Researchers got about 100 high school students in rural Pennsylvania
to taste a variety of plain vegetables seasoned with just oil and
salt and then try the same vegetables flavored with different spice
blends. Participants rated how well they liked each dish and then
indicated whether they preferred the plain or spiced up recipe.
Students liked broccoli, cauliflower, vegetable dip, and black beans
mixed with corn better when recipes included a spice blend, the
study found.
When forced to choose between plain vegetables and vegetables
seasoned with spice blends, students preferred the spicy versions
for corn and peas, broccoli, vegetable dip, black beans with corn,
and cauliflower, the study also found.
“This is important because we really need to make sure we are
focusing on improving the vegetables served in schools to make sure
students take interest in eating them,” said lead study author
Juliana Fritts of Pennsylvania State University in University Park.
“Vegetable intake is still SO low in adolescents and adults, and
these are so important for health, so we really still need to be
working harder at either making vegetables tastier or encouraging
people to purchase and eat more vegetables,” Fritts said by email.
Teen girls should eat four servings of vegetables a day, and teen
boys should eat five, U.S. dietary guidelines recommend. One serving
of vegetables could be one cup of leafy greens, a half-cup of cooked
or raw veggies, or three-fourths of a cup of vegetable juice.
Most students surveyed at the start of the study said the taste, the
serving size, and the food’s appearance were “very important”
characteristics of school meals.
Roughly three in four students said disliking the taste stopped them
from eating vegetables. More than half also said they didn’t like
the vegetables served in school.
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Most students were familiar with common spices like cinnamon, garlic
powder, black pepper, chili powder, oregano and basil, surveys also
found. Very few of them were familiar with cumin, allspice, curry,
and sage.
The students tasted different vegetables, sometimes plain and other
times with added spices, during lunch periods on different school
days. Cafeterias served canned or frozen vegetables similar to what
they would normally prepare for school lunches.
Sensory scientists and research chefs at the McCormick Science
Institute, which funded the study, developed the recipes for the
experiment. McCormick makes spices sold in grocery stores and to
industrial and commercial customers.
One limitation of the study is that participation was voluntary, and
it’s possible students who agreed to sample different vegetables had
different preferences or opinions about veggies than the kids who
declined to participate, researchers note in the journal Food
Quality and Preference.
Another drawback is that researchers didn’t test whether a stronger
preference for vegetables with spices translated into teens actually
eating more vegetables.
Still, the approach tested in the study would be a low-cost and
simple strategy to try in school cafeterias because it’s using
products that are already staples of school lunch programs, said
Gregory Madden, a researcher at Utah State University in Logan.
“Increasing the variety of vegetables served can modestly increase
consumption,” Madden, who wasn’t involved in the study, said by
email. “A more effective strategy is to get rid of competing foods
on the plate.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2tXugns Food Quality and Preference, published
online February 27, 2018.
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