so I lovingly made osso buco. Watching them take their first bite I was surprised at their reactions. Both of them couldn't eat it because of the "texture". Since then I've been more aware of this. I personally don't have a problem eating anything, but totally understand. Now I always ask guests if they have any food aversions. Thanks for the article.”
— Karen S.
Comment

Additionally, Kapoor illustrates the power cultural and social associations have on our preferences. “In China and Japan, different textures are valued much more highly than in the West,” she writes, using the popular Japanese snack of ultra-chewy dried squid as an example. Compare this to the American image of “healthy” food (crunchy and raw) or, perhaps, what we believe “fancy” food to feel like (silky and smooth, like a fine mousse). These larger cultural and social associations undeniably fuel our personal texture preferences, even if they ultimately lead to overly broad—and sometimes incorrect—characterizations of food.

I’m definitely guilty of allowing texture to eclipse all other aspects of a meal, with little thought given to what I might be missing out on in the process: namely, the closeness, the special kind of connection that happens only over a shared meal. Despite my squeamishness, I'll be trying one of Kapoor's texture experiments this weekend (excerpted below)—focusing not on how squishy a food might feel, but how delicious it will taste. Here's hoping that soon I'll be slurping bowls of ramen—bouncy wood ears and hairlike noodles and all—with my boyfriend.


Jellied

Textures often merge into one another and the most fragile jellied textures can
melt into liquid regardless of whether they’re a wobbly plum jelly (jello) or the set juices within a pork pie. However, there are many other jellied textures, including unctuous, gelatinous-textured meat, such as pulled pork; crunchy cloud ear fungus; slippery tapioca; or dense agar-agar set sweets. Some even verge on the chewy, such as marshmallows or Turkish delight. In all cases, care is required when matching jelly-like textures with other foods. Complementary soft ingredients are needed when a jelly is going to turn to liquid in the mouth, such as lychees in a lemongrass jelly, and denser-textured ingredients are needed when the dominant food retains its consistency, such as pulled pork within a soft bun.

Texture Test

Make a home-made jelly, but before mixing in the gelatine, set aside a little of the liquid. Once the jelly has set, compare the taste and feel of the flavoured liquid to the set jelly.

Chewy

As with all textures, chewiness can be good or bad depending on the context. In
 a toffee, for example, chewiness is wonderful, as it slowly releases its delicious caramel buttery flavours, but the chewiness of a garlic-buttered snail is unbearable for someone who dislikes eating molluscs. Chewy ingredients can be used to prolong or highlight flavours in a dish. A chewy pizza base, for example, allows the eater to enjoy the different tastes and textures of its topping, while chunky strips of candied orange peel in rough-cut marmalade underline the bitter-sweet orange taste of the marmalade jelly. However, tastes and flavours change with prolonged mastication, so it’s wise to consider the final taste and texture on any dish when introducing a chewy element.

Texture Test

Make a simple burger with good chopped beef, salt and pepper and grill alongside
 a sirloin steak. Compare the flavour and texture of the two.

Hard

For the purposes of this book, I’m including crunchy, crisp and brittle textures within this category. At first glance, hardness might seem an unpromising texture in cooking. However, in moderation, hard-textured elements can add excitement by introducing textural contrast and flavours that are released at different rates into a dish. Among the most commonly used hard-textured foods are nuts and crunchy vegetables such as raw carrots, and celery. Brittle-textured foods, such as vegetable crisps, filo pastry and caramel, can add a surprising lightness to a dish, while crackling textures, such as bacon fat, pork crackling and Melba toast, are often used as a textural contrast in richly flavoured dishes.

Texture Test

Leave a celery heart in your refrigerator until it turns bendy, and then eat a stem alongside a fresh crisp stem of celery.

Adapted slightly from Sight Smell Touch Taste Sound A New Way to Cook by Sybil Kapoor (Pavilion Books).

Tell us how the experiments went in the comments!

See what other Food52 readers are saying.

  • JFulbright
    JFulbright
  • CF
    CF
  • Adrienne Boswell
    Adrienne Boswell
  • Karen
    Karen
  • TXExpatInBKK
    TXExpatInBKK
Sara Coughlin is a freelance writer living in Brooklyn. Although she writes about food, health, wellness, lifestyle trends, skin-care, and astrology, she’d much rather talk to you about professional wrestling, rock climbing, and her personal favorite true crime theories. You can find her in her studio apartment doing yoga while a pan of veggies gently burns in the oven.

8 Comments

JFulbright February 14, 2021
I will eat just about anything. Really! Food, in all its variety (even crickets!), is such a gift! However...
My husband and I both hate bananas. Everything: the texture, the flavor, the aroma. Banana bread is ALMOST acceptable. It's the reason we've never been smoothie fans. I've loved snails and raw oysters almost all my life, but those "Dole Rockets" are just gag- inducing. Weird, huh?
 
CF July 1, 2020
Within the last month, after starting the AIP diet, food textures have been bothering me. Being in the elimination phase, I am limited to certain foods. Maybe the boredom of the same foods has me realizing how gross the textures are, regardless of flavor. I especially notice this when reheating leftovers.
 
Adrienne B. May 17, 2020
For me, it's eggs. I don't like custard and custard-like things. I barely eat chocolate pudding only because the chocolate gives it a little more texture. I can't eat egg whites. But, I love deviled eggs and have come up with a method of deftly turning them in my mouth so that the egg white never touches my tongue. Runny egg yolks, which most people love, are awful to me, and I prefer my scrambled eggs on the well done, but not burned side. I also can't stand omelets because of the frequently browned bottoms. Yet, I love raw hamburger, raw oysters, sushi, etc.
 
Karen May 14, 2020
Shiitake mushrooms! Love the flavor....the texture makes me gag.
Same with oysters. Can not, will not, eat oysters. No matter how they are prepared. But I’m all over anything “oyster flavored”.
 
TXExpatInBKK May 11, 2020
Yes, this is why I can't eat Schlotzky's sandwiches... the bread has all those holes!!! My friends and family laugh at me for it, but I still can't eat it.
 
Karen S. May 9, 2020
Growing up, we ate what we were served, no excuses. In fact I didn't even realize that disliking a food because of its texture was a thing until about 10 years ago. My cousin and nephew who were in their early twenties at the time, were staying with us and I wanted to make something I considered special so I lovingly made osso buco. Watching them take their first bite I was surprised at their reactions. Both of them couldn't eat it because of the "texture". Since then I've been more aware of this. I personally don't have a problem eating anything, but totally understand. Now I always ask guests if they have any food aversions. Thanks for the article.
 
Arnica December 26, 2020
Thank you for being the first and only person to correctly identify food preferences as the behavior that it truly is. Despite one's tendency toward or aversion to certain tastes and textures, liking food is a learned behavior. It can therefore be unlearned. Super tasting is indeed a thing. Many chefs supposedly are. This increases their ability to taste certain things, but says nothing about how preferences are formed. Genetic preferences are probably a thing also. However, it is not responsible for a person's food aversions. It's simply preferences reinforced by repeated exposure or elimination. It is psychological. Exposure breeds familiarity which breeds tolerance. Some supertasters like broccoli some don't. There's no explaining that just whipping a supertaster. I am a food supertaster myself. (You can buy one of those kids to test for it on Amazon. We had a good time testing each other.) I can easily taste all three of the bitter components used to test for this. I was raised the way Karen was raised. You eat what is put in front of you. If you're going to insist on your food privileges, let's just call it what it is: picky eating. But let's not try to use science to justify what in essence is people being brats. Try everything that's put in front of you every time, and seek out new experiences with an eye toward learning to like it. It will change your world.
 
JFulbright February 14, 2021
People have their reSons, and I think some are born to it. Others have it beaten into them. I know a woman who's a HUGE animal lover / defender, but she can't eat veg or fruits. Turns out, an over-zealous (abusive) parent made anything non-meat a trauma-inducing "eat or get beat" situation. :-(