I read a remarkable article in the newspaper a few days ago, I was wondering if anyone has ever experienced such a thing? It is at least something to pay attention to.
Apparently quite a few people experience an alteration in their perception of taste, two days after eating pine tree seeds. All of a sudden everything what they eat will taste bitter, especially wine, tea and coffee become undrinkable. After five days the bitter tastes disappear and the perception is normalized.
The delayed effect has been hard to explain, there is a fruit known that can change taste perception: the Synsepalum dulcificum. It makes sour food taste sweet, but the effect only lasts a couple of hours.
Moonbear
Jul15-08, 03:55 PM
Is there an English version? :tongue:
I've never noticed any effect of eating pine nuts on taste of other things, and I ate a lot of them for a while (bought a big package and added them to everything). I'd definitely remember if my coffee didn't taste good anymore.
Monique
Jul15-08, 04:09 PM
Is there an English version? :tongue: Why, it's just Dutch :biggrin:
Sorry, the online website translators are terrible so won't be of any use. The article basically describes what I summarized. There might be a chemical in the pine tree nuts that changes the sensitivity of your bitter-sensing taste buds. They have no clue where it comes from, there doesn't seem a specific source.
I'd definitely remember if my coffee didn't taste good anymore. haha, Yeah, I haven't noticed the effect either.
hypatia
Jul15-08, 04:47 PM
Well that makes 3 of us who haven't noticed the effects of altered taste after eating pine nuts {seeds}. Maybe its a different species, the pine nuts we eat here come from the Pinon pine{Pinus edulis}.
turbo-1
Jul15-08, 05:01 PM
Well that makes 3 of us who haven't noticed the effects of altered taste after eating pine nuts {seeds}. Maybe its a different species, the pine nuts we eat here come from the Pinon pine{Pinus edulis}.Make that four of us, hypatia. I have had pretty generous helpings of pine nuts with salads and in trail mixes, and my coffee always tastes fine.
Borek
Jul15-08, 05:03 PM
Maybe its a different species, the pine nuts we eat here come from the Pinon pine{Pinus edulis}.
Perhaps that's effect of eating nuts of Pinus nonedulis?
turbo-1
Jul15-08, 05:19 PM
Perhaps that's effect of eating nuts of Pinus nonedulis?Known in the central states of the US as the notapinenut... :rolleyes:
TheStatutoryApe
Jul15-08, 06:11 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_nut#Risks_of_eating_pine_nuts
Apparently it is an as of yet unidentified species from China that seems to cause this issue.
Mk
Jul18-08, 07:00 PM
Here's something I remembered that is related to the main topic of this thread. This is a New York Times article on a west African fruit, Synsepalum dulcificum, that drastically alters the sense of taste of other foods for several hours.
Chemicals in the fruit are said to bind to the bitter and sour receptors on the tongue, blocking or modifying what is sensed.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle_fruit
This plant is thinking out of the box! It is a completely different response to create an incentive for animals to eat fruit, from "be tasty," to "make everything else tasty."
Monique
Jul19-08, 07:22 AM
Here's something I remembered that is related to the main topic of this thread. This is a New York Times article on a west African fruit, Synsepalum dulcificum, that drastically alters the sense of taste of other foods for several hours. Yes, I mentioned it in my first post. I've heard the rumor that the US food industry wanted to use it as an ingredient, but that it got banned.
Indeed, in the article it says: "During the 1970s, a ruling by the Food and Drug Administration dashed hopes that an extract of miraculin could be sold as a sugar substitute. In the absence of any plausible commercial application, the miracle fruit has acquired a bit of a cult following".