๐Ÿ’Ž On strongest memory of taste tending to be the first bite (olfactory change blindness)

We are all in a constant state of โ€˜olfactory change blindnessโ€™. Intriguingly, this is something that the food companies have been trying to exploit to their, and hopefully our, advantage for a few years now. The basic idea is that you load all the tasty but unhealthy ingredients into the first and possibly last bite of a food, and reduce their concentration in the middle of the product, when the consumers are not paying so much attention to the tasting experience. Just think about a loaf of bread with the salt asymmetrically distributed towards the crust. The consumer will have a great-tasting first bite, and then their brain will โ€˜fill inโ€™ the rest by assuming that it tastes exactly like the first mouthful did. This strategy will probably work just as long as the meal isnโ€™t high tea and the taster eating cucumber sandwiches with the crusts cut off! Or imagine something like a bar of chocolate, which most people will presumably start and finish at the ends, not in the middle. In fact, Unilever has a number of patents in just this space.

Excerpt from: Gastrophysics: The New Science of Eating by Charles Spence