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First Bite: How to Shape a Child's Taste

How do genetics, culture, memory and early feeding experiences contribute to our food preferences? That is what food writer Bee Wilson explores in her new book First Bite[1]. “The subtitle – How We Learn to Eat – came to me very late. It was like a revelation to me, because I didn’t believe at first that eating was something we learn. I felt as if I was carrying around this wonderful secret: that we can adjust our desires, even late in the game. To me, this changes everything” says Bee.

Seniors can learn to appreciate brand new exotic flavours, and there are tricks, as the “Tiny Tastes” technique, that can prompt young ones to eat healthy food with childish pleasure: these are some of the discoveries Bee made during her writing journey. Let's hear more.

First Bite: How to Shape a Child's Taste

How and when does a child's palate get formed and evolves?
The single biggest way that a child learns about flavor is through memory. The trouble is, most of the memories happen so early on, we don’t realize we have them. We become emotionally attached – almost imprinted – with foods from our mother’s diet. Even before a child is born, he or she has tastebuds and our first sips of amniotic fluid leave memories. We know that if women eat a lot of garlic, for example, amniotic fluid will actually taste garlicky. In one amazing experiment, babies whose mothers drank a lot of carrot juice in the last trimester of pregnancy preferred carrot-flavoured cereal when they took their first bites of solid food.

Why do we love some foods and disregard or even abhor others?
This is one of the great human mysteries. There’s definitely a biological component. All babies are born loving sweetness and feeling wary of bitterness (this makes sense, because milk is a very sweet substance). But there is nothing in your physiology that says you are destined to grow up and love chocolate and hate broccoli. The world of flavor is a different place for different people. For example, some people have genes that make cilantro taste soapy and gross, whereas for others it tastes herbal and fresh. Other people are ‘supertasters’, so that bitter flavours taste stronger to them. But the strongest force in forming our food desires is definitely environment. From childhood onwards, we pick up so many signals from our culture about which foods are treats (desserts) and which are duties (vegetables). Our tastes also become a strong part of identity, a way we distinguish ourselves from our siblings or friends. We say ‘I’m a carnivore’ or ‘I can’t stand liquorice’ and it becomes self-reinforcing. It’s hard to change your own likes and dislikes without a sense of loss. But it is possible.

What should parents do to raise healthy, feisty food explorers&lovers?
I have three children and now see that I made so many mistakes in the way I fed them. The single biggest thing parents can do is to make meals playful and fun. Ease up. The end goal of feeding is not to force a child to consume a plate of nourishing food that they hate, but to help them become a person who will choose good food of their own accord when they grow up, because they prefer it. I came across a wonderful new technique, pioneered over the last decade, called Tiny Tastes. It has transformed mealtimes for my fussiest eater, who now happily eats aubergines, red peppers, cabbage, almost any vegetable. The idea is that if you make the size of the new food as small as a pea or even a grain of rice, it’s possible for the child to put it in his or her mouth. You praise them, even if they lick it and spit it out. I know it sounds too simple to be true, but the odds are that if you can repeat this every day for 10 days, dislike will turn to like.

Is there any way we can change our food tastes that came together during childhood?
Yes, we can change, but it’s a question of psychology as much as nutrition. The biggest obstacle for adults changing is that we lack motivation. We don’t believe we could ever become the kind of person who enjoys different foods. We are so much more set in our ways than children. But the great news is that it’s possible to change your diet at any age, when the motivation is there. Research shows that even supertasters can learn to love bitter puntarelle and radicchio if they try them often enough in a positive way. The key is to approach it through pleasure. Instead of forcing ourselves to go ‘on a diet’ and eat foods that we do not like, the key to long term change is to change our preferences, until you reach the point where (give or take the odd plate of French fries) you actively prefer eating in a way that is good for you. I came across a study in Sweden, a ‘taste school for the elderly’ involving people with an average age of 75. With intensive cooking courses, this group started to enjoy new flavours such as fennel and sweet potato and rediscovered the joy of good meals.

How can the food professionals contribute to these processes - both shaping children's palates and reshaping adults' ones?
The problem at the moment is that the big manufacturers in the food industry are shaping children’s palates in exactly the wrong way. They push children’s products high in sugar and fat and salt, which trains children to expect all food to taste this way. But chefs and food writers have a huge power to help us to change. By reminding us of the joys of real food, they may help encourage people to new tastes. The science shows that our tastes are influenced by social conditioning. If we see someone we admire eating something we don’t like, we are more likely to try it. When we see chefs celebrating real, wholesome food, it makes us more likely to overcome our resistance and try it in our own kitchens.

Could you share some little story among your favourites about “bites&memories”?
This is just a tiny example of how emotional we all are about eating. Scientists at Purdue University gave a group of people apple juice. They found that when apple juice was heated up and presented as apple soup in a bowl, it left them much fuller than when they drank it cold, in a glass. The calories were the same but the psychology was different. I like this example because it shows how irrational our eating is, and how it happens in our brains as much as our stomachs. We think of soup as a food that will sate our hunger, and so it does, even when it’s really apple juice.

References

  1. ^ new book First Bite (www.amazon.com)
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Tetsuya Wakuda: The Strength of Asian Food

Tetsuya Wakuda: The Strength of Asian Food

The man with arguably the toughest job during the Asia Pacific Bocuse d’Or was Jury President Tetsuya Wakuda, heading up the critical decision-making process that saw Japan, Singapore and Australia go through as winners to January’s final in Lyon[1], along with China and South Korea as runners-up.

Given the Diners Club Lifetime Achievement Award ahead of the announcement of Asia’s 50 Best Restaurants List 2015[2], Wakuda is a genuine culinary superstar in Asia Pacific, thanks to his legendary Sydney restaurant Tetsuya’s, Waku Ghin at the Marina Bay Sands in Singapore.

More than that, he’s always prepared to give advice and time to those in the industry, so was perfectly placed to judge the best talent Asia had to offer.

What was the difference today? Why did Japan win?
It was the essence of good cooking, everything was there. It’s not pushing boundaries, what they did was very classic, they just cooked absolutely perfectly. It was also simple, we could taste every flavour of each ingredient. Even the individual garnishes were so good, they all lifted the main focus of the dish, the fish or the beef. That’s all it is! All the judges were smiling, it smelt right, just perfectly cooked. I wanted to eat a whole plate, everybody was saying they wanted to finish it!

So, not a difficult decision?
They were clear winners but Singapore also did very, very well. The overall standard was very high.

How does this compare to other competitions?
Bocuse d’Or is the ultimate culinary competition. The most highly-recognised. For thirty years now it has consistently been the best. Anybody in the food industry knows it. But it’s important to remember that although this is a competition, we’re not like rivals. We’re really united, we’re brothers, that’s all it is, in a very special industry. It’s very hard for outsiders to understand how difficult and painful it is, but also very sweet and rewarding.

Jerome Bocuse said Europe needs to watch out in the global final, France and Scandinavia especially need to be careful because the level in Asia is so strong - do you agree?
Before, it used to be different between Europe and Asia, but now people there are very open about liking and understanding Asian food. We respect each other and we are united in many ways through food and friendship – not language, not politics, but food. Number one or number two, we decide who wins in the competition, but even just to be here today everybody has won, in many ways. And when you go to Lyon, wow!

What does this mean for Japan?
It’s great for Japanese cuisine. We know they can cook! I come from Japan but have been overseas for more than 30 years now and the standard there only gets better. Some of the judges were joking that I’m Japanese, with a business in Singapore, living in Australia – and Japan, Singapore and Australia came in first, second and third!

And finally, were you happy with the number of entrants from Asia?
We can always have more and make it bigger – there are never too many! Think about it, people travel to eat. The first thing you think when you go somewhere is ‘which restaurant am I going to visit?’ Not because you’re hungry, you go there for pleasure, for excitement. That’s food today. There’s so much future in it and so much opportunity for young people and cuisiniers. Maybe they’re thinking they don't know what they want to do, but there are amazing options as a chef and you can work anywhere around the world.

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The Many Streets of Mozzarella | Gallery

The Many Streets of Mozzarella | Gallery

A closer look at Le Strade della Mozzarella[1] (The Streets of Mozzarella) event, the Italian festival dedicated to buffalo mozzarella[2] that gathers chefs from all over the world to put their own spin on one of Italy's most beloved foods.

Read here the report from day one[3], and here the report from day two[4]: Mozzarella di Bufala Campana Dop is the highest quality mozzarella and some of the chef pairings will amuse you.

Mozzarella and sweetbreads? Mozzarella and watermelon? We saw that and more at the 9th edition of the festival, sponsored by S.Pellegrino and Acqua Panna.

Have a look at the gallery at the top of the page to enjoy some of the dishes prepared by the chefs.

References

  1. ^ Le Strade della Mozzarella (www.finedininglovers.com)
  2. ^ buffalo mozzarella (www.finedininglovers.com)
  3. ^ Read here the report from day one (www.finedininglovers.com)
  4. ^ here the report from day two (www.finedininglovers.com)
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The Week in Bites <br> 24th April 2016

The Week in Bites <br> 24th April 2016

PRESSURE COOKING

We kicked things off this week with a look at the science behind pressure cooking. This cooking technique has been around for a long time but still strikes fear in some cooks.

How does it work? Why should you use it? Is it worth it?

Find out here[1].

FIRST BITE

As the week progressed we reached out to author Bee Wilson about what influences a child's palate. Wilson's book First Bite: How We Learn To Eat explores the topic.

Read our exclusive interview[2] and find out just what shapes our palate since our birth.

AMAZING MOZZARELLA

Our week ended with a mouthwatering photo gallery of the glorious dishes presented at Le Strade della Mozzarella[3], the epic Italian festival dedicated to buffalo mozzarella.

Here's a look at the amazing dishes[4] created by international chefs.

References

  1. ^ Find out here (www.finedininglovers.com)
  2. ^ Read our exclusive interview (www.finedininglovers.com)
  3. ^ Le Strade della Mozzarella (www.finedininglovers.com)
  4. ^ Here's a look at the amazing dishes (www.finedininglovers.com)
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Eating the Classics in London

My favorite food day was back in 2003, on the day I graduated from The Courtauld Institute in London. I grew up a foodie, the son of foodie parents (we once took a multi-week holiday built around eating at legendary barbecue joints in the American Midwest, and once drove four hours to get French fries from a stand on the pier in Baltimore), and wherever we went, we would map out our meals, long before we shifted gears to consider such mundane things as visiting people and seeing sites.

I inherited this trait from my parents, but in truth I usually left it to them. My father loves researching restaurants, and specialty dishes, and so when I moved to London for my post-graduate studies, I knew that I could place myself in his hands, with regards to restaurant recommendations.

Through many years of visits to the great city of London, we developed regular favorites to which we returned whenever we could. But of all the culinary expeditions we undertook, that graduation day was most memorable. As a special treat, my parents took me to my two favorite classic London eateries: Rules for lunch and The Ivy for dinner.

It was heavenly excess, and allowed me to compare the two greatest sticky toffee puddings of my life in direct, head-to-head competition. Here is my personal list of the must-eat classic restaurants of London, those that have endured, stood the test of time, and continue to produce at the very highest level.

Simpson’s in the Strand

Eating the Classics in London

Part of the Savoy Hotel building on the Strand, this is one of the oldest restaurants in the city, and still the best classic establishment to taste a traditional Sunday roast (though who needs to wait for Sunday?). It opened as a smoking room in 1828 and began to serve roast meats in 1850, while it was also the premiere venue for chess players to test their mettle.

And just in case you still doubt its cultural resonance, the king of traditional British comic fiction, P. G. Wodehouse, called it “a restful temple of food.” The roast beef, gravy and Yorkshire pudding are the draw. Nothing light, nothing nouveau, just good, old-school British fine dining, white tablecloths and all.

The Newman Arms

Eating the Classics in London

Part of the appeal is that it’s tricky to find, and seats only about a dozen customers, and you probably should reserve. The dollhouse-sized upstairs dining room of a traditional dark-wood-paneled pub down an alley off a side street in Fitzrovia that no tourist would stumble upon serves killer savory pies. Beef and Guinness. Chicken and ale. The combination of meat and veg, cooked in beer and sealed in buttery pastry is hard to beat. Or, I should say, was hard to beat. In researching for this article I found, to my dismay, that the Newman Arms is for sale and currently closed. But such a legendary, long-standing establishment (so entrenched in London’s cultural history that it appears in two novels by George Orwell) means that someone will surely buy it and bring it back to life.

Rock and Sole Plaice

Eating the Classics in London

A fish-and-chips shop has been present on this spot since 1871, so it is fair to call this an enduring legend. There are loads of good local places, serving up perfectly-cooked white fish, battered and fried, with fries, in a cone of newspaper, needing only a dash of malt vinegar.

But I’ve never had fish-and-chips as light as these, with none of the weight and grease associated with frying. Plus, located between Covent Garden and Seven Dials, this is in the heart of tourist London, as spot easy to find and return to. Often.

Rules

Eating the Classics in London

In 1798 Thomas Rule opened what would become London’s oldest continuously-running restaurant. The walls look like a Victorian drawing room, covered in Vanity Fair cartoons, old photographs, and oil paintings, with a warm, golden glow brought out by perfect lighting and ochre walls. A doorman in a top hat and overcoat smiles as you enter, and the staff makes you feel like landed gentry, even if you’re a plebeian like me.

The restaurant owns an estate up north that provides much of their meat. They do nothing particularly original, just very fine versions of very traditional dishes, in an atmosphere that simply feels wonderful. Don’t forget to leave room for sticky toffee pudding.

The Ivy

Eating the Classics in London

London’s most beloved restaurant (good luck getting reservations) has maintained its astonishing quality of food and service, in a stylish Art Deco interior, for decades, as well as its fiercely loyal clientele, a who’s who of London stars (one time I was eating there opposite Stephen Fry, Salman Rushdie and Mick Jagger). There are certain restaurants I’ve been to that just do everything right. It’s almost as if they pump laughing gas through the vents, because everyone has a brilliant time, every time they go. Il Latini in Florence, Da Luigi in Rome, Union Square Café in New York and, in London, The Ivy, all have this aura about them—I would build a holiday around eating at any of them (and have). The Ivy does not allow phones (so the ever-present celebrities can relax), and has a dress code. But that’s part of the fun. So, too, is the Poulet de Landes, probably the single best dish I’ve ever had, anywhere, and which I would request as my last meal. Special, happy French chickens are stuffed with foie gras and truffles (lots of them) and drizzled with a Madeira reduction sauce. It is simply incredible and unreproducible. My father and I bought the fanciest chicken we could find in the US, and followed the recipe in the official Ivy cookbook. The result was good, but it wasn’t the same. You’ve got to have it there. Bucket list. And don’t forget to save room for sticky toffee pudding.

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