Ms Erica's thread started to drift towards a lot of food-related posts, which I thought were very good. So to keep that thread from being hijacked into food-related posts, I thought it best to start a new one.
I'll kick it off: sugar. Why is it SO hard to find something WITHOUT sugar in it? Well, I know why - it (tends to) taste better, so consumers will purchase the product based on taste. Where I think producers screw up is related to how the body tastes things and how food taste testing is done, from what I read on some research on Pepsi vs Coke:
Remember those "blind" taste tests between Pepsi & Coke, where (depending on who was filming/editing) Pepsi was getting chosen? From what I recall, it was because in small quantities, the body will crave the sweeter choice. But if one increases the quantities, it can overwhelm the taste buds and people will tend to choose the less-sweet product.
So, I understand why companies will add sugar based on how they test things - if people are given smaller quantities and asked to compare, they'll tend to prefer the sweeter product (even if its not a "sweet" thing, like bread). But it frustrates me to no end on how much is present or that its present at all. If something isn't sweet enough, I'll add sugar (honey, Nutella, etc) myself. (But I usually don't - my favorite bread is what I make myself: flour, water, yeast, Kosher/sea salt. )
I'll kick it off: sugar. Why is it SO hard to find something WITHOUT sugar in it? Well, I know why - it (tends to) taste better, so consumers will purchase the product based on taste. Where I think producers screw up is related to how the body tastes things and how food taste testing is done, from what I read on some research on Pepsi vs Coke:
Remember those "blind" taste tests between Pepsi & Coke, where (depending on who was filming/editing) Pepsi was getting chosen? From what I recall, it was because in small quantities, the body will crave the sweeter choice. But if one increases the quantities, it can overwhelm the taste buds and people will tend to choose the less-sweet product.
So, I understand why companies will add sugar based on how they test things - if people are given smaller quantities and asked to compare, they'll tend to prefer the sweeter product (even if its not a "sweet" thing, like bread). But it frustrates me to no end on how much is present or that its present at all. If something isn't sweet enough, I'll add sugar (honey, Nutella, etc) myself. (But I usually don't - my favorite bread is what I make myself: flour, water, yeast, Kosher/sea salt. )






