[HN Gopher] Darwinian Gastronomy: Spices taste good because they...
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Darwinian Gastronomy: Spices taste good because they are good for
us
Author : magoghm
Score : 24 points
Date : 2023-02-11 06:15 UTC (2 days ago)
(HTM) web link (academic.oup.com)
(TXT) w3m dump (academic.oup.com)
| overcast wrote:
| Wonderful news, this chocolate eclair is healthy for me!
| yjftsjthsd-h wrote:
| Sugar - sadly - isn't a spice.
| overcast wrote:
| The title is implying tasting good = healthy.
| yjftsjthsd-h wrote:
| My point is that there's room for a little more nuance than
| that; "your body likes X because it's good for you" doesn't
| imply a universal rule, just a specific correlation.
| TulliusCicero wrote:
| It's really more like tasting good = evolutionarily useful.
| carlmr wrote:
| Which is true for sugar. It's good if you get a few grams
| of sugar while running around the forest all day. It's
| not good to get half a pound of sugar from big gulp
| softdrinks while you're sitting in traffic.
| beebmam wrote:
| Not necessarily, even in the evolutionary biology model.
| Something can taste good to humans entirely by accident,
| and be evolutionarily neutral (or even a small amount
| negative). Just like the reason men have nipples.
| twelvedogs wrote:
| The ingredients probably are, the quantities possibly not
| mouse_ wrote:
| Makes sense. Menthol (mint) is a vasoconstrictor, capsaicin is a
| vasodilator. Children will have no idea what this means, but they
| still know innately they're opposites of each other. Our
| instincts guide us when we listen.
| redtriumph wrote:
| nit: This article should have (1999) in title.
|
| Interesting read nonetheless.
| cm2187 wrote:
| And so does nutella and peanut butter.
| bretbernhoft wrote:
| This is a thought I just finished having. Right alongside a bowl
| of canned soup, that (with the help of spices) turned out to be a
| five star meal. Food is medicine, as it is said.
| gt565k wrote:
| I always put black pepper and cayenne pepper in my soups.
|
| Warms me up and is healthy.
| heyitsguay wrote:
| And a touch of garlic powder!
| cwkoss wrote:
| Hmm. I wish this analysis accounted for availability of spices in
| different regions: I would expect onions and garlic to be more
| prevalent in Scandanavian dishes than cinnamon and ginger simply
| because those are easier to grow in temperate climates.
|
| Would be interesting to look at which spices have 'broken into' a
| cuisine despite being not agriculturally viable in that region.
| How does this set of spices differ from the broader set? More
| antimicrobial?
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